Tobago Correspondent
Four more suspects have been detained by police following a police dragnet in Goodwood, Tobago, on Sunday night, as the T&T Police Service continued to try to bring closure to the case of missing toddler Angelo Tobias-Plaza.
The string of arrests came minutes after Goodwood villagers held a vigil at Cambridge Trace on Sunday night, appealing for divine intervention in the disappearance of two-year-old child.
Apart from the toddler’s mother Kalifah Tobias, 22, and her boyfriend Shannon Miller, police now have the driver of a vehicle in custody. The child’s mother and boyfriend have been in custody since last Friday, while the other suspects were rounded up even as police intensified the search for the missing toddler on land and at sea.
Police also intensified their search at the Studley Park landfill for a second consecutive day yesterday.
The search party, which included police officers with the help of a cadaver dog, the Tobago Emergency Management Agency and members of the Hunters’ Search and Rescue Team, focused on specific areas of the landfill, with an excavator digging up areas identified.
An excavator helped sift through tonnes of garbage in the dump, but despite hours of scouring the area, the child’s body could not be found by the end of yesterday’s search efforts.
Hunters Search and Rescue Team (HSRT) commander Shamsudeen Ayube said based on information received, they converged on an area in the landfill “where he was last seen.” The members vowed to continue their efforts until he is found.
“We will go right through. We will not stop,” Ayube said.
Captain Vallence Rambharat, leader of the other HSRT that was combing the landfill, said his team searched several pits in the dump to no avail. He said his team also helped police search other locations, including Pembroke. He said they will continue today to complete a thorough sweep of that area.
The toddler was reported missing from his seaside home on May 11 and has not been located since.
Angelo’s mother and boyfriend told police the toddler suddenly went missing from their home around 7.30 pm on May 11.
Police have been trying to retrace the last public sighting of Angelo. Villagers told Guardian Media they did not see the child on the day he vanished.
However, the child was spotted with his mother in Scarborough on May 10 — Mother’s Day — according to a relative of Miller.
The incident has shocked Tobago, with Chief Secretary Farley Augustine taking to social media on Sunday to voice his anger over the slow pace of the investigation.
He said the public is now demanding accountability in the matter, as “something does not sit right with the national conscience.”
“The public outrage and heartbreak now being expressed across Tobago and Trinidad are justified. We have a right to be damn vex about how this is unfolding and the Nancy stories that are being peddled,” Augustine said.
Meanwhile, members of the quiet Goodwood community where the toddler’s family lives raised their voices in song and illuminated candles on Sunday night, as they called for God to shine a light wherever the child might be.
As the vigil ended around 9 pm, however, the flicker of their candles was replaced by blue flashing lights as police swooped into the community and arrested a male suspect.
Another suspect briefly eluded officers as they closed in, but he was apprehended later that night.
The driver of a vehicle, believed to be a crucial piece in the puzzle to finding out what happened to little Angelo, was also detained before daybreak. A female suspect is believed to also be among those held that night. Angelo’s mother and boyfriend were first to be detained by police on Friday afternoon in Goodwood.
Goodwood villager: We must break this curse
Goodwood Village Council president Wendy Des Vignes says prayers are needed to “break this curse” that has befallen the community.
“It is like this is a curse. We want to break this curse before it happens again,” Des Vignes said during the candlelight vigil in the community for Angelo on Sunday night.
“We want to get in touch with God because it seems to me the people of this island losing touch with God. We have to beg for mercy and help.”
She said Angelo’s mother, before she was taken into custody, speculated that her son may have been abducted.
Des Vignes said she was not judging the mother, as she does not have all the answers.
“We want to pray and get in touch with God in a way where we could petition for this child to be found. We cannot give up.”
She added, “Something like this, we just hoping and praying we find the child — and if we find him alive then that will be better.”
Baptist pastor and Village Council deputy Brian Patrick said the community and the nation was hurting over the missing child.
He said, “It is really a community issue we are facing. Everyone is hurting and the island and the nation as well.
“It’s a long week for us in the village, especially the mothers and the fathers. We really want to bring some closure to this.”
