Seven months after fleeing an abusive relationship, a woman and her 14-month-old baby were found in a house at Location Road, Barrackpore, yesterday with their throats slit.
The lifeless bodies of 34-year-old Tara “Geeta” Ramsaroop and daughter Jada Mootilal were discovered at 11 am.
A neighbour saw the baby lying face down on a bloody mattress and called the police, who also found the mother’s body when they arrived.
A 29-year-old close male relative was taken into police custody hours after their bodies were discovered.
Wiping away tears at the crime scene yesterday, Jassodra Rajaram blamed the police for not acting upon numerous domestic violence reports and protection orders that Ramsaroop, her younger sister, had obtained against the suspect.
Rajaram said her sister had dropped off her eight-year-old son at his school in Barrackpore earlier yesterday, so when they found their bodies they put the school on alert in case the suspect went to that site.
Rajaram said the suspect was waiting for her sister at the school, and she believes he may have forced her back to his Barrackpore house. She said her sister had four children, two from a previous relationship.
Rajaram lamented that her sister had been abused for about six years before she decided to end the relationship. Recalling that day, Rajaram said her sister called her and when she got there the suspect was beating and dragging her sister by her hair.
Ramsaroop started working with Rajaram at a burger cart and built a home at GP Road in Barrackpore. Her two youngest children lived with her.
However, Rajaram said the suspect continued “torturing her.”
“He going by her, beating her. He gone with blades (cutlasses) a couple of times...We work in the evening so when she goes home in the night...he waiting in bed for her,” she said.
Rajaram complained that her sister made several reports against him at the Barrackpore Police Station and obtained four protection orders. However, she claimed the police failed to serve them on the suspect.
“Up to last week he break into her house and steal 4,000 and something dollars. She make a report again. They (police) never do nothing about it,” Rajaram claimed.
“He vandalise my car, he vandalise my sister house. It have all them reports and they never do nothing. The station never do nothing.”
She said the police would tell them that they could not locate the suspect, and many times the police refused to give her a receipt after she made the reports.
Rajaram lamented, “One day she called 999 and a woman police officer came and when she telling them about what happened, the woman police asked her ‘why you make children for he for’.”
Rajaram said the suspect had always threatened to kill her sister and her two children, but she (Ramsaroop) took his threats “for granted.”
Ramsaroop’s neighbour, Amy Mohammed, who would care for her children when she was at work, appealed to the authorities to take domestic violence reports seriously.
“I want them to do something about this and for the police to give support to women and children in these situations. These men don’t care. They need to do something about it,” she lamented.
Hours after the discoveries of the bodies, a relative spotted the suspect in a forested area at Paltinique Trace in Barrackpore and called the police. The suspect was allegedly in possession of a rope.
Meanwhile, the suspect’s relative said she was surprised that Ramsaroop went to the suspect’s home yesterday. She claimed the suspect called them and confessed that he had killed Ramsaroop and the baby.
As tears streamed down her face, she said, “I would not like this to happen to anybody.”
She said after the call, a relative went into the house and discovered them. She said they had spoken to him many times about his behaviour and had intervened when they (Ramsaroop and the suspect) were fighting.
Contacted yesterday on the family’s claims, Snr Supt Rodhill Kir,k who recently took charge of the Southern Division, said he could not yet confirm or deny Rajaram’s claims.
Expressing condolences to the family, Kirk confirmed there were domestic problems and a protection order was in place. However, he said if there were breaches of protection orders and reports are made, the police needed to act.
He assured that under his stewardship, domestic and gender-based violence matters will be acted upon. He said the police and the public need to treat these incidents with the “utmost level of seriousness.”
Minister: A barbaric act
Minister in the Office of the Prime Minister with responsibility for Gender and Child Affairs, Ayanna Webster-Roy, described the murders of the mother and her baby as a “barbaric act of violence.”
Strongly condemning the horrific murders in a statement, the minister said she was committed to working with stakeholders to ensure the care and well-being of the surviving child (Ramsaroop’s son), who was secured by members of the Trinidad and Tobago Police Service, and to the provision of support services to any affected family members.
She added, “I want to emphasise that all acts of violence against women and children are preventable. It is our collective responsibility as a society to ensure that our families and communities are places of safety. We have the power to prevent such tragedies.”
As they raise awareness of the needs of the most vulnerable in society and implement effective safeguarding mechanisms, the minister urged individuals and families to seek out these essential services at the first sign of distress.
“Remember, time is of the essence. PLEASE DO NOT WAIT; do not take any chances, as it may never get better. Early reporting is crucial in preventing further harm.”
She told individuals, families and members of the general public that when faced with incidents of domestic violence or any form of child abuse, all cases or suspected cases should be reported to the relevant authorities, including the TTPS (999), the Children’s Authority Hotline (996 or 800-2014) or Childline 131 or 800-4321. She said help was also readily available via the National Domestic Violence Hotline 800-SAVE (7283) or National Family Services Division 623-2608 (ext. 6701 to 6715).
Noting that every life taken, every child emotionally or physically scarred is one too many, the minister said the division stands in solidarity with every man, woman and child, and is ready to unite to end domestic violence and child abuse.
IWRN urges public to reach out
Meanwhile, the International Women’s Resource Network also condemned the murders. Noting reports that Ramsaroop had endured years of abuse, the organisation again pleaded with victims of domestic violence to reach out to their team via our Facebook page.
IWRN president Adriana Sandrine Rattan said, “We have implemented a new strategy for victims which cannot be disclosed. The first step is to report the incidents to the police and ensure to share all pertinent details including threats.”
She added that the only way to nip domestic violence in the bud is to pay close attention to the abusive tendencies, then contact them.