RADHICA DE SILVA and
STEPHON NICHOLAS
Nearly a month after seven-year-old Angelica Jogie was killed in a jet ski collision at Tobago’s Pigeon Point Heritage Park, her grieving father says his family feels justice is slipping further away as police investigations continue without charges being laid.
Speaking with Guardian Media yesterday, Arnold Jogie expressed frustration, anger and growing suspicion over the pace of the investigation into the April 8 tragedy, which sparked national outrage and renewed scrutiny of marine safety enforcement in Tobago.
“We’re angry about that. Why is it taking so long? Why are they trying to save this guy?” Jogie said.
Questioning the delay in the matter, he added, “We are starting to get suspicious. Do they want to sweep it under the carpet? I don’t know.”
Jogie said the family feels abandoned by the justice system despite what he described as overwhelming eyewitness testimony surrounding the incident.
“Yes, yes, we feel we are being denied justice,” he said.
Calling on investigators to act decisively, he insisted that numerous people witnessed the jet ski operator allegedly breach a designated bathing zone before crashing into his family.
“Do their jobs properly and put this guy to justice because everybody see that he did wrong. Why should you save him? We want justice,” he pleaded.
Angelica, a former student of San Fernando TML Primary School, was vacationing in Tobago with relatives when the tragedy occurred. Reports stated that she was bathing with family members inside a marked safe swimming area at Pigeon Point when a jet ski allegedly entered the restricted zone and struck them.
Angelica, her parents and an uncle were all hit during the collision. She later died at the Scarborough General Hospital. An autopsy confirmed she suffered multiple traumatic injuries, particularly to the head.
The 32-year-old suspect was arrested at his Canaan home during the early hours of April 9 after allegedly fleeing the scene. However, he was subsequently released pending further investigations.
Senior Superintendent Rodhill Kirk said police have completed extensive investigations and the matter is now before the Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP).
“The police are professionals. While we serve the public, we do not allow public impatience to cloud our judgment and sacrifice accuracy for speed,” Kirk said in an interview with Guardian Media.
Kirk explained that investigators had compiled a file and submitted it to the DPP for legal advice and further consultation.
“You would agree that this is a unique situation and it is a very complex matter. We must operate within the perimeters of the law and not in an ad hoc manner,” he said.
“It is for the DPP to let us know whether we meet that threshold for bringing charges against anyone and what are the recommended charges.”
The tragedy has reignited concerns over the regulation of jet ski operations and the enforcement of marine safety laws at Tobago beaches.
In the aftermath of the incident, eyewitnesses claimed some operators had been riding recklessly near bathers shortly before the fatal collision. Questions were also raised about the absence of marine patrols and the effectiveness of restrictions within protected bathing areas.
Chief Secretary Farley Augustine has since criticised police for what he described as inadequate responses to reports of illegal jet ski activity at Pigeon Point.
Augustine warned that if the Tobago House of Assembly faces legal action arising from the tragedy, he would instruct attorneys to pursue action against the central government and Attorney General John Jeremie.
Meanwhile, at a meeting involving jet ski and reef tour stakeholders earlier this week, jet ski instructor Richard Ash claimed repeated warnings had been issued to the THA about unsafe practices within the Buccoo Reef Marine Park.
“It could have been prevented,” Ash said, while warning that another accident could occur if proper navigational markers are not installed for watercraft operators.
Just days before the fatal incident, the Division of Environment, Climate Resilience and Energy had reminded stakeholders of the operational rules governing the marine park following a March 27 stakeholder meeting.
In an April 2 media release, the division stated that jet skis are prohibited within the marine park except for authorised transit and that all vessels must remain within designated navigational channels.
