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Gangs, prisons and murders - Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

Once again, the conditions, gangs, frustrations and public concerns over our prison system have arisen, this time triggered by the fatal shootings of prison officers and a reported “hit list.” Deputy Commissioner of Police McDonald Jacob said several people were being questioned regarding these two fatal shootings.

Prison Officers Association (POA) secretary Lester Walcott, declared last Tuesday: “Whatever we are doing is not working. We have a mandate to deal with high-risk, some of the most dangerous persons within a prison system who have far-reaching hands.”

POA president Ceron Richards said the association has had numerous meetings with “several ministers of national security and the attorney general in different governments but none yielded any results.” Richards now insists on meeting the National Security Council chairman, the Prime Minister.

Meanwhile Prison Commissioner Dennis Pulchan gave the assurance that his officers had controlled the recent protests at the Wayne Jackson Building (Building 13) and everything was "back to normal.”

Prisoners had been protesting the abuse, restrictions and conditions in this building. Pulchan denied officers abused prisoners, also denying prisoners were not fed, given spoilt meals, not allowed to bathe or get fresh air, etc.

”Propaganda is the tool of terrorists,” he said.

He admitted, however, that some officers smuggle cell phones and other items into the prison walls, a challenge, he said, he is seriously attending to.

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Protests inside our prisons are nothing new. However, murdering prison officers inside or outside the prisons is a very serious matter. Why is this done, especially if allegedly done by or engineered by prisoners?

POA secretary Walcott added: “Most of them who are in Building 13 are leaders and heads of gangs and posing a direct threat as a means to gain some kind of control or sway National Security to move them out of certain situations.”

This country already has a growing gang problem. Putting gang members in jail or in remand yard ironically helps consolidate, even institutionalise the enterprise. Where present, complicity by prison or police officers is dangerous, mainly because of their complexity in membership, structure and purpose, gangs present authorities with very formidable challenges.

Numerous reports on “prison transformation” by previous prison commissioners (eg Cipriani Baptiste) and the bulk of other recommendations have repeatedly fallen by the wayside or enjoy shelf space. In a Facebook revelation last Wednesday, former justice minister Herbert Volney, regretting long trial delays for remand inmates, recalled how his Cabinet proposal “for four state-of-the-art judicial centres with 28 special criminal courts failed to materialise.” Another former UNC minister, Stephen Cadiz, last week recalled how the 2020 promises of gang reduction and prison reform by Attorney General Faris al-Rawi also failed to materialise.

Gangs are dangerous to

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