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No Paria, no one gets left behind - Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

THE EDITOR: The testimony of Paria managers on Wednesday at the Commission of Enquiry into the deaths of the four divers was difficult to watch for many reasons, and it no doubt would take an emotional toll on a nation already traumatised by the daily bloodshed that seems to be occurring all around us.

But what was also revealing to me was that this is the very reason why trained individuals are needed at the helm, individuals who have proper leadership qualities to make the right decisions when these situations occur.

What is clear as well is that not only did we have untrained civilians making life-and-death decisions, they were starved of operational information because of decisions by those who are ultimately responsible, the ones who shut down the National Operations Centre, which was designed and built, at great cost to taxpayers, for situations just like this.

Additionally, while it may be understandable for a civilian to defer from risking lives, the very nature and ethos of members of the protective services and the defence force are to train to acquire the skills to do just that.

This is why during the 1990 attempted coup I saw my fellow soldiers eagerly answer the call to face the enemies of democracy, this is why on a daily basis the brave men and women of the TTPS, who I had the honour of leading, face the criminal elements - often armed with high-powered weapons - and, while civilians scramble to run away from gunfire, the officers run in the direction of gunfire.

Not gung-ho or having a death wish, members of the protective services know that while their decision to join the services increases exposure to risk, their training helps to mitigate against it. And while that is ever present in the minds of these heroes, the concept of "no man left behind" is etched in the DNA of those who answer that call to serve. This is why I am convinced, if given the chance, some would have volunteered to risk their own lives to rescue the divers.

So while heroes are built differently, so too are cowards. Cowards dismantle and shut down the National Operations Centre for political reasons. They thrust ill-equipped civilians into dreadful situations, hiding in the background, shirking their responsibility. They take vacation while the country is experiencing its bloodiest year ever. They play golf with celebrities while the country is in the full grasp of criminals, and they hide away in their palaces while hundreds of thousands of citizens are being negatively affected by floods.

GARY GRIFFITH

political leader, NTA

The post No Paria, no one gets left behind appeared first on Trinidad and Tobago Newsday.

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