Tobago Correspondent
Chief Secretary Farley Augustine says Tobagonians are “damn vex” over the “Nancy stories being peddled” in the disappearance of two-year-old Angelo Tobias-Plaza.
It has been a week since the toddler was reported missing from his seaside home at Cambridge Trace, Goodwood.
His mother Kalifah Tobias and her boyfriend Shannon Miller remained in police custody last night as police sought answers in the toddler’s disappearance.
During post-Executive Council media briefing on Thursday, Augustine said there were more questions than answers in the incident.
However, in a Facebook post yesterday, the Tobago People’s Party leader was more vociferous, saying he could no longer be diplomatic amid the unsettling situation.
Explaining that he could not sleep peacefully on Saturday night as Angelo was on his mind, Augustine said, “Every mother, every father, every grandparent, and every decent citizen feels the weight of this tragedy.”
He said the public is 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.”
The disappearance has sparked a multi-agency response spanning land and sea.
However, Angelo’s mother does not believe her son drowned, saying he was afraid of the dark and the sea.
Augustine yesterday also said he found it hard to believe a two-year-old would walk in the pitch-black night, through a ditch and obstacles into the ocean. A dirt track covered with fallen leaves, protruding roots and branches separate Angelo’s home from the Atlantic Ocean.
Augustine said the matter must be treated with the highest level of urgency, seriousness and investigative intensity.
“Every lead must be pursued. Every inconsistency must be examined. Every person with information must cooperate fully with authorities,” he urged.
He added that any negligence or wrongdoing must be exposed and prosecuted, while warning that people withholding information in a case involving a child should understand that “silence ... is unacceptable.”
Augustine also said the tragedy should force society to reflect on its responsibility to protect children.
“The protection of children is not optional. It is a sacred responsibility,” he said.
He ended by saying Tobago stood with Angelo, the people of Goodwood and all citizens demanding answers.
“A nation is judged by how it protects its most vulnerable. There can be no peace, no comfort and no closure until answers are found,” Augustine said.
Augustine echoed sentiments expressed by Goodwood Village Council president Wendy Des Vignes that if wrongdoing is found, charges should be brought.
The search for Angelo shifted to the Studley Park landfill yesterday, based on intelligence received by the police.
The two Hunters’ Search and Rescue Teams searched the dump alongside police, the Tobago Emergency Management Agency and other agencies from around 10 am but it was unsuccessful.
A villager passing by with his family yesterday stopped his car upon noticing the heightened activity.
He told Guardian Media, “That child could have been my grandchild, he could have been my child, he could have been everything. It real sad and it real crazy,” he said.
He said he was left speechless upon hearing the news of the missing child.
“I could not believe it,” he said.
He urged the authorities to search non-stop until Angelo is found.
Meanwhile, Goodwood villagers held a candlelight vigil last night praying for Angelo’s return and for justice to be served. Playing gospel music from a speaker, the villagers invoked divine intervention to guide police to find Angelo, wherever he is.
Des Vignes told Guardian Media they want to send a message to the nation that they care about children.
