Senior Reporter
anna-lisa.paul@guardian.co.tt
Shell-shocked and in disbelief that his daughter-in-law is now facing criminal charges and accused of killing his son, Christopher Samaroo yesterday testified that Kaia Sealy was nothing short of an angel who loved Joshua Samaroo dearly.
Struggling to accept what he said were very “far-fetched” claims that the 24-year-old mother of one was responsible for his son’s death, Christopher denied this as he said, “I don’t even want to make a statement on that. That is so far-fetched from my mind.
“It’s like I watching my son and saying well, you know, you are a killer. No, no, no, I can’t do that. I have to get evidence. I don’t know her like that. I know her as very, very nice person.”
He insisted Sealy was “a very, very loving, nice, giving person.”
Revealing that she was always on her phone researching hairstyles and hairdressing techniques when she visited his Maraval home, he recalled chatting and exchanging views on various topics with her whenever the couple visited.
“I have no problem with her. I am just shocked that she is in this kind of a mess. I hope that God steps in and give her a hand to get herself out of this one,” he said.
Holding firm to the belief that Police Commissioner Allister Guevarro was involved in a plot to cover up what really happened and protect the officers involved, he urged the top cop to come clean.
“Sir, just do your job. Do it to the best of your ability. Be honest, that’s all,” he begged.
Claiming Guevarro was “not serious about his work” if he could allow the investigation to follow the path it did to reach such a conclusion, Samaroo said, “He is trying to save his people, his police officers, even if they are doing wrong.”
He said efforts were being made to “get them out of whatever hot seat they are in, unlike others that have passed through.”
Samaroo said Guevarro was now “back-pedalling” and that prayer alone was what would now save T&T.
Further alluding to a cover-up, he said, “Right now, everything is kind of scattered because you are hearing one thing one day, and the next day, you are hearing another thing.
“You don’t know what to believe and right now, there is nothing again to tinker my brains about, you know, this lil country gone through. We gone through, we gone through. And we need to come back.”
To the officers involved in the shooting, he said, “I pray that your family is safe.”
But he cautioned, “There is a God and God don’t sleep at all.”
Despondent at the shocking turn of events, Samaroo lamented, “We don’t have anybody to save us again. We don’t have anybody to seek our interests. T&T gone through.”
Referencing the word “lie,” which was how he initially described the T&T Police Service’s claims against Sealy, Samaroo said, “That is all that is going in this country right now, every single thing is a lie.”
Just like the rest of the country, Samaroo said he, too, was “very disappointed” with the announcement by the TTPS that Sealy was the one now facing criminal charges.
However, he acceded, “I don’t know all the facts.”
However, he said he was not expecting to be in the current situation at the end of the probe.
“I have to wait and see what is dishing out in future, what is taking place, as there is a lot of hearsay, they-say, them-say, I say, say from the sky, say from the ground, all over... and right now, I am totally confused about all what is going on, every single thing.”
Asked how Joshua’s twin brother, Caleb, was coping, the grieving father said, “He is bothered but I am keeping everybody safe. We just have to keep it together and hope for the best.
“I am praying and asking God, with the people around me, the two girls who usually do the protests, the population of T&T, and everybody who is listening to the sound of my voice, that is concerned, that is in shock too, like me... I have to say we will get there.”
Calling on the country to pray, he said, “The country gone down, straight down.”
Indicating that Trinidad and Tobago was in a worse off position when compared to its Caricom neighbour Jamaica, Samaroo insisted, “We are not hearing from the politicians. They are just silent. They don’t care.”
Despite the country being in what he claimed was an “abyss,” he said hope is eternal but the question is when.
“When will hope come?” he asked.
He agreed the country was a failed state and the population was living among “snakes, centipedes, scorpions... you name it. And these are the people who are supposed to guard us, guide us and protect us. But the population is under siege.”
