Senior Reporter
jensen.lavende@guardian.co.tt
The aunt of police shooting victim Joshua Samaroo, Camellia Samaroo, yesterday complained about the police presence at his funeral, saying it left her feeling uneasy.
Camellia Samaroo said while she understands that the police have a job to do, they caused her some discomfort seeing them at the funeral. This, she said, was compounded when police officers were seen following relatives from the original location venue at the St James Crematorium to the nearby Monsegue and Company Funeral Chapel on Church Street, St James.
Police officers at funerals for individuals killed by officers is a normal occurrence, but Camellia said she felt uncomfortable by their presence.
“It’s very painful to see a police officer or any police with guns. That is where the problem is. Once they have those guns on their chest and they’re looking at you or they’re talking to you rough, it triggers something and sometimes it feels very scary, for me, I don’t know for anybody else. If they drive behind me, I will feel scared,” she said.
She added, “They have their work to do, like I said, and if they do it in the manner that they’re supposed to, that will bring peace. They have to bring peace in the public domain right now. Because there isn’t anybody that is comfortable. I feel regardless, it’s a funeral or not, society on the whole doesn’t look like they feel comfortable, whether it’s our tragedy or normal citizens in the country. They don’t feel comfortable.”
The funeral was originally scheduled to take place at the St James Crematorium but was moved to the other after some issues at the original site. Guardian Media understands that police officers who went to the crematorium followed those who attended from the crematorium to the funeral chapel. Outside the chapel, Guardian Media counted at least five marked police vehicles passing during the service, as the media was not allowed inside.
Opposition Leader Pennelope Beckles, who was at the service, said she knew Samaroo’s mother, as she had attended church in Arima for years, and days before the funeral, she met with his father and promised she would attend to support the family.
Recalling what occurred during the service, Beckles said those who spoke of Samaroo recalled his Christian faith and entrepreneurial spirit, while his father called for justice not only for his son but also for all those killed by police.
“The father talked about, you know, for society to remember him. To (say) thanks that there were cameras, so you could have had an opportunity to see exactly what transpired, because at the end of the day, that is what it is. When a death like that occurs, people want to know what really happened because of the circumstances and what should happen. I made it clear a couple days ago that I endorsed the body cameras (for police),” Beckles said.
On Thursday, friends of Samaroo and his partner Kaia Sealy, who was shot during the police-involved shooting in St Augustine on January 20 and is now paralysed from the waist down, staged a protest outside the Police Administration Building, calling for justice and the resignation or removal of Police Commissioner Allister Guevarro and Homeland Security Minister Roger Alexander.
Sealy missed yesterday’s funeral, as she remains hospitalised.
On Wednesday, Alexander called on the public not to lose trust in the police service because of the video, which showed Samaroo being shot after he surrendered when his car crashed in a drain.
Meanwhile, Beckles says any legislation brought to Parliament to ensure better productivity from police officers is going to be supported by the Opposition.
“No society will be comfortable when a situation like this happens if, at the end of the day, we don’t do all that we can to make sure that it doesn’t happen again. You want to ensure that the police, the victim and everyone gets what is due to them, meaning to say that justice is due for everyone. So just as much as you are concerned with Joshua, you also don’t want to pass judgement without the appropriate evidence.”
