Tyrico Bay has been used by kidnappers as a dumping site, pick up point and escape route this month alone, creating a sense of fear in the community.
The tension in the Maracas Village community has heightened in the wake of the kidnapping of San Juan businesswoman Tara Poliah, after residents learned the suspects used the beach as a staging area to take her to Venezuela before they were intercepted at sea by the T&T Coast Guard.
Maracas resident Dianne Ghany yesterday called on the powers that be to police the beach at night.
“What they could do is, if they are not developing the beach, they should at least have the beach locked off at certain areas. It is a lonely beach, it have no lights on the beach, we would like to get back lights on the beach. We already have the police presence, which is good, but the beach should be locked off at a certain time,” Ghany said.
She added that the illegal nighttime activities was a cause for concern for villagers, who often have to endure loud music and now criminal activities.
Just before midnight on Wednesday, police arrested a total of 11 people and rescued Poliah, who was being taken to Venezuela on a vessel which was intercepted off Tyrico Bay.
Under the cover of darkness on March 18, kidnappers also snatched Cody Narine from off the beach while he and others were liming. A US$50,000 ransom was demanded for him. He remains in the hands of his kidnappers.
The third incident was the discovery of businessman Homardath Sookdeo’s body in some bushes at the beach on March 8. His hands and feet were bound with rope and a dog chain after he was kidnapped hours earlier.
Beachgoer Ray Stoute said he felt safe at the beach yesterday but warned against visiting during the night. This sentiment was echoed by Pundit Sat Dubey.
“There is a reason why things happen. If people come late in the night to do something here or to hang out, they put themselves in that situation. Come at a reasonable time and you will be safe in Trinidad, any part of Trinidad,” Dubey said
Ghany said the area has not been the same since Sookdeo’s body was found, with villagers feeling uneasy since then. The rescue of Poliah came as a shock, she said, adding that while police presence had increased since Sookdeo’s killing there, the number of police on Wednesday night was something out of a movie.
“We noticed something was happening in the area because we lost power, the whole of the North Coast lost power. It had police and army, the place was busy and it had roadblocks. We didn’t know it was because of the kidnapping, it was only after we heard it on the news that we realise it was because of that.”
Speaking in Parliament yesterday, Homeland Security Minister Roger Alexander said the police, Defence Force and Immigration, along with other state agencies, are collaborating to ensure crimes such as Poliah’s kidnapping would not recur.
Meanwhile, Opposition Leader Pennelope Beckles hailed the joint security operation that led to Poliah’s rescue. She noted that the TTPS credited the country’s radar centre as a key asset in pinpointing Poliah’s location. She said this demonstrates Trinidad and Tobago already has an effective radar system, undermining the Prime Minister’s rationale for allowing the United States to temporarily install one in Tobago last year.
“You would recall that part of our debate was that we have this existing radar that can assist us. And what really was the purpose of this new radar? I think we need to remember what the Prime Minister said. The Prime Minister said, as the head of the National Security Council, she could not share that information.”
While not wanting to identify it as a trend, criminologist Dr Randy Seepersad yesterday highlighted that the use of the beach by criminals should be monitored.
“What is a bit more worrying for me is that kidnappings that have this kind of transnational element to it, where perpetrators have the ability to take a victim out of the jurisdiction, that creates certain complexities that law enforcement has to deal with the fact that they have no jurisdiction once you’re outside of the borders of Trinidad and Tobago.”
He added that with a strained relationship between T&T and Venezuela, the authorities may face issues getting the needed cross-border support should victims be taken to Venezuela.
