Jamaica Gleaner

PARENTS HEARTBROKE­N over missing kids

... Scores still unaccounte­d for

- Nadine Wilson-Harris Staff Reporter nadine.wilson@gleanerjm.com

ERIC MAXWELL’S only child is among the 1,674 children who went missing last year, and with each passing day he gets even more depressed about the mysterious disappeara­nce of his 12-year-old daughter, Tamoy.

According to the Ananda Alert Secretaria­t, while there has been a three per cent decline in the number of children reported missing when compared to the correspond­ing period in 2016, the whereabout­s of 195 of Jamaica’s children were still unknown at the end of last year.

Maxwell’s daughter went missing on November 16, 2017. She was returning home from the Corporate Area school she attended, but decided to stop at a friend’s house to change after she got drenched in the rain. It is reported that she left the friend’s house and headed to the bus stop and has not been seen or heard from since.

“We were home waiting on her to come home and we didn’t really see she come home back from school,” the distressed father told The Sunday Gleaner.

He said that in addition to filing a missing person’s report, he also went to her school to do his own investigat­ion, but he is yet to receive any clues as to the whereabout­s of his daughter, who is of a Pelican Parade, Kingston 11 address.

“I am not getting anywhere. The cops them calling me to ask me if I hear anything new, and I tell them no,” Maxwell said.

Tamoy is of brown complexion, slim built and is about 105 centimetre­s (three feet, five inches) tall. Anyone knowing her whereabout­s is asked to contact the Hunts Bay Police at 9237111, or Police 119 emergency number.

“From mi youth born, a me a take care of her. From she little bit. A this morning mi get up a cry. I am just seeing the picture alone and I am not seeing her,” the distraught father lamented last week.

78 PER CENT ARE FEMALES

An estimated 78 per cent of those who went missing last year were females. According to the secretaria­t, three of the children were found dead subsequent to being reported missing. They are Shineka Gray, Okeem Golding and Ariel Lawrence.

According to media reports, the partly decomposed body of Shineka Gray was found February last year. The former grade 10 Green Pond High School student was found in bushes in the community of Meadows of Irwin, St James, three days after she was reported missing. It is reported that she was last seen heading to a taxi stand, after attending a funeral.

The mutilated remains of 13-year-old Okeem Golding was found on Chapel Street in Linstead, St Catherine, last year July, about a week after he was reported missing, while the body of 17year-old Ariel Lawrence was found with chop wounds hours after she was seen boarding a taxi in Portsmouth, St Catherine.

HAPPY ENDING

*Sabrina James is happy that her daughter will not be numbered among the missing when the 2018 data is collated, as she was found two weeks after she was reported missing on February 5 this year.

The mother told The Sunday

Gleaner that her 12-year-old daughter left the house one day and did not return. She did not see her again until February 19.

James said she went to file a report at the police station once she realised that her daughter was missing, and she also started doing her own search. She later found out that her daughter was last seen in the company of her neighbour’s brother, who appears to be in his late 30s.

Her neighbour said he did not know where to find his brother as he had told him to leave his house.

“The gentleman’s brother said that he can’t take him and the whole heap of young girls, because when he brings them there, he would beat them and all kind of things, so he put him out. So he doesn’t know where he is right now,” the mother said.

The man’s mother eventually took James’ daughter to the police station after she found out that a search had been launched for her.

“The lady was denying that he was her son, and she said she don’t know the gentleman. So I asked her how my daughter turn up at her yard,” the frustrated mother said.

“I asked her why she had my daughter for so long. I was so upset I wanted to fight her, but the police told me I couldn’t do that.”

RAPED BY CAPTORS

James’ daughter told her that she was raped by the man and his two friends. She said her daughter had reached out to her abductor’s female cousin for help, but she said she could not assist. The cousin later told the police that she thought the 12-year-old girl was the man’s relative and so she did not intervene.

“My daughter said to me in front of the officers and the lady that she go to the lady and ask the lady if she can’t call the police for her because she is tired of what they are doing to her, and the lady turn to her and tell her that she cannot do anything,” James said. No arrests have been made. James said her daughter has been receiving counsellin­g.

* Names changed to protect identity

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 ??  ?? Twelve-year-old Tamoy Maxwell went missing on November 16, 2017.
Twelve-year-old Tamoy Maxwell went missing on November 16, 2017.

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