Radhica De Silva
Three Erin fishermen, including Daniel Abraham, who were kidnapped in Venezuela late Thursday, have been released, but four other men have now been abducted and their captors are demanding a US$20,000 ransom for their safe return.
The newly kidnapped men were identified only by their aliases—K-man, Plaits, Keebwey and Adecat. A relative of one of the men, who asked to remain anonymous for safety, confirmed the ransom demand.
“They want US$20,000 or they say the men won’t come back,” the relative said. “A boat owner already went to drop the money. Everybody just praying they release them.”
Abraham, who was freed with two others hours after being taken, returned home bruised but alive. Relatives said he was caught in the middle of a dispute he knew nothing about.
“They release him after they realise he went innocently,” a family member said. “He thought he was going fishing. He didn’t know the fellas he went with had people owing money. They tell him straight—don’t ever go to sea with people you don’t know.”
Abraham was beaten during the ordeal. “They give him slap and lash because they wanted money,” the relative said. “But when he explain he have nothing and didn’t know what was going on, they let him go. The four other fellas — they keep them and start to ask for US$20,000.”
All three released men are said to be shaken and unwilling to speak publicly about their ordeal.
The kidnappings follow a warning from Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar earlier this year about illegal maritime activity between Trinidad and Venezuela. She declared any illegal incursion by unidentified vessels into T&T waters would be met with “deadly force” by national security agencies.
She said she instructed Minister of Defence Wayne Sturge and Attorney General John Jeremie to review the legal framework for authorising the use of deadly force against vessels entering from Venezuela and smuggling “military-able bodied men and women” into Trinidad and Tobago.
The Prime Minister said flatly: “T&T territory is off limits to them.”
She also warned both Venezuelan and Trinidadian nationals involved in cross-border trafficking: “If you enter Venezuelan waters to do your illegal acts … and you are caught by the authorities, you are on your own.”
In a later interview, she reinforced the government’s position: “They are on their own. We will not spend a cent of taxpayers’ money to assist them. I have repeatedly warned that anyone caught engaging in illegal activity abroad will face the consequences.”
CNC3 News contacted Minister of Foreign Affairs Sean Sobers for comment on the latest kidnappings. A source at the Venezuelan Embassy said the matter would be investigated. TT Charge d’Affaires to Venezuela, Dayne-Marc Chin, referred all questions to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs’ communications department.
