Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
07PORTOFSPAIN138
2007-02-08 17:54:00
UNCLASSIFIED
Embassy Port Of Spain
Cable title:  

AMID THE TRAGEDY OF CRIME AND VIOLENCE IN T&T, A TROUBLED

Tags:  PGOV PTER PHUM KCRM TD 
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UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 03 PORT OF SPAIN 000138 

SIPDIS

SIPDIS

DEPT FOR WHA/CAR

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PGOV PTER PHUM KCRM TD
SUBJECT: AMID THE TRAGEDY OF CRIME AND VIOLENCE IN T&T, A TROUBLED
POLICE FORCE

REF:

UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 03 PORT OF SPAIN 000138

SIPDIS

SIPDIS

DEPT FOR WHA/CAR

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PGOV PTER PHUM KCRM TD
SUBJECT: AMID THE TRAGEDY OF CRIME AND VIOLENCE IN T&T, A TROUBLED
POLICE FORCE

REF:


1.(SBU) SUMMARY: The arrest of T&T businessman Inshan Ishmael
apparently on an initial charge under the Anti-Terrorism Act, for
distributing unlawfully printed leaflets, has at best deepened the
public's cynicism toward the police and at worst led to allegations
of dictatorship and repression of the people's fundamental rights
and freedoms. At the same time, public concern with the level of
crime and violence is verging on hysteria, particularly following
some high-profile murders and kidnappings. The belated decision of
the police to declare all-out war on the criminals, only after one
of its own was brutally murdered, has added to the public's cynicism
and frustration and to some confusion as to which is worse: a
do-nothing police or a police that shoots first and asks questions
later. END SUMMARY.


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"WHAT A JOKE?"
--------------

2.(U) On January 23, a squad of some four or five police vehicles
with a sizeable number of officers reportedly descended on the home
of Indo-Trinidadian Inshan Ishmael and hauled him off to a police
station for 15 hours of interrogation which included a
strip-down-naked body search. In the press, Ishmael has been
variously described as a businessman, a social activist, radio
broadcaster and TV talk-show host on Trinidad and Tobago's new
Islamic TV channel.

3.(U) Throughout January, Ishmael had mounted a national campaign
to have businesses and other organizations "shut down" on January 25
and 26. The "shutdown" which was largely observed in Central, a
heavily Indo-Trinidadian area, was intended as a very visible
protest designed to rally government and public to the fight against
the tide of crime and violence sweeping the country. Yet, according
to Ishmael's lawyer, Ishmael was initially charged with violating
the Anti-Terrorism Act, a statute which carries a minimum penalty of
20 years imprisonment. Whether this is an accurate account of what
motivated the contingent of police to make the arrest, the charge
was ultimately downgraded to a simple misdemeanor violation of the
regulation governing the distribution of handbills, a very minor

offense which normally goes unheeded by the authorities.

4.(U) By all accounts, Inshan Ishmael, a Muslim and apparently a
member of Winston Dookeran's recently-created opposition Congress of
the People (COP) party, has never demonstrated any terrorist
leanings and does not have a history of incitement to violence.
Following in the tradition of peaceful democratic protest, he
distributed leaflets and pamphlets advocating for the "shutdown."
In addition, Ishmael urged the public to attend a mass rally against
crime, at a suburban Port of Spain venue, scheduled for January 27.
The permit for use of the venue was subsequently revoked by the
local council which is controlled by the ruling People's National
Movement (PNM),allegedly for political reasons.

5.(U) Without exception, editors and political commentators blasted
the police for its "keystone cops"-type behavior. "What a joke,"
screamed one headline; "The wrong message sent" was the more sober
assessment of a high-powered lawyer and Independent Senator in a
guest editorial. Some analysts went so far as to accuse the
government of instigating Ishmael's arrest. However, in the face of
such stinging rebuke, the government quickly distanced itself from
any implied link with the arrest, in the hope that any subsequent
court proceedings over the misdemeanor charge would bring an end to
the matter.

6.(U) The opposition political parties saw even more sinister
motives behind the Ishmael arrest. First Winston Dookeran,
Political Leader of the COP, and then Kamla Persad-Bissessar,
Parliamentary Opposition Leader of the United National Congress
(UNC),sought meetings with President George Maxwell Richards. They
complained to him of a creeping dictatorship in the country and
increasing repression by the Government of the people's fundamental
political freedoms and human rights. Although they asked him to
intervene, Richards has taken no action so far.

-------------- --
CRESCENDO OF CONCERN OVER CONTINUING HIGH CRIME
-------------- --

7.(U) Public concern over crime has risen sharply during the past
two months, spurred by a number of high-profile murders and
kidnappings. In December, Vindra Naipaul Coolman, Chief Executive
Officer of the Xtra Foods Supermarket Chain, was violently kidnapped
for ransom and has yet to be found dead or alive, while Burt
Allette, a local councillor representing the PNM, was brutally
murdered. Then, in January, heavily armed and well protected gunmen

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burst into the home of Police Constable Elizabeth Sutherland and
executed her, her husband, her daughter and a family friend with
bullets to the back of the head. At the same time, the newspapers
carried lengthy interviews with women who had been kidnapped and
lived to recount their experience of unimaginable pain and physical
and psychological outrages perpetrated against them.

8.(U) In the past, editorial writers and news analysts have tended
to attribute the vast majority of the 368 murders committed in 2006
and the 29 murders committed so far in 2007 to nothing more than
"inter-gang warfare." However, even they were forced to modify
their assumptions, in the face of the particularly senseless and
horrendous murder of an elderly middle-class couple in their home,
on January 30. This seemingly endless spree of violence has been
accompanied by a crescendo of editorial criticism as well as public
concern expressed in letters to the editor and in man-on-the-street
interviews by the electronic media.

--------------
THE POLICE AND GOVERNMENT RESPONSE
--------------

9.(U) It is becoming more and more evident that the execution-style
murder of Police Constable Elizabeth Sutherland may have triggered
an attitude-change in the Police toward what the public views as an
unacceptable murder rate. Immediately after Sutherland's killing,
Police Commissioner Trevor Paul declared an "all-out war against the
criminals," and, as if to demonstrate that he meant business,
police, just hours later, killed Tor John, a suspect in the
Sutherland murder, in an alleged shootout, even though John was
apparently killed from behind and had no traces of gunpowder on him,
which might have indicated that he had fired at the police.

10.(U) Most recently, on February 2, police officers, again alleging
a shootout with criminals, killed four suspects in one fell swoop.
Subsequently, it emerged that at least two of the suspects were
known gang members wanted by the police on at least 20 counts of
murder, and that they had actually been tried on two occasions but
escaped conviction because witnesses failed to show up to testify
against them. Asked to comment on the incident, Commissioner Paul
said: "if the police find themselves in situations (with criminals)
which require a response in a way that could result in someone's
death, then so be it!" Increasing citizen support for such strong
measures parallels the public's outrage at the audacity of the
criminal element. On February 6, a businessman, who had been
kidnapped and robbed in 2005 and was scheduled t testify in court
against his attackers, was murered in his furniture store by three
men who walked in, calmly executed him and drove away.

11.(U) There is a clear impression of growing Government frustration
with its own inability to control crime. One indication is that, in
recent statements, Prime Minister Patrick Manning, Minister of
National Security Martin Joseph and Minister of Trade and Industry
Kenneth Valley have all attempted to focus the public's mind on the
fact that crime is a global problem and not one that afflicts
Trinidad and Tobago alone. There has also been a tendency to spread
the perception that crime-fighting is "everybody's business" and to
blame the public for not assuming its share of the load.
Accordingly, in a new televised public service announcement
sponsored by the Ministry of National Security, the narrator
shamelessly tells the viewers: "We are doing our part," and then
calls on them to "now please do yours." But perhaps the best
illustration of the country's frustration and its search for answers
is that it recently turned for salvation to Trinidadian-American
citizen Choc'late Allen, a precocious 13-year-old girl who is
unusually articulate and has a well-developed social conscience. As
she sat, fasting against crime in the lobby of the National Library,
a stream of citizens came by to greet her and draw inspiration from
her, including none other than Prime Minister Manning, UNC
opposition leader Persad-Bissessar and many other luminaries.

12.(SBU) COMMENT: It is widely recognized, even within Government
and police circles, that the police service is in dire need of
technical training, more vehicles and even protective vests for all
officers; that the police might have a better chance of defeating
the criminals if there were more officers on the beat; that
adequate crime-fighting legislation is sorely lacking, such as
legislation to permit the use of DNA evidence (recently laid by the
Government before Parliament) as well as court-authorized
wire-tapping; and that the police service would benefit from
stronger support on the part of what is currently a dysfunctional
judicial system. However, the arrest of Inshan Ishmael and the
immediate response of the police to the killing of Constable
Elizabeth Sutherland demonstrate that what is perhaps in shortest
supply at the highest reaches of the police service is sound
leadership. Such leadership would have called a halt to the Ishmael
arrest before it ever got underway, and would have recognized that
to arrest someone on a terrorism charge simply for exercising his
democratic rights is to make a mockery of democracy and to devalue

PORT OF SP 00000138 003 OF 003


the seriousness of terrorism at the same time. The police service
cries out for leadership that would have declared war on the
criminals years ago, leadership that is attuned to the public
relations consequences of its actions and leadership that is able to
see the police as the public sees it, cynically, and not merely
through the prism of its own narrow self-interest. END COMMENT.


SWEENEY