Trinidad's
frightening crime wave
by
Ram
Jagessar
They have a new word in Trinidad these days Indo-nap-ping. As you have
guessed, it refers to the new crime of kidnapping Indians for ransom.
Several dozen of this crime have already occurred this year,
continuing last year's pattern of one kidnapping every two days. Most
of the victims, by some strange coincidence, have been Indians,
although the police and the government insist it is not racial crime.
By another accident, most of the kidnappers have been identified by
their victims as Africans, and most of those, charged with
kidnapping have been Africans.
And when they say ransom, these kidnappers are not
talking chicken feed money. They are asking, and getting, hundreds of
thousands of dollars, and millions in some cases. In the most recent
case last week, the kidnappers have demanded $10 million for a young
girl whose parents run a roti shop.
A family who ran a jewellery store in Trinidad barely escaped a
kidnapping attempt last week, driving away from a vehicle containing
kidnappers pretending to be police. What a supreme irony! Many Indos
in Trinidad believe that there are policemen protecting the
kidnappers, if not actually helping them. How else could kidnapping be
flourishing in Trinidad for almost two years now (since the present
government took
power) with the police helpless to do anything serious to stop it?
The jeweller family didn't wait to make useless complaints to the
police. They closed down their million dollar business the same day,
bought plane tickets and did an immediate Indo-nap-migration. Call it
migration by Indians to escape kidnapping. I
hear that many Indians are quietly shipping out their children from
sweet Trinidad, I
This kidnapping business has the entire Indian community jumping in
their boots. The rich ones are living on the edge as they see wave
after wave of kidnappings occur month after month. The police and the
government have responded with press releases, vain threats to apply
the law severely, and plans to make more serious laws against
kidnapping.
Middle class and even poor Indians are getting worried too. Kidnappers
are asking for hundred thousand dollar ransoms from Indians whose
businesses are small auto garages and retail shops.
I very much fear that kidnapping is here to stay in Trinidad. It's
like cocaine trafficking. So many people have made easy money from it
that they will never go back to robbing gas stations for $200 or
sticking up market vendors for a couple thousand. Why take the risk?
Just grab some Indian's child and you can get at least $50,000 with no
risk and very little fear of the police.
The kidnappers have stumbled on a weak point among Indians - our love
for our family, and especially our children. Most Indians will do
anything for their children, pay any money to save them. It is their
proud boast that they will make any sacrifice for their children, and
those children are the reason they work so hard and save so much. So
they will pay the kidnappers.
But there is another side to this story. Indians will see that the
wealth they have been
working so hard to build for their children is being taken away by
lazy, good for nothing crooks. They will lose their reason for living
and working. There is no point in planting crops for somebody else to
reap.
Indians will leave a country where they cannot reap the benefits of
their labour. Those who cannot leave will produce only enough for
themselves and a little saving for an emergency. Why kill yourself to
build a big business when you will probably have to liquidate it to
pay a kidnapper? Look out for the enterprising Indians to abandon
Trinidad in the next few years.
This kind of thing has happened before. In nearby Guyana a few years
ago the Burham government took on the kidnapper role and forced Indian
rice farmers to sell their rice at low prices only to the government
rice board. The farmers responded by cutting their rice crops to
subsistence level^and that finished the era of massive rice production
and wealth from rice. Later, many of the Guyanese Indian business
people fled to various countries all over the world.
Exactly the same thing happened in Tanzania when the government sought
to control the wealth of the Indian business people by methods like
forced intermarriage with the local Africans. Sometimes the Indian may
behave like a donkey, but don't believe he is an ass.
This kidnapping epidemic is the worst threat Indians in Trinidad have
had to face in many decades. If it continues it has the capacity to
become a mind changing force. It could make Indians turn away from the
attitude many still hold today: that they were born in Trinidad and
they are going to stay there no matter what.
Indo
Caribbean World Page 4, October
08, 2003