Senior Reporter
As tears of joy and relief streamed down their faces while they embraced detainees released from the Eastern Correctional Rehabilitation Centre (ECRC), Santa Rosa, yesterday, relatives blasted the authorities as they argued there was no justification for the State of Emergency (SoE).
Heavily criticising the Government and security agencies for their actions over the past six months, several people described it as “totally disruptive,” “unwarranted,” and “a total failure.”
A mother who arrived at the ECRC from as early as 9 am, anxiously waiting for her son to emerge, could barely speak as she wiped tears and said, “It is not justifiable.”
An elderly couple who travelled from their home in Fyzabad to collect their 25-year-old son wept openly as they hugged each other tightly.
Scores of anxious people lined Pinto Road 3, which leads to the ECRC, from as early as 7 am, following the instructions of heavily armed police and prison officials.
All visitors and vehicles were thoroughly searched, while a sniffer dog was also used as part of the security blanket.
Marked and unmarked police vehicles were also stationed at traffic intersections along both sides of the Churchill Roosevelt Highway, as police kept watch.
A total of 85 people, including several females, were scheduled to be released ahead of the expiration of the SoE at midnight yesterday.
A total of 32 detainees were released on Friday.
Police Commissioner Allister Guevarro confirmed that 117 were to be released, of the 151 that had been detained via the Preventive Detention Order (PDO).
Relatives of one of the detainees who arrived at the ECRC and had spent hours waiting to be called by prison officials and directed to drive up and collect their loved one were left disappointed after being told he was to be charged and would not be released into their custody.
Police officers from the Port-of-Spain Division also arrived at the ECRC around 11 am to collect one of the detainees to be charged, following which they took him from the prison and left in a convoy.
It was not known who that detainee was, nor were any relatives who lined the road informed.
A wife waiting on her husband, who had been detained for the past two months, said, “It was just so very hard. It wasn’t a nice thing at all.”
A woman said she waited in the hot sun for her 30-year-old son, questioned, “After all of this... you lock up people family, where people going after this?”
“You lock up people family for this period of time and then just release them... ‘sorry’, that’s what you go say. They saying they want to keep the peace, and I ain’t saying no, cause I am a law-abiding citizen. But I am the mother of only sons, and I does install the correct things in my sons, but I know my son was here. I don’t know for what reason, but all glory goes to God.”
The mother of a 28-year-old man from Gonzales, who had been nabbed by police as he walked to a nearby shop and had been detained for the past six months, revealed the difficulties she had endured as a result.
“My blood pressure went high. I couldn’t sleep comfortable. I wasn’t feeling good and ended up in the hospital cause this is the son who does really stand up with me. He is the only one who does help me and take care of me.”
A female relative of one of the detainees said he was picked up at the beginning of December, taken from his home, whilst being told investigations were underway.
“He got a glimpse of the paper, but it didn’t state he was being arrested for anything to do with any particular crime or a person of interest. They just said they believe he was a possible threat to the public and for that reason, he was being held.”
Indicating the family had been forced to step in and provide financial and emotional support for the detainee’s girlfriend, who gave birth shortly after he was held and pay his loans and rent, the woman said, “It is a relief he is coming out but it is also a burden.”
Asked if she felt the SoE was warranted and could be justified, she emphatically replied, “No!”
“I think it was totally unfair.”
To the authorities, she said, “You disrupted hundreds of lives. This is just ridiculous. I wanted to be a police officer, and the only thing I didn’t do was the final interview because I got my dream job.”