Senior Reporter
rhondor.dowlat@guardian.co.tt
Up to late last night, members of the T&T Coast Guard and the Police Service were attempting to retrieve a pirogue with several decomposing bodies in it. The vessel was discovered near the bpTT Casia platform off the south-east coast of Trinidad.
Police confirmed around 3 pm that several decomposed human bodies were found aboard the boat in the Atlantic Ocean, believed to have been drifting for days.
The vessel, reportedly spotted by workers in the area, raised alarms due to its condition and unpleasant odour. The coast guard and police were subsequently contacted. Upon inspection, it was confirmed that multiple human remains were inside.
The identities of the deceased and the circumstances surrounding their deaths remain unknown up to late yesterday. Investigations are ongoing to determine the origin of the boat, the cause of death, and any potential foul play.
Up until 8 pm, Lieutenant Khadija Lamy, the public affairs officer of the Coast Guard, stated that no additional details were available. She confirmed that investigations are ongoing.
Meanwhile, DCP Junior Benjamin confirmed last night that his officers, along with the Coast Guard, were still working to retrieve the pirogue.
He added that they would tow the vessel to Tobago, where they plan to conduct thorough investigations to determine its origin and the nationality of the deceased.
In May 2021, 14 decomposing bodies and human remains were found on a boat adrift off the coast of Belle Garden, Tobago.
Local police concluded the vessel to be from Mauritania after an inspection of the boat uncovered seven mobile phones and foreign currency among the corpses.
Police said the phones had information about the West African countries of Mauritania and Mali.
The boat, which drifted to Tobago, became part of the history of so-called “ghost boats” carrying migrants from African countries that have been lost along the Canary Route, known for treacherous currents.
The boat, which was adrift off Tobago, was reported on The Canary website in a June 2021 article titled “Ghost Boats: A Mauritanian cayuco (canoe) in the Caribbean highlights those lost on The Canary Route.” The article stated, “There has not been a month in recent times during which one or two vessels have not disappeared from Mauritania on this route, of which nothing more has been heard in more than a year. ,
“In most cases, these boats disappear without a trace, capsize, break up, and are swallowed by the ocean. But, sometimes, rarely, the trade winds and the currents that make up the great oceanic churn manage to carry an intact cayuco to the Americas, drifting the same route Christopher Columbus inaugurated in 1492: from the Canary Islands to the Caribbean Sea.”
The article added that in Tenerife (Portugal), 24 recent graves, with anonymous tombstones, were evidence of the fate of one group of migrants. “It is a danger to which the thousands of young Africans who attempt to travel the Canary Route, towards some European dream, subject themselves in flimsy fishing vessels, to end up exposed to the harsh realities of the ocean, where death by thirst, surrounded by water, is still all too common.”
The article also noted that a canoe was found drifting off Barbados in May 2006. It left for the Canary Islands from Cape Verde, carrying 47 young Senegalese, at the end of 2005. Eleven decomposed bodies were recovered from the vessel.