MED STUDENT SNATCHED AND RAPED

A 21-YEAR-old medical student was abducted on the Quinam beach and raped in a nearby forest, police said yesterday. The woman, of Couva, was found wandering along an isolated road near the beach some eight hours after the ordeal.

Police have detained two men, aged 20, and 35, of the Quinam district, in connection with the incident. Reports stated that on Saturday the medical student went to a beach lime with other friends. Around 2.45 pm while strolling along the shore with her 20-year-old boyfriend the two were confronted by two men, one armed with a gun and the other with a cutlass. According to police, the attackers held onto the young woman and ordered the boyfriend: “Go for all your money and don’t take more than 15 minutes. Don’t make this into a murder.” The 20-year-old man went to the car where he accumulated $150, but when he returned to where he left the medical student he saw the armed men dragging her into the bushes.

The police were immediately alerted and launched a massive aerial and foot patrol search through the Quinam forest. Around 10 pm, police were tipped off by an anonymous caller that a young woman was seen dazed and walking through a lonely area along Siparia/ Quinam Road. Investigators said the young student in her traumatised state still managed to give a description of her attackers. She was taken to the San Fernando General Hospital (SFGH) and warded. Police later picked up two suspects, whom they said had previous convictions for marijuana and cocaine possession. Siparia CID police are continuing investigations.

Amnesty: 2002 saw marked increase in TT crime

The 2003 Amnesty International Annual Country Report for Trinidad and Tobago has noted, in its opening paragraph that there was an increase in crime in TT in  2002.

Unlike those of previous years, the 2003 report, which covers the period January to December 2002, states, “There was a marked increase in crime, with at least 170 people murdered.” It also noted that at least 80 men and four women were on death row at the end of 2002, but said that no executions were carried out and no death warrants were issued. “Courts continued to impose death sentences; at least one woman and six men were sentenced to hang. Defendants facing a mandatory death sentence continued to appear in court without legal representation,” the report said. In this regard, the report named Peter Cadette who it said appeared before a magistrate’s court in March 2002, charged with the murder of his wife and child, “a capital offence, without a lawyer to represent him.”

In TT, the report also noted, many prisoners lacked the most basic facilities to ensure hygiene. Some inmates, the report stated, were forced to defecate onto newspapers which then had to be stored in a bucket that was emptied frequently. There were also reports of inmate-on-inmate violence as well as brutality by prison guards. Police brutality was also listed as a problem. It named 15 year old school boy David Sooklal who alleged that he was beaten by police officers, causing him to vomit blood. The officers were allegedly attempting to get information about his brother. He was taken into custody, but released shortly after without charge. In July 2002, the report said, Kenton Sylvester was awarded TT$220,000 compensation after being beaten in 1992 by police who mistook him for a member of an armed gang. He suffered two broken arms, eight fractured ribs and liver damage.

In November 2002, according to the report, Edmund Ancil, Bruce Henry and Ashford Ramdhan alleged they were beaten by police officers to force them to confess to a high-profile murder. During a court appearance, the three men detailed their allegations and showed the judge burns allegedly inflicted by police officers with cigarettes and other marks allegedly caused by beatings. The magistrate ordered that the men receive medical treatment. A fourth accused, Irene Ragbir, alleged that she had been denied legal assistance while being questioned by the police. However, TT’s report was mild compared to Jamaica’s which stated: “The economic situation remained dire with a large number of people living below the poverty line. Jamaican society continued to suffer from an extremely high level of violent crime; at least 1,045 people were reported murdered, including 16 police officers.”

Taxi passenger compensated for injury

A passenger in a taxi who was injured during an accident has been awarded damages by Justice Alan Medonca. The judge made the order last Monday in favour of Nigel Lorne Williams of Back Street, Morvant.

Williams testified that on November 13, 1999, he was a paying passenger in a vehicle owned by Russell Matthews. When the vehicle was travelling along the Eastern Main Road, in the vicinity of Citrus Growers Association, it collided with another vehicle owned by Celus Mitchell. Williams suffered personal injuries, loss and damage. Williams testified that as a result of the impact, he suffered punctured lungs and broken ribs.The trial in this matter first came up on July 14 at the Port-of-Spain Third Civil Court and two days later, the matter was adjourned for a site visit where the accident occurred.On Monday, Justice Medonca ordered that there be a judgement for Williams against Matthews with damages to be assessed by a Master in Chambers. He also ordered Matthews to pay Williams’  and Mitchell’s costs in action. Attorney Yaseen Ahmed appeared on behalf of Williams, while Asaf Hosein represented Matthews. Philip Lamont represented Mitchell.

$200,000 worth of compressed marijuana seized by police

Six people were arrested and nine packets of compressed marijauna with a street value of $200,000 seized in an exercise carried out by police attached to San Rafael police station yesterday.

At around 10.30 am on Sunday, a party of police officers headed by Sgt Osmond Williams were on road exercise duties along the Talparo /Muneo Nuevo Road when they stopped a Green B 13 Sentra car proceeding east with two occupants. The occupants were ordered out of the vehicle and searched. Packets of compressed marijuana were found in the vehicle. The marijuana was seized and the men arrested and taken to the San Rafael Police station were they were cautioned and charged by Cpl Gomez with the possession of marijuana for the purpose of trafficking. The four other  persons were arrested for possession of narcotics and outstanding warrants. The six arrested people will  appear before a Arima magistrate today.

Vehicle gang terrorises family

A LIME at Mayaro Beach turned sour on Friday night for a southern family and their visiting relatives from the United States when a gang of men terrorised them with an All Terrain Vehicle (ATV) and a motorcycle.

Mayaro Police are investigating a report that around 10.40 pm Friday, Ben Ramnarine, his wife and two children, were on the beach together with his relatives, Nagnon Boodan and family of the US. They were apparently enjoying the festive mood when, according to a police report, some men charged towards them. One of the men was driving an All Terrain Vehicle (ATV) which he drove right into the crowd of men women and children.

The report stated that they had to scamper for safety causing some of them to suffer scrapes and bruises. Police said the men numbered about eight, and one of them charged the families with a motor cycle. The report stated that the men terrorised the families by driving the ATV and motorcycle around them, cursing and laughing as they did so. Police said that one of the men was injured when the ATV struck him. Police said that the family were so scared that they  packed their belongings and left the area immediately. The incident was reported to PC Ramnath of the Mayaro Police Station. PCs Ragbir and Mohammed are carrying out investigations.

Roadblock yields guns, drugs

Four occupants of a car were arrested in a roadblock exercise early yesterday and a 9 mm pistol, an air pistol and 15 rounds of ammunition seized.

Reports revealed that a party of officers led by Cpl Jones were carrying out the roadblock in the vicinity at Second Crossing Hardware, Arima, around 2 am when they saw a car with four occupants acting in a suspicious manner. The occupants were searched and the guns and ammunition allegedly seized. Two of the suspects are from Wallerfield and the other two are from Chaguanas. A black Toyota Tercel car was also seized. During the same exercise two others were held for possession of marijuana and cocaine. Another roadblock exercise carried out in Mayaro resulted in the arrest of nine persons for larceny, narcotics and outstanding warrants.

Value of Crime Stoppers

PUBLIC response to the appeal by Crime Stoppers, since its introduction four years ago, to assist in the solving of crimes, by reporting them under the cover of confidentiality, has resulted, inter alia, in nine kidnappings, 493 narcotics, 120 firearms, 43 murder and 17 sexual offences being solved. Initially, the response was relatively slow, but with public confidence growing in the system, along with increasing public revulsion at the rise in crime, there has been a marked increase in calls. Devrol Dupigny, General Manager of Crime Stoppers, stressed last Thursday at a Peronal Security Awareness Seminar organised by AmCham that the last month alone had witnessed a five-fold increase in the number of valid tips received by his organisation. for the month of July, up to the 23rd, CS received 393 calls including 249 tips as compared to 157 calls and 46 tips in the month beore. Apart from the motive of civic duty, CS has been the offering incentives in the form of rewards of up to $10,000, except in cases of kidnappings where the reward has recently been upped to $25,000. The assurance of confidentiality has also helped to win public confidence in the scheme.

Initial public resistance to reporting incidents of crimes to Crime Stoppers had been conditioned by allegations that some persons, who had made reports to the Police in the past with respect to the narcotics trade, murder and firearms, among other things, had their names passed on to the criminals, and in some cases had been reportedly threatened. The allegations, whether true or not, had been enough to frighten off many persons from doing their civic duty. The idea of Crime Stoppers, with its emphasis on confidentiality, had been designed to win the trust and cooperation of citizens in the battle against this dreadful scourge. It was the most practical and effective way of providing members of the public with an opportunity to assist in the fight against crime. A print and electronic media blitz, in which the principal thrust had been the insistence that telephone calls to the Crime Stoppers’ hotline could not be traced; that there was no need to give the person at the other end the names and addresses of callers, and that individual ID numbers would be given, which could then be used for the collection of rewards for relevant convictions, had boosted needed confidence in the project.

And although the solving of nine kidnappings through reports to Crime Stoppers may appear modest in relation to the incidence of kidnappings over the past four years, what is of critical importance is that a start has been made. Hopefully, more citizens will be won over to the business-like approach of Crime Stoppers, and the firm assurance that confidentiality is indeed a fact, will lead to an increasing number of tip-offs. The response to Crime Stoppers has demonstrated that although the maintenance of law and order is primarily the responsibility of the Police, citizens have a not insignificant role to play in the critical effort to stem the rising tide of serious crime in our country. The call has been repeatedly made for every sector of our society to join in this struggle. Crime does not normally occur in remote and uninhabited areas of our country; it happens within the bosom of our society and very often within the view and detection of many. A call to Crime Stoppers can strike a telling blow.

Money talks, but does it always make sense?


I remember I was leaning forward in my seat, in a ballroom I think it was. The cushioned chair was fashioned to encourage its occupant to tuck in, but I didn’t want to miss a word of this unexpected lecture on “press responsibility” from a top businessman. I did not like much of what I was hearing. (Nor did many in his audience—unsurprisingly enough — given that several were members of the media). Don’t get me wrong. I have no problem with criticism of my trade, but commentary of any sort really should have its base securely rooted in fact. Back then in that ballroom— and it must have been around 1996 — that merchant’s feet were in theoretical quicksand. The daily papers, he was complaining, were placing too much crime on their front pages. The headlines and photographs were frightening the country’s children. I waited for a statistic, a quote from a study, a report, to support his alarming statement. Not a word; not a number. He was done with that part of his lesson and had moved on to the second hackneyed reason why the dailies should window wash their front pages. The world was a global market, he announced. The media’s prominent reporting of murders and armed robberies etc, was reaching offshore investors who now had the “wrong impression that Trinidad and Tobago was in “crisis.”

They were thinking twice about bringing their money here. Again, I awaited the proof to sustain his theory. I was tempted to raise my hand and ask him to “name a company.” However, he was already on to his third and final observation, the most overused of clich?s: crime sold and that is why the press highlighted it so. While I was ready to admit that newspaper companies were as keen to sell their product as he was his, I would not concede that reporters delighted in trekking through blood, guts and brains, or inhaling death. Nor had I ever seen an editor toast a murder. I sank back into my comfortable chair. I felt weighed down by my new burden, the preservation of a tidy, happy TT. According to this man of commerce, the role of the press was to bury crime deeper in the papers than its victims were interred in the ground. That way, the country’s image was kept unstained, its children merry. Our responsibility as journalists was to engage in “constructive, positive” reporting. If we did not, Trinidad and Tobago would lose vital foreign currency and with it, possible employment.  However, worst of all, if we did not cease to write about crime, an entire generation of the nation’s children would be traumatised. But who were the children the businessman wanted insulated if not his and those of his friends? The headlines and images were not as traumatising to other young people because these lived among the crime and the daily carnage or they were too dead to be offended. But to keep his own brood on an even keel, the merchant wanted us to cast aside the chilling photographs of other dead youths. He expected the press to pretend that drug and gang-related deaths were not occurring, lie to readers, who the businessman assumed were all of his class, insulated in a rich fool’s paradise.

That was then. Now, a few years later, people of the same group as that businessman are shouting bloody kidnap. They were running to Whitehall everyday like chickens with their heads cut off with old proposals. “We want results now. We are in crisis!” cluck, cluck. I wanted to ask them, “What is that word, you are using?” ‘Crisis?’ Won’t the global village hear you? Isn’t the country still in need of the foreign dollars?” I also wondered why nowadays, there were no lectures on press responsibility from the business community, no demands that the press remove a single abduction from the front pages, not a condemnatory word about media sensationalism and greed. Ah, but wait, now. The kidnap victims weren’t ghetto youths. Kidnappers were mainly snatching the offspring of the affluent by the handful. We would not be asked to bury such news. Yet, what of the sensitivities of the poorer children who would never be abducted? Was the press not going to offend  these by placing the photos of young kidnap victims on our front pages? Should their parents not be protesting? If there had been any logic to that businessman’s argument years before, the conclusion to the last two questions would be “yes.” Fortunately, back then most of his audience concluded that his thesis was more self-serving than rational; and continued to alert the population to the spreading crime and its related violence. As we were now warning them about the growing number of kidnappings. Perhaps, years ago, people like that businessman and his friends should have paid heed to the press, instead of trying to silence us or lecture us about responsibility. It might have saved them a trip, or two, to Whitehall. And a whole lot of anguish.


Suzanne Mills is the Editor
of the daily Newsday.

Vision 2020 heading for a black hole

THE EDITOR: Vision 2020. Exploring the education system, looking at the institution of the family, examining all facets of our national life in order to make us a Total Quality nation by the year 2020. Does anyone remember the last five-year plan on education commissioned by a PNM government in 1992? I do, because I contributed to it as a representative of the Ministry of Education Central Guidance Unit. I’m not surprised if no one else recalls it for the simple reason that it was never put into practice or utilised in any way, except as a door-stopper somewhere in the Ministry. That five-year plan on education suggested that there be a national assessment examination for children at about age seven or eight. This was meant to identify possible learning difficulties as early as possible so that remedial work could begin. It became national standardised exams, putting an extra burden on teachers as they struggle to get through the curriculum for the exam and make sure that their children pass. That was never the point. But it does illustrate how well these plans are understood by the policy makers and how faithfully they are followed. Perhaps the education plan should have included functional literacy tests for all government Ministers and MPs.

What, then, is the point of Vision 2020? Its critics may say it has none. I beg to disagree. It has several aims:
1. It looks like the government is doing something. (Very important to distinguish this from actually doing something, which is not on the agenda). The sub-committees are likely to take some months to report, so it looks like the government is doing something at all times.
2. It silences all the critics of government policy, since all the people most likely to criticise will naturally be kept busy on the various sub-committees. If they refuse to participate, then clearly they can no longer be taken seriously since they only want to talk instead of doing anything concrete.
3. There are numerous wonderful photo-opportunities when all the plans are handed in — government looks efficient and businesslike, receiving important reports from national experts.

I am sure there are others, but these are the ones which spring most easily to mind. The shame of it is that many, many people will volunteer their time and expertise, only to see the whole thing disappear into a black hole at the end. And the tragedy of it is that some of our most helpless citizens, the children, continue to suffer, while this self-serving, cynical, public relations exercise takes place. I am reminded of a character in one of Charles Dickens’ novels, Bleak House. This lady was a volunteer for all kinds of worthy causes involving the poor in far-off lands — but she completely neglected her own home and family. Her beautiful eyes were always gazing into the distance. I don’t know if anyone in our government has beautiful eyes, but I would recommend they use the ones they have, read the reports which already exist on so many of the issues to be covered in Vision 2020, and actually start implementing.
Save us all a lot of wasted time and effort.

KAREN MOORE
Champs Fleurs

Arnim smith clashes with police

UNC Senator Arnim Smith put up strong opposition to the manner in which he was treated during a roadblock in Curepe on Friday night. According to police officers conducting the roadblock along the Southern Main Road, Curepe, Smith refused to slow down his silver Yaris vehicle at their request. Smith believes that he was targetted by the officers who found a 9 mm semi-automatic handgun in the glove compartment of the car. “I feeling like I was singled out!” declared the irate Smith. He turned to the media who were covering the police exercise, gesticulated and ex-claimed: “Take my picture, I am UNC Senator Arnim Smith! Let the people know that the police are jostling me here.” When Smith learned that ACP Crime Oswyn Allard was in the vicinity he shouted, “Where Allard? I going to talk to Allard!” “They want to search me like a criminal, what they want me to do, drop my pants,” said Smith to Allard. Allard was able to pacify the incensed Senator who then furnished the licence for the handgun along with the insurance for his vehicle. Smith’s woes continued as he was unable to find his car keys following the short ordeal.

He had to return home to acquire a spare key. Numerous efforts to contact Smith yesterday for comment proved futile. UNC Senator Wade Mark did however state that he had no problem with the police carrying out their duties but thought that there was a deliberate attempt to humiliate Smith. Mark added that the party would be writing to the Acting Commissioner of Police regarding the matter and are not ruling out the possibility of legal action. Smith was caught up in a police exercise which ended along the Southern Main Road, Curepe. Media personnel were called upon to join the patrol and witness the intricacies of numerous police searches in the Lower Laventille, Morvant and Curepe areas. The desire of reporters, photographers and cameramen to “see the real action” was met by a relatively uneventful night. There were however some highlights which included the arrest of a soldier on Indepen-dence Square for the use of obscene language, the voracious protest of Smith and a vicious barrage of mosquito bites at a roadblock along the Priority Bus Route. When asked about the inconvenience caused by activities such as roadblocks Allard said, “I would like to appeal to the country, I hope that you will be patient with us, as these exercises are intended for your own safety.”