Otto Carrington
Senior Reporter
otto.carrington@cnc3.co.tt
The trade union movement is seeking legal advice from a senior constitutional attorney over the arrest of activist Trade Unions Move to Challenge Labour Day Police Action and her mother during Labour Day celebrations in Fyzabad, with National Trade Union Centre (NATUC) General Secretary Michael Annisette warning that the incident raises serious constitutional concerns and reflects what he described as an increasingly emboldened police service under the State of Emergency.
Speaking at a joint trade union press conference yesterday, Annisette said labour leaders have engaged a senior counsel to review the events of June 19 and advise on possible legal action.
“I could assure you that we are engaging a senior counsel to take an overview of all what has happened to advise us as a labour movement how to move forward in this matter,” Annisette said.
“This is not a simple matter. I believe it has some constitutional issues in what transpired. I’m not going to pronounce on it, but we are engaging senior counsel to discuss it so that they will guide us in terms of the constitutionality that we see was breached by the police.”
He said the review is a joint initiative of the labour movement.
“It is a joint exercise. A well-renowned senior counsel in constitutional law will guide us in terms of what we can do as we move forward.”
Annisette also accused police of becoming increasingly aggressive under the current SoE regulations.
“You see an emboldenment by the police under the State of Emergency,” he said.
The veteran trade unionist rejected a police statement suggesting Phillip was not authorised to participate in the Labour Day procession, insisting she had been personally invited to march with members of the Seamen and Waterfront Workers’ Trade Union (SWWTU).
“There is this press release from the police and it seems to suggest that I had no authority to invite the young lady to march with the Seamen and Waterfront Workers’ Trade Union. Let me tell the police there is nothing in the law that speaks to that,” Annisette said.
He questioned the basis for Phillip’s arrest, noting that Labour Day celebrations have historically included activists, students, community groups, political organisations and members of the public.
“Who are the police to determine in the 21st century who is to march with the labour movement?” he asked. “Our invitation continues to be, and will continue to be, for all social activists, all social groups and everybody who wants to participate in Labour Day.”
Annisette said he repeatedly informed officers that Phillip had been invited to march with him and the SWWTU contingent, but claimed his efforts to engage police were ignored.
“Can the police deny that I made all the efforts to engage them in discussions as it relates to the young lady? Could they deny that I expressed the view that she was invited? We have all the coverage. She was marching with me peacefully and she was marching with the Seamen and Waterfront Workers’ Trade Union.”
He alleged that officers appeared intent on targeting Phillip and her mother.
“There was an arrogance that I have never seen by the police. It was like they had a plan, a selective plan, and the plan was to arrest the young lady and her mother.”
Annisette also questioned why objections to non-union participants were not raised during planning meetings ahead of Labour Day.
“If the police had an intention or an objection to other people other than the trade union movement marching, why didn’t they say that at the meetings that we had? That was never pronounced in any of the meetings.”
He further criticised what he described as an unprecedented security presence at the annual event.
“For the first time in the history of Trinidad and Tobago, and I have participated in Labour Day marches for years as a young man, I have never seen so much police presence in a Labour Day celebration. Armed police, riot police too. What was the purpose of that? To intimidate us?”
Annisette also called on the Commissioner of Police to investigate an incident in which his 13-year-old daughter was allegedly pushed aside by officers during the detention of Phillip and her mother.
“You push my daughter aside like she was a rubbish bag. How could that be fair? I want the Commissioner of Police to investigate it because we have it on tape.”
He said the Commissioner owed workers an apology.
“The police commissioner owes the working class of Trinidad and Tobago an apology for the behaviour of the police. If the police are mature enough, they should be mature enough to say, ‘I made a mistake.’”
Oilfields Workers’ Trade Union (OWTU) First Vice-President Sati Gajadhar-Inniss also condemned the arrests, describing images of Phillip and her mother surrounded by riot police as deeply troubling.
“As a woman and as a woman in leadership in the trade union movement, I feel very offended by what they continue to do in our demonstrations. Take your hands off our members and, in particular, our women,” she said.
She challenged police claims that Phillip was not authorised to participate and called on officers to identify who they allegedly consulted within the labour movement.
“If the police want to involve the Oilfields Workers’ Trade Union, they need to clearly identify who they would have spoken to and bring the evidence as such,” she said.
Gajadhar-Inniss added that Labour Day marches do not operate on the basis of formal individual invitations, arguing that Annisette’s invitation should have been sufficient.
“If Comrade Annisette saw the young lady on the way and invited her to join him on the march, then what gives them the right to say she should not be on it?”
“Then any member of the public could have been arrested for being on the pathway or joining the march from time to time.”
Both leaders said Phillip’s arrest has broader implications for freedom of expression and democratic participation.
Describing June 19 as “a sad day”, Annisette warned that Trinidad and Tobago risked sliding into dangerous territory if peaceful dissent is met with force.
“My fear is I am seeing the militarisation of Trinidad and Tobago and it is something we have to pay attention to. We cannot ignore it.”
“The labour movement is the countervailing power. We will always continue to stand up for what is right. We will always express dissenting views and we will always stand up in defence of anybody who expresses a dissenting view because that is what democracy is all about.”
He said the incident should serve as a warning.
“We must not allow anybody to intimidate us under any circumstances. If we allow this to seep into our culture, then we will be going down a road that we will live to regret.”
