Akash Samaroo
Lead Editor-Politics
akash.sama[email protected]
While the Parliament of Trinidad and Tobago was informed that Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar would engage in one-on-one discussions with United States President Donald Trump at the recently concluded Shield of the Americas Summit, it now appears that the interaction was not a formal closed-door meeting but rather “an engagement” just before the official photo opportunity.
On Friday, on the eve of the summit, Minister in the Office of the Prime Minister, Nicholas Morris told the Lower House, “Mr Speaker, the Honourable Prime Minister will have one-on-one discussions with the United States President Donald Trump, as well as senior officials in his administration, including Secretary of State Marco Rubio, United States Trade Representative Jameson Greer, and Secretary of Energy Chris Wright.”
Images posted on Saturday on the Prime Minister’s Facebook page showed bilateral meetings with Secretary Chris Wright and United States Trade Representative Jamieson Greer.
The Prime Minister also met Trinidadian-born rapper and avid Trump supporter Nicki Minaj. However, apart from a video showing President Donald Trump welcoming Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar ahead of the official “family photo” with other invited leaders, no images or video indicated that a private meeting took place with the US President.
Responding to questions from Guardian Media during the Summit on Saturday, Foreign and Caricom Affairs Minister Sean Sobers was asked if the “one-on-one” meeting took place.
“That would have been a private meeting with the heads at the beginning of this morning’s engagement.”
Asked if the two leaders were in a room alone, Minister Sobers said, “Well, when they would have met, there was an individual meeting engagement, and then they moved on to have the photo session. President Trump had individual engagements with each leader, and then they went on to have the photo session.”
Attempts to get clarity from Minister Morris were futile.
Guardian Media waited outside the Trump National Doral Hotel, the venue for the summit, in hopes of questioning the Prime Minister about the highly anticipated “one-on-one” discussions with President Trump. However, after a seven-hour wait, the Prime Minister and her entourage drove past without stopping or acknowledging the presence of T&T media representatives.
All questions sent via WhatsApp, her preferred mode of communication, also went unanswered.
Similarly, Public Utilities Minister Barry Padarath, who was part of the delegation, did not respond to questions sent to him about the Summit.
Only Minister Sobers took time in between meetings on Saturday to speak briefly with reporters via a telephone.
Guardian Media understands that shortly after delivering his remarks, President Trump left the venue. This would have been around 1.30 pm.
Meanwhile, Kamla Persad-Bissessar left around 8 pm.
While the Summit was addressed by President Trump and Secretaries Hegseth and Rubio, no other invited head of state or government was provided an opportunity to bring remarks on behalf of their country.
There was also no joint press briefing following the announcement of the Americas Counter Cartel Coalition (ACCC).
The coalition is designed to operationalise “hard power” to dismantle drug cartels and transnational criminal organisations across the Western Hemisphere.
Questions remain about what the agreement will mean in practice, particularly how T&T will treat suspected drug runners, and whether it will fully embrace the US military’s controversial “shoot-first” approach, which human rights organisations have criticised as amounting to extrajudicial killings.
The government, through Defence Minister Wayne Sturge, recently issued a formal statement calling on the media and the Opposition to temper their questions regarding sensitive national security matters.
He added that the government is legally empowered to refuse to answer them.