Senior Reporter
Opposition Senator Faris Al-Rawi is questioning why Homeland Security Minister Roger Alexander appears to be relying on a list from the United States to identify individuals allegedly involved in drug trafficking and organised crime in Trinidad and Tobago.
Speaking at an Opposition media conference in Port-of-Spain yesterday, Al-Rawi said that while intelligence-sharing with the US is routine, it raises serious questions if the Government does not already possess similar information through its own security and intelligence networks.
His comments follow a newspaper report stating that the US had shared a list of individuals suspected of involvement in drug trafficking, cartel activity, illegal firearms and violent crime with Alexander.
“You mean to tell me that Roger Alexander, after three periods of emergency, two states of emergency, does not have a list of his own supplied to him by the Commissioner of Police?” Al-Rawi asked.
He further contended that during previous states of emergency, law enforcement authorities detained several individuals identified as gang leaders, suggesting that the Trinidad and Tobago Police Service already has intelligence on organised criminal networks.
“If they were detained, the reason in the detention orders is that they were gang leaders,” Al-Rawi said. “So you mean to tell me Roger Alexander didn’t have that list?”
The former attorney general also raised the issue of Alexander’s past work as a defence attorney, questioning whether that history could create complications in dealing with individuals he may have previously represented.
Al-Rawi also said intelligence lists from foreign partners are not unusual, noting that during his tenure as attorney general, he regularly received information from the US concerning suspected terrorists and other individuals flagged under international security frameworks.
He pointed to longstanding intelligence cooperation between T&T and US agencies such as the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Drug Enforcement Administration and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.
However, he questioned the structure of national security oversight in T&T, pointing out that under the Strategic Services Agency Act, the minister responsible for national security is supposed to oversee the country’s intelligence agency.
According to Al-Rawi, that responsibility currently falls under Attorney General John Jeremie rather than Alexander.
He urged members of the media to question whether US authorities are directly sharing intelligence with Alexander and, if not, why that might be the case.
He also asked if intelligence information is being shared with Minister of Defence Wayne Sturge.
Al-Rawi further questioned why Alexander was not involved in discussions linked to the “Shield of the Americas” initiative, saying the minister responsible for homeland security should be central to international efforts to combat organised crime.
“If we are taking the fight against criminality in Trinidad and Tobago seriously, how on God’s earth could we be leaving out Roger Alexander?” he asked.