There is a constant call - amid the outrageous and macabre
developments of recent days, month, and years - to avoid an irresistible urge
to yield to fear and a sense of diminished hope on questions of social peace,
cohesion, and calm.
For certain, the impact of fear can contribute to the
undermining of the confidence and resilience required to advance any country’s
development agenda.
But it is clearly inadvisable to suggest that fear can be
seamlessly and elastically enjoined to statistical performance or gratuitous
expressions of political assurance. Things just do not work that way.
You see, the minute fear is casually dismissed as baseless
irrationality or described as being cynically contrived there are always
realities guaranteed to smack you in the gut and stomp on your steel-tipped
toes. Witness the last few days.
Last week in this space, in citing several instances that
conspired to establish such a point, I concluded that pervasive recklessness –
to put it mildly - had conspired to transform daily life here into a
precarious, often deadly gamble.
Between then and now have come more killing; claiming in the
process the lives of children, discovery of mass, apparently unlawful human
burials, and the brutally audacious “security breach” (speak of euphemism) at
the San Fernando Municipal Police Station. Among other things.
A subsequent newspaper photo-op featuring two government
ministers, the commissioner of police, a coast guard officer, and other
security personnel marching resolute and shoulder to shoulder must have tempted
the caption: “Never fear. We are here.”
But I am yet to witness unreserved purchase of the goods on
display.
Fear and panic, the commissioner had proposed just one week
prior, are just as bad as crime itself. “Why aren’t people feeling that (the
statistics)? Why isn’t anyone talking about that? Because fear has gripped this
country for so long that we can’t even see when change is coming,” the
commissioner said.
Guilty, as charged! We all seemed to respond. For
credibility is earned not through selective application of favourable data –
and one may wish to cite unreferenced, appallingly low criminal detection rates
and bland efforts to determine and influence causative factors – but through
the comfort of believing that somebody is in charge and people are taking joint
responsibility through knowledge, resources, and individual capacity.
Such assets include truth-telling of the highest calibre.
Who, for instance, really believes that the current, extended state of public
emergency was constitutionally justifiable as a way to address grand, specific
existential threats? Where is the progress report on this?
Even so, we are instead being told that all of this can be
expected to generate concurrent (not just core) benefits. This has been an
argument that has spanned at least 15 years, across the political divide.
Yet, the “updates” have grown to focus exclusively on
statistical gains related to matters outside the purported threats for which
there was extreme recourse. Instead, what was meant to be a very last resort on
specific constitutional grounds has now become a readily available default for
everything else. As asked right here last week: In the face of growing fear and
a sense of futility, what do you do for an encore?
Additionally, I recall in the years following the murderous
assault of July 1990 numerous admonitions, including from this writer, to
resist the temptation to reduce all of this to the status of political row and
advantage.
Blood, we are constantly being told, remains a stain on the
hands of politicians and not necessarily smeared on the walls of civic
institutions from school to community centre to places of worship.
“Solving crime” has since become more firmly entrenched as
manifesto bullet points, verses, and chapters. Political opportunity has been
grasped with both hands.
People have clamoured for “the good old days” of the heavy
hand (or ropes) around our necks, and election campaigns with five-year cycles
have responded accordingly.
Meanwhile, those under whose portfolios reside obligations
to address such challenges would do well to spurn the temptation to announce
victory on the battlefront even as the war continues.






