Former Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley has criticised the proposed Zones of Special Operations legislation and taken issue with recent comments made by Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar, warning that the rhetoric and the law itself could deepen division and undermine the rights of law abiding citizens.
In a Facebook post, Rowley reacted to public comments surrounding the proposed legislation and said similar remarks would not have been accepted if he had made them while in office.
“If I had said anything nearly as offensive and arrogant as what Kamla recently said, everyone in this country would have known not to accept that from the Prime Minister. I am proud of that fact. It confirms to me that I was held to a higher standard and I am satisfied that I met those standards!”
Rowley’s comments followed remarks by Persad-Bissessar on X, where she criticised opponents of the Zones of Special Operations Bill.
“Over the past few days, during commentary on the Zones of Special Operations Bill, the country has witnessed a parade of weak men and women opposing the Bill, whose only apparent goal is the defence of violent criminals.
It is astonishing how the PNM and pseudo ‘independent’ groups have suddenly discovered a manufactured sense of humanity to defend criminals and gangsters. They say nothing about the crime, robberies, rapes, murders, and brutal home invasions that have plagued the country for the past decade. They also remain silent on the dehumanising treatment endured by victims of crime.”
Rowley argued that the justification being advanced for the legislation was inappropriate in Trinidad and Tobago’s social context.
“These arguments to justify their dangerous legislation to be promulgated in this uneasy multi racial, multi ethnic society is not an appropriate crime fighting tool.”
He also raised concerns about the powers the law would grant to law enforcement officers and the absence of parliamentary oversight.
“To stigmatize communities and removal of the entrenched rights of the law abiding at the behest of Officers without Parliamentary oversight is not what one expects from a Government that is prepared to do its job of going at the lawbreakers without trampling on those who are law abiding.”
Rowley warned that the application of the law could have serious consequences.
“Given the divisive politics and the suspicious nature of so many it may very well turn out that the justification of ‘ fighting crime ‘ might not be enough to manage the fallout when the law is applied. The unsupervised authority will breed abuse and resentment and all that flows.”