Nine times under emergency: A history of Trinidad & Tobago’s State of Emergency declarations: 1970-2026... - Daily Express
Reported by: Khamarie Rodriguez, Daily Express
March 8, 2026
When Trinidad and Tobago declared yet another state of emergency (SoE) last week, it marked the ninth time since the country gained Independence in 1962 that a public declaration of emergency has been used to confront national challenges.
Sweeping emergency powers that suspend constitutional rights were once used sparingly for reasons ranging from social unrest to threats to its democracy. But more recently, the SoE has been used as a tool to deal with the problem of gang violence and crime.
Over the last five years—between 2021 and 2026—a total of four states of emergency have been declared.
According to Section 8 of the Constitution of Trinidad and Tobago, the President may declare an SoE if he/she is satisfied that a public emergency has arisen as a result of the imminence of a “State of War” between T&T and a foreign state, the occurrence of disaster or other calamity, or threats to endanger the public safety.
Historically, the use of emergency powers were invoked to quell disturbances, notably during the Black Power Movement of the 1970s, and the 1990 attempted coup that saw the Prime Minister and ministers taken hostage in the Parliament by armed members of the Jamaat-al-Muslimeen. Since then it has been used for public health purposes, and a variety of others.
To read the rest of the article, which discusses each of Trinidad & Tobago’s nine state of emergency declarations, look here.
Photo by Renaldo Matamoro on Unsplash.