Wakanda News Details

Pepper spray = false security - Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

To my huge disappointment, the bill to legalise pepper spray was passed in the Senate with no votes against.

The only sensible reflection I heard in the Senate debate, and it was an aside, was that we could use our potent scorpion peppers to become exporters/manufacturers of pepper spray.

So, sadly, TT is on its way to yet another instrument of violence circulating in the community.

There is a lot of worrisome misunderstanding around the subject of self-protection amongst our lawmakers and we, the women, whom they are all so keen to protect, are even more endangered by their myopia. Firstly, having a gun or any lethal weapon does not necessarily prevent a woman being maimed, raped, kidnapped or killed.

In fact, it could produce just the opposite. Introducing a lethal weapon in a dangerous situation only ups the ante. We might stand a better chance of salvation without the provision of such a tool for an easy kill at the end of some gruesome torture. A woman might be able to fight off a strangulation or act of physical violence, but not a weapon wielded by a frenzied or scared male attacker.

Maybe the thinking is that all assailants are heavily armed but, happily, that is still not so.

Furthermore, the idea that pepper spray is in good hands because a woman has acquired it, even after some arduous bureaucratic process, is totally erroneous. There is nothing to prevent it being stolen, illegally sold, loaned, misused or even turned against the owner.

One independent senator complained in last week's debate that pepper spray was being treated almost as if it were a lethal weapon. Well, although it won't kill you on the spot, it can result in death, which is why it is banned in many countries. In the UK, under a section of their Firearms Act, citizens are banned from its ownership, carrying, importing, and use. Contravention leads to arrest and a subsequent criminal record, and even deportation.

The European Union, as a body, does not regulate pepper spray, leaving member countries free to regulate it individually. Belgium, Denmark, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Norway, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Sweden and Turkey prohibit its use. France, Italy, Spain, Germany and Russia allow it under licence, but its use may constitute an assault, simply because it is a very harmful weapon.

I read that even in the USA, with its gun-loving, wild west mentality, although pepper spray can be legally purchased and carried in all 50 states as a form of self-defence, some states regulate the maximum allowed strength and restrict age, content and use. In California, it is a criminal offence to use pepper spray against another person out of anger or in a way that is not considered self-defence, and can attract a fine and/or up to three years in prison.

Typically, the spray is derived from very strong pepper that is dispensed from a hand-held canister and can reach up to four metres. It affects the eyes by causing severe pain and forces them shut, leavin

You may also like

More from Home - Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

Black Sands Animated Trailer: Ultimate Battle

Facts About Women