Senior Reporter
shane.superville@guardian.co.tt
While most Maraval residents were preparing for work, sanitation workers made a grisly discovery when they stumbled upon the body of a newborn baby girl early yesterday morning.
According to the police, Amalgamated Sanitation Services workers were collecting garbage from a bin at the corner of Saddle Road and Bowen Road at around 6 am, when they noticed the child’s hand sticking out of a black garbage bag.
On checking, the workers found the baby girl’s body.
Investigators said the bag also contained a placenta.
The garbage bin where the child’s body was found was obliquely opposite the Maraval Police Station.
A district medical officer was called in and declared the baby dead. The child’s body was taken to the Forensic Science Centre, St James, for storage.
The scene was also visited by officers of the Homicide Bureau of Investigations Region I, who are expected to view security camera footage from nearby businesses as part of the enquiry.
When Guardian Media visited the area hours later, several residents spoke among themselves while looking at the garbage bin where the baby’s body was found.
Long-time resident and shopkeeper Neil Rodriguez, whose business is located across the street from the garbage bin where the child’s body was found, said he was unsettled by the discovery.
“When I came out around 6.30, the garbage truck was already parked up and the police were there. It feels very bad,” Rodriguez said.
“I’m a human being, but right now I feel like humans have lost touch with God. It feels like humans now have lost touch and I don’t even think the Church can bring us back.”
Residents speaking among themselves at the shop lamented the child’s death and speculated who or where the child’s mother could be.
One resident said the garbage bin where the child was found was not only used by nearby residents but anyone with garbage to dump, noting that it was located on the Saddle Road which connected Maraval and could have been used by scores of people from outside the community.
Resident Cyril Rodriguez said he was also shaken by the fact that a child’s body could be discarded.
“It wasn’t nice to see. Everybody is feeling bad. People from all about does throw garbage in the bin. I am a father of children so it has to have a wicked person who does something like this,” Rodriguez.
Contacted for comment, head of the TTPS Child Protection Unit, Supt Claire Guy-Alleyne, described the incident as heart-breaking and called on the community to rally together to help each other.
Guy-Alleyne said the child’s death and the way in which the body was discarded was a “stain on the society” which could not be ignored.
“Each life matters. All life is precious and it is our moral duty to protect the most vulnerable among us,” Guy-Alleyne said.
“We are urging the public to be vigilant and report any suspicious activities. We all play a role in protecting the most vulnerable members of society.
“We are asking people to seek help and we as a society must create an atmosphere where people feel they can seek help amongst us.”