There have been mixed reactions from past and present politicians to the second State of Emergency implemented by the United National Congress (UNC) Government in the 11 months it has been in office.
This follows Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar’s early morning announcement yesterday of the new SoE.
A previous SoE announced by her Government in July 2025—and extended last September—ended January 31, 2026. Then, the Prime Minister had warned criminal gangs and detainees held and released when the measure ended that if they couldn’t behave themselves, she would have no hesitation in declaring another SoE.
Yesterday, former minister Vasant Bharath knocked the development.
“Another SoE, another round of hopeless justifications. This has become a Government by perpetual emergency. Another suspension of normalcy dressed up as ‘decisive leadership’,” he said.
“The declaration is less a tool of last resort and more a confession that the Government has no plan to deal with crime, never had, and this is simply a statement of abject failure. An SoE doesn’t signal strength or strategic mastery. It’s an admission that the ordinary instruments of governance, i.e., intelligence, policing, prosecution, and prevention, have all failed- the political equivalent of pulling the fire alarm because you never bothered to install smoke detectors.”
Bharath added, “This is especially damning given the lofty promises made on the campaign trail. It’s totally contrary to the Prime Minister’s bold, audacious statements at Caricom that ‘American military action in the Caribbean caused the murder rate to decline by 42 per cent’. Have they departed? Has the radar been removed? The UNC spent 10 years in opposition criticising from the sidelines, insisting they had all the answers, only to reach office and default to emergency rule.”
Slamming the UNC on what he called failed, feeble crime control attempts, Bharath said, “Communities remain trapped between gangs and grief. Mothers bury sons. Small businesses close earlier. Citizens alter life in quiet surrender to fear.
“A SoE may temporarily suppress symptoms, but it doesn’t treat the disease. Crime networks adapt. Illicit economies mutate. Without deep structural reform of policing, border control, social intervention, judicial efficiency, and anti-corruption mechanisms, the cycle simply resets. This Government, which promised readiness, seems startled by reality. Emergency powers are being normalised because long-term planning seems beyond them. Citizens are asked to trade civil liberties for security without evidence that this trade will yield results.”
Bharath said emergency powers must be rare, targeted, and time-bound.
“They cannot become governance by reflex. The population deserves more than crisis management... declaring another SoE may project urgency, but urgency without strategy is panic - a nation cannot be governed on panic.”
Congress of the People chairman Lonsdale Williams said, “Having not been able to have the Special Operation Zones Legislation passed, the Government may have been left with no choice but to reinstate an SoE. However, the SoE could have been limited to Trinidad, as Tobago will surely experience some negative tourism-related responses to this new declaration.
“We look forward to more innovative approaches going forward, including improved employment rates that might serve as mitigating the increase in the overall rates of crime,” Williams added.
COP leader Prakash Ramadhar said he would speak on the issue at a future media briefing.
Former police commissioner and national security minister Gary Griffith says while he never saw SoEs as a crime-fighting tool, the Prime Minister had no choice but to institute one to save lives, and she did the correct thing.
He said this was necessary if people lacked the capability, systems and 21st-century expertise in policing to operate innovatively “out of the box,” since that is what’s needed. Griffith detailed the measures and systems that were in place from 2014 to 2015, when an SoE wasn’t needed.
“This commissioner, over the last year, we have seen no policies, no programmes, no units, no technology, no high visibility, no rapid response,” Griffith said.
“So, while people are criticising the SoE now, the Prime Minister has done the correct thing for T&T, “he added.
National Trade Union Centre general secretary Michael Annisette said, “We in NATUC note the declaration of a state of Public Emergency by the Prime Minister in response to the recent surge in violent crime. We unequivocally condemn criminal activities and support lawful measures aimed at protecting citizens, including members of the protective services, who continue to face serious threats in the execution of their duties.
“We view crime as a serious national issue that requires not only enforcement but sustained social and economic strategies, and that national security and civil liberties remain balanced in the interest of all citizens.”