Kejan Haynes
Former prime minister and Opposition MP Stuart Young has followed through on a promise made in Parliament by formally writing Commissioner of Police Allister Guevarro, requesting police interview Defence Minister Wayne Sturge over statements linking two recent deadly shootings.
In a letter dated May 11 and marked “urgent”, Young asked the Trinidad and Tobago Police Service to question Sturge after the minister claimed during his contribution in the House of Representatives on Friday that he knew the recent murders were connected and referenced Young's constituency explicitly.
Young enclosed a copy of the Hansard proceedings from May 8 and referred specifically to Sturge’s contribution as MP for Toco/Sangre Grande and Minister of Defence.
“In light of the clear utterance of Minister Sturge, I am hereby requesting that the Trinidad and Tobago Police Service (TTPS) interview the Minister to ascertain who committed the heinous murders of the nine-year old J'Layna Armstrong on April 19, 2026 and the murder of two-year-old Akini Kafi on May 7, 2026 and what is his knowledge of same,” Young wrote.
The move comes days after Young publicly vowed in Parliament to send Sturge’s contribution to the Commissioner of Police.
“I immediately put on a record Through you Mister Speaker, a request for the Hansard of the last speaker's contribution, and I'm going to take that answer of his contribution here this afternoon, and I'm sending it directly to the Commissioner of Police, and asking the Commissioner of Police, Mister Speaker, having listened very carefully to his contribution, to ensure that The speaker is interviewed, because he claims to know exactly who it is perpetrated the murders yesterday in Belmont,” Young said in the House on Friday.
The letter stems from comments made by Sturge during debate in Parliament when he linked the May 7 triple killing in St Francois Valley with the April 19 quadruple murder along Lady Young Road, Morvant.
Aqiyl “Fats” Kafi, 30, and Anthony “Monster” Wilson, 28, were killed after gunmen ambushed the vehicle they were travelling in along Upper St Francois Valley Road around 8.35 am on May 7. Kafi’s two-year-old son Akini Kafi, later died at the Port-of-Spain General Hospital, while his mother, Antonia Cain-Kafi, remains hospitalised in a stable condition.
On April 19, nine-year-old J’Layna Armstrong was among four people killed when gunmen ambushed a car along Lady Young Road in Morvant.
During his contribution in the House, Sturge said: “I’m sure he knows that the murders yesterday are connected to the murders in Lady Young, the quadruple murder. It’s connected. And we know where they are from. We know, we’ve seen all the wakes and all the crying. We know Belle Eau Road is in play. We know Serrano Road is in play.”
Young immediately challenged the remarks in Parliament and defended residents of Port-of-Spain North/St Ann’s West.
“I state here this evening, I have no idea and no clue who are the criminal elements that perpetrated this heinous crime. I do not know those criminal elements, and I’ve never interacted with them,” Young said then.
The development also comes after senior police officers investigating the Belmont killings reportedly concluded the incidents were not linked.
Investigators close to the probe said inquiries carried out since the murders had led them to conclude the two attacks were separate matters, although they declined to disclose further details. Officers from the Homicide Bureau also returned to Belmont on Monday, distributing flyers and appealing for information from residents.
Contacted on Monday following the police assessment, Sturge maintained his position.
“That might explain why detection rates have been historically low, and conviction rates are even lower. As a former criminal defence attorney, my position is that until I see credible evidence to the contrary, backed up by charges laid, I will maintain what I said in the Parliament and which is based on the intelligence on the ground. Small wonder why conviction rates in gang-related matters, and under the Anti-Gang Act in particular, is closer to zero,” Sturge said.
