Tobago Correspondent
The Homicide Bureau is now part of the investigation into the disappearance of two-year-old Angelo Tobias in Goodwood, Tobago.
Minister of Homeland Security Roger Alexander made the announcement in Parliament yesterday, adding that the Child Protection Unit is also probing the incident.
Angelo went missing from his seaside home around 7.30 pm on Monday night, triggering a desperate search throughout the community.
The child lived with his mother Khalifa Tobias and her boyfriend Shannon Miller, in a house perched on a small hill less than 100 metres from the Atlantic Ocean. A dirt track littered with brown leaves connects the home to the rocky seaside.
Despite the best efforts of villagers, police and professional divers who searched the surrounding area and the sea, Angelo remains missing.
A labourer claimed he saw the body in the choppy sea around 6.30 am on Tuesday, but it slipped below the surface.
Asked for an update on the investigation during parliamentary questions yesterday, Alexander said a multi-agency approach is being adopted.
“The immediate search for the child continues,” he said, adding that the operation includes the Homicide Bureau, Child Protection Unit, Tobago police, the fire service, the Tobago Emergency Management Agency (TEMA) and Coast Guard.
“As the investigation continues, we will be able to update members of the public,” he said.
In a supplemental question, Opposition MP Marvin Gonzales asked Alexander whether police are investigating a homicide or a missing person.
Alexander replied that the Homicide Bureau was involved in the probe alongside the Child Protection Unit.
In an interview yesterday, Snr Supt Rodhill Kirk told Guardian Media there was no specific reason the matter had attracted the attention of the Homicide Bureau.
“It is always a multi-agency approach to this incident. We don’t have a body, so we don’t know what happened to the child. The child is missing, so we would treat it as such until.”
Meanwhile, Mahalia Bacchus, Asst Supt, Tobago Operations, urged any person with information that may help their investigation to come forward.
She said police have interviewed the relatives of Angelo, who made the missing person’s report, as well as neighbours.
She said the public can call Crime Stoppers at 211 or the emergency 999 number.
Soldiers called in to help
After an unsuccessful search in the sea on Tuesday, authorities called in the army to help search on land yesterday.
Bacchus said, “The police, we made a decision along with the other state agencies, we are extending the search a little bit more within the land space around us, to ensure if the body did wash up it is not somewhere on the land and the other areas, bushes and foliage in the back of us here where the house is. We’re just doing a more thorough search to see if we could find anything that might bring some closure to the matter.”
Bacchus said the police “understand the pain of the parents” who have gone over 48 hours without seeing Angelo.
Asked whether the police are still treating Monday’s sighting of the body as legitimate, Bacchus said the police are working with all available information.
She said divers were expected to continue their search yesterday, but noted a large mass of sargassum brought by the currents.
A couple hours later, Alvin Douglas, director of Tobago Marine Safety and Security Services, confirmed diving was impossible.
He said visibility was almost zero, and conditions then were hazardous to his dive team.
Douglas said a boat might be needed to check other parts of the coastline.
“One of the things we noticed yesterday is that when the tide changed, the sargassum left the bay and went around the bend. Unfortunately, there is no beach, per se, on that side of the island. If we are gonna monitor that area, we gonna have to do it via a vessel because there is no way to get down to the rocks.”
He speculated that if Angelo’s body is still in the water today, it would be floating.
Closure needed
Meanwhile, Wendy Des Vignes, president of the Goodwood Village Council, said tensions have cooled after Tuesday’s violent clash between a relative of Angelo and another villager.
The altercation took place after relatives took umbrage to a comment made by the villager to the media.
Des Vignes said the stress of the situation is telling on Angelo’s family, and they need closure.
Des Vignes, who had criticised the response of authorities on Tuesday, said she feels more optimistic with soldiers, Coast Guard and Snr Supt Rodhill Kirk at the scene.
However, she added, “That doesn’t mean the child come back. We still ain’t seeing the child. I dunno what else they could do to bring closure, that the mother heart and the grandmother heart could settle and take away the stress from them.”
She said Goodwood remains a tight-knit village and villagers will continue to come out to show support to the grieving family.
“Everybody lives together as one. When anything happen, everybody does feel the pain. That is how Goodwood is. Goodwood is love.
“That is why everybody out here trying to console with the mother and the grandmother.”
