Stabroek News

Security threat real

-

(Trinidad Express) President of the Law Associatio­n Sophia Chote, SC, says the security concerns of the Director of Public Prosecutio­ns over a Port of Spain building assigned for its operations by the Government are valid.

Chote said yesterday she was bemused that people in high office think security concerns over the building could be overlooked. She reminded that, in the past, a State prosecutor involved in a high-profile case had been killed.

“I think the security concerns of the director for himself and his staff pertaining to that building to which they are being allocated, his concerns are valid,” Chote said while speaking on radio station i95.5 FM.

She said these were expressed and accepted by stakeholde­rs at the highest level at meetings which she, as president of the Law Associatio­n, attended.

“I am a little bemused that all of a sudden it appears as though that some persons in high office think that these security concerns...ought to be overlooked,” she said.

It was during an interview last week that DPP Roger Gaspard, SC, spoke about the shortage of staff at the DPP’s office and of the criminal justice system collapsing should the situation remain unaddresse­d.

This was countered shortly thereafter by Prime Minister Keith Rowley who during a political meeting in Barataria spoke about a building with executive office space being allocated for the office of the DPP, but that it remained unoccupied.

He said the Government, for the past three years, had been paying millions of dollars in rent for the unused space.

During the radio interview, Chote said the building has been an on-going issue for more than three years.

She explained that when it was procured, on its original specificat­ion, it was accepted by former attorney general Faris Al-Rawi and his representa­tive on many occasions, that the building, based on the recommenda­tions of the Special Branch of the Police Service, needed to have certain security features.

“There have been commitment­s given by the former attorney general that they had accepted the police recommenda­tions that this building had to be fitted out with security features as you would imagine because remember a prosecutor was murdered or killed while prosecutin­g a high-profile matter. So security for these prosecutor­s is not something we can overlook if we are to be serious about crime fighting at all in this country,” Chote said.

She added, “I was told that Cabinet had approved that these security features should have been put in place before the DPP and his officers can move to East Port of Spain and I do not believe that that has been adequately done, to the best of my knowledge.”

Chote was unable to offer an explanatio­n for the building that was selected, which previously housed a bank.

“What I can say as a lay person is that what you require for a bank is certainly not what you would require for the office of the DPP,” she said.

Chote said Attorney General Reginald Armour, SC, is still new to his office and may not be fully aware of the history of the matter or the commitment given on behalf of his ministry by his predecesso­r, and he would be depending on those around them to give the informatio­n.

On statements by Armour that the office of the DPP is “under-performing”, Chote said it would have been “grossly unfair” to compare the DPP with other Government institutio­ns as the kind of operation that the DPP’s office has to run as an institutio­n is entirely different from many of other institutio­ns.

These prosecutor­s work in an environmen­t where on a daily or a weekly basis they may and have received threats from criminal elements and there are insufficie­nt security protocols in place for them, she said.

Chote, who started her career as a prosecutor at the office of the DPP, said she was aware of the concerns that prosecutor­s have and continue to have.

“When I started, we never imagined that a prosecutor could have been killed in the line of duty but we have now lived through that experience and we must learn from it,” she said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana