Venezuelan human rights lawyers and opposition officials condemned the shooting and demanded an investigation.
âThe death of a Venezuelan boy, who along with his mother fled from the dictatorship, hurts our soul as a country,â tweeted Venezuelan opposition leader Juan Guaidó. âThe shots fired by the Trinidad and Tobago Coast Guard are unjustified, they killed him.â
The Coast Guard spotted the boat as it crossed the Venezuelan border into Trinidad and Tobago waters just before midnight Saturday, according to a statement posted on Facebook and signed by Kerron Valere, a lieutenant and public affairs officer with the Trinidad and Tobago Coast Guard.
The Coast Guard crew tried to intercept the boat using its horn, searchlight and flares, followed by warning gun shots, according to the statement, but the boat continued forward with âaggressiveâ moves, attempting to ram into a Coast Guard vessel.
The vessel was larger than the Coast Guard boat, the statement said, and its advances caused crew members âto fear for their lives,â prompting them to fire shots at the vesselâs engine, according to the Coast Guard statement, which did not specify how many shots were fired. Officials said the recent use of this âevasive techniqueâ against the Coast Guard in other instances had caused ship damage and risked the safety of crew members.
Only after the ship stopped did the Coast Guard realize there were migrants âhiddenâ on board, and a woman was bleeding, according to the statement. The woman was stabilized and taken to a local health facility, but her baby was found unresponsive. Officials did not specify how many people were on the vessel but said the others on board will be processed âin accordance with immigration and health protocols.â
âThe Trinidad and Tobago Coast Guard extends sincerest condolences to the family and loved ones of the infant and takes the opportunity to wish the injured female a speedy recovery,â the statement read.
The wounded mother told her relatives that the captain of the boat wanted to turn back to Venezuela when he saw the Coast Guard, the womanâs sister-in-law, Daicelis Salgado, 38, said in an interview with The Washington Post.
âBut the Guard followed them and started shooting at the engines,â Salgado said. âShe was close to the engine. She said she felt something hit her in the chest and immediately looked down and saw the babyâs head broken. She had him in her chest when she was shot.â
The baby, his mother and his sister were all on their way to meet the childrenâs father, who had been living in Trinidad, Salgado said. She said authorities have not yet informed the father or other family members of the whereabouts of the older child or the body of the baby boy.
âMy brother doesnât know where his daughter is,â she said.
Salgado left for Trinidad four years ago from her hometown in Venezuela, fleeing the economic crisis there. Her brother followed eight months ago. She learned the rest of his family was traveling to Trinidad this Saturday.
âI told him I didnât agree because things are not very good here now,â she said. âBut he told me he rented a room and bought a fan for his children. He wanted them all to be together.â
They were among 20 people on board the migrant boat on Saturday night, said Orlando Moreno, a lawyer with the Venezuelan advocacy group Foro Penal. He heard about the death from a family member of the baby boy in Trinidad on Sunday.
âWhat kind of people are they to shoot like that? What consolation can a mother have after that?â Moreno said in a tweet, adding that he has put the relatives in contact with United Nations representatives in Venezuela. âThis is the reality of our coasts. It is a permanent tragedy with faces, stories, families and pain.â
Between six to 10 vessels leave daily from northeastern Venezuela toward Trinidad and Tobago, Moreno said, as Venezuelans continue to flee the economic crisis in the socialist state under the government of President Nicolás Maduro. The president did not make any public statements about the shooting by late Sunday.
The fatal shooting comes as Venezuelans are crossing into the United States in record numbers, usually after flying to Mexico and walking across the border. U.S. Customs and Border Protection stopped 24,819 Venezuelans in December, up from 206 a year earlier.
Nafeesa Mohammed, a human rights attorney in Trinidad, said she was concerned about the shooting and described it as an âabnormal situationâ with more questions than answers.
âIt is a very barbaric approach,â she said. âYou should not be firing at a vessel in the middle of the night unless they are being attacked. ⦠Was there evidence of an attack? Who can prove it?â
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