Caustic Death Of Jamaican Teen
One Caribbean Nation.
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Relatives shocked
at how 13-year-old girl met her demise
BY
TANESHA MUNDLE
WHEN 13-year-old Shanoya Wray left home quietly on the night of
July 15, her relatives — who quickly reported her missing — had no clue she
would not return home alive.
Not
once during the week in which they awaited her return did they think that she
would have turned up dead and that her alleged killer would be Trinidadian
teacher, Sanju Maharaj, who is currently before the court on a sex charge with
her as the complainant.
“I
thought she would come back home; I wasn't thinking that [she would be dead] at
all,” said Wray's mother, Shana-Hay Hall, who was in tears as she spoke with
the Jamaica Observer yesterday from her family home on Tavern
Drive in Kingston.
The
teen's grandmother, Sylvia Campbell, who was also in tears, said, “Everyday we
call Biffy (Shanoya), even though she nuh answer. [It seemed] the phone was
locked off from the Monday, but we a say Biffy must answer.”
“ The
morning after she gone we never did a tek it fi nothing, 'cause pickney go bout
dem business and come back, so you expect har fi come back the Monday. You a
look fi har a come in a the day or in the evening, but everytime dem call Biffy
no answer,” Shanoya's aunt Lisa-Gaye Hall.
But
five days later the family's hope quickly turned to heart-rending grief when
relatives were asked to submit to DNA testing which confirmed that the skeletal
remains that were found soaking in a bathtub with chemicals at premises on
Walley Close, in Kingston, on July 20 belonged to the missing teenager.
Hall,
who said she has been unable to eat or sleep properly since her daughter's
death, said the police were only able to recover few pieces of bone and a
skull.
“The
doctor say if it did stay one more day no bone wouldn't leave, and no smell
wouldn't be there,” she said.
The
police were alerted to the remains by a neighbour who was concerned about an
unpleasant stench from next door after cleaning his home. The neighbour
reportedly a used a ladder to climb up and peep through a window over into the
premises and made the unfortunate discovery.
According
to Hall, based on the state of the remains, she was informed that an autopsy
could not be done. The police, she said, have since theorised that a caustic
substance was used to burn the teen's body.
She
said that she was also told by the police that neighbours had allegedly seen a
man burning female clothing and braids. Her daughter, she said, was wearing
braids at the time she went missing
“We
just can't believe how the man burn up the child, 'cause even the bone weh left
back dem say no substance no inna the bone, so if the neighbour never find it
even the next 10 years we wouldn't find her or know what happen to her, and dem
would haffi just throw out the case,” said the child's aunt, shaking her head.
A
19-year-old resident of Harbour View in Kingston, Lenardo Madden, believed to
be a close friend of the Trinidadian and who was allegedly at the house when
the police made the gruesome discovery was later charged along with Maharaj
with murder, accessory after the fact, and misprison of felony.
The
Trinidadian teacher was arrested and charged last year after Shanoya was found
at his home a day after she did return home from school.
She
said around October of last year her daughter, who was then a 12-year-old grade
seven student at New Day All-Age School did not come home after school.
Maharaj,
who was on teaching practice at the school at the time, was out on bail and had
been scheduled to reappear in court this November on carnal abuse charge.
The
teenager's father, Starkey Wray, who later turned up at the home yesterday,
could not hide his emotions.
“Me
cyaan even tell you how I'm coping; it a mad me, it's the worst thing ever
happen to somebody I know.
“The
man who kill her is really wicked; first me see a man wicked like that: how you
can kill a child like that?”
Similar
sentiments were expressed by Shanoya's older sister, Correy-Ann Morgan, 15.
“It
just nuh feel right just to know how she innocent and to know what she go
through; maybe if a did something like sickness kill her we wouldn't feel like
we do now, 'cause we not even know how she died. We just imagine the pain that
she went through before she die; it's just hard.”
She
described her sister as always pleasant.
“It's
like certain things in a life hard for me to do now. Me try me best not to
think about it, but it is like something come in my head back and I can't be
happy to the fullest again,” Morgan said.
The
family, meanwhile, is hoping they will get justice in the court.
The
two accused are expected to appear in court tomorrow.
(From Jamaica Observer)
8/16/18
Mahogany Coconut Group(MCG) Comment
The Mahogany Coconut Group will continue its quest to ensure that all abuse of our women, children and elderly, comes to an end and that those responsible are quickly brought to justice. the MCG has called for capital punishment for those criminals who rape women and has canvassed for minimum sentences of twenty five years, for those who molest our children. We continue to urge regional governments, to revise and revisit existing laws relating to such crimes and use them to ruthlessly rid our region of this growing scourge on our Caribbean societies.
We extend our profound sympathy to the family. May they find the needed strength during this difficult time.
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