Senior Reporter
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Homeland Security Minister Roger Alexander says most of the homicides recorded for the year thus far were not gang-related or carefully planned attacks, but random arguments and domestic disputes.
He therefore urged the public to exercise restraint and walk away from potentially dangerous situations for their own safety and the safety of others.
The murder toll stood at 203 yesterday morning, compared to 212 for the same period last year.
Speaking with Guardian Media during the launch of a barbering course for young men at his El Dorado Road, Tunapuna constituency office, Alexander reported that while this year’s murder toll was still trending below the previous year’s, the margin was smaller.
He added that given the nature of arguments as a motive for murder, it was difficult for the police to predict and formulate strategies to prevent violence that could happen randomly, arguing that continuous, community-level engagements aimed at anger management were critical to making a meaningful change in these categories of murders.
“We want people to understand and respect the lives of others. De-escalation is an important part of the process. There are things you can de-escalate,” Alexander said.
“Not because you and a man are in a bar and you all fall out, it means it has to go to violence. You can buy a beer for me, I can buy a beer for you and we can move on with our lives.”
Alexander noted that while the authorities were monitoring this trend in murders, engagement through various community resources, including conflict resolution and anger management programmes, were being utilised.
The trend Alexander was referring to was first reported during a police town hall meeting in St Augustine by head of the North-Central Division Snr Supt Vernly Gift, who noted that while murders in his district were among the highest of all ten police divisions, they were largely due to arguments, with many of the victims being visitors to the region and not residents.
Gift also recommended interventions from the Tunapuna Police Station Council with mediation and community justice clinics, to offer residents an alternate means of dispute resolution.
Since the beginning of the State of Emergency (SoE), which was declared on March 3, 2026, several purported underworld figures were targeted using Preventive Detention Orders (PDOs), which were credited with the dismantling of criminal organisations responsible for murders through prolonged gang warfare.
However, while the number of mass shootings appears to have dropped, violent crimes—including murders—remained a challenge to law enforcement.