Senior Reporter
otto.carrington@cnc3.co.tt
The families of six missing crew members aboard the fishing vessel St Vincent VII are making an urgent regional appeal for assistance as the search continues for the burned vessel, which has been missing at sea since Monday, July 13.
Family members are appealing to media houses, maritime authorities, and passing commercial vessels to assist in locating the vessel, which is believed to be drifting without power or communication in waters between Suriname and French Guiana.
According to information provided by relatives, the vessel caught fire around 6.30 am on Monday, July 13, 2026, and has had no confirmed contact or visual sighting since the incident.
Relatives believe the vessel may still be adrift, with its movement now dependent on ocean currents and wind conditions.
The vessel, St Vincent VII, is owned by Renata Enterprises Limited and departed Trinidad on Monday, July 6, 2026, from the Tardieu Marine yard in Chaguaramas.
The last known location of the vessel was near the maritime borders of Suriname and French Guiana.
Six crew members were on board: Captain Eshwar Persaud, also known as “Shanie” — a Guyanese national, four Trinidadians and one Vincentian national
Relatives of missing crew member Shannon Joey Mohammed, from central Trinidad, said they are urgently seeking help from the authorities and vessels operating in the region.
“We are desperately pleading with regional media houses to broadcast this information immediately,” said Amanda Suraj, Mohammed’s wife.
“We urgently need intervention from neighbouring maritime assets, passing commercial vessels, and local authorities in French Guiana, Suriname, and Brazil to deploy search and rescue teams to the area.”
Suraj said the absence of communication from the vessel has left families desperate for information.
The concerns were echoed by Geeta Allister, Mohammed’s mother-in-law, who said the family has been left without answers since the vessel caught fire.
Allister said the family only learned about the incident after someone in the fishing community contacted her daughter.
“My daughter, they called my daughter and they told somebody who was passing, who was fishing there, our captain on a boat who knew my daughter’s phone number,” she said.
She claimed the company did not directly contact the family following the incident.
Allister said the family remains uncertain about the fate of the six men.
“We don’t know if the boat burned right down. We don’t know if they’re out on a lifecraft. Nobody haven’t given us any information.”
“Up to now, nobody’s not doing nothing. We are begging because time is running out. This happened on Monday.”
Meanwhile, Fishermen and Friends of the Sea (FFOS) Corporate Secretary Gary Aboud criticised what he described as failures in the response to the incident.
Aboud said the incident highlights longstanding concerns over safety standards and regulation within Trinidad and Tobago’s fishing sector.
“The Fisheries Management Bill is over 25 years old, and government after government have come and gone,” he said, calling for stronger protections for seafarers.
Anyone with information is asked to contact Amanda Suraj, wife of missing crew member Shannon Joey Mohammed.
Guardian Media attempted to contact Renata Enterprises Limited; however, calls to the owner’s cellphone went unanswered.
