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Woman held after 9-month-old's death – BABY FED POISON - Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

SHOCK and horror gripped the quiet, rural community of Unis Road, Busy Corner in New Grant, following news of the murder of a nine-month-old baby girl, who police said, was force-fed milk laced with poison on Wednesday evening.

Selieen Ramsaroop breathed her last around 6.30 pm at the San Fernando General Hospital (SFGH), even as doctors tried their best to resuscitate her, after she was brought in motionless.

Police said they received information the baby was force-fed a concoction of milk, cereal and a poisonous substance, believed to be Malathion, at around 12.20 pm on Wednesday.

According to a Google search, Malation is an insecticide commonly used to control mosquitoes and a variety of insects that attack fruits, vegetables, landscaping plants and shrubs.

Shortly after the baby's death, a woman was arrested and police seized a baby bottle, a plastic syringe and a bottle bearing the label Malathion.

Relatives of the baby said on Thursday there could be no excuse or reason for the crime and they called on the police to investigate and charge the woman.

Police sources said investigators were told by the woman that she became annoyed over baby Selieen's constant loud crying and used the syringe to extract a dose of the poison which she then infused in the formula which was already in the baby bottle. She then forced the baby to drink it.

Police sources said the woman, who claimed to have been a victim of abuse, admitted she became frustrated by the baby's crying.

She said after feeding the baby, the woman placed her on a bed to sleep. At around 3.15 pm, the baby was taken to the Princes Town Health Centre in an ambulance. Nurses contacted the Princes Town Police who accompanied the child to the SFGH.

[caption id="attachment_976436" align="alignnone" width="683"] IN SHOCK: Sharmela Deonarine, a relative of baby Selieen, hugs another relative, a young boy, at their New Grant home on Thursday. The family was reeling from baby Selieen's death. PHOTO BY MARVIN HAMILTON -[/caption]

Selieen was pronounced dead by Dr Latchan and her body was removed to the hospital’s mortuary. An autopsy will be done at the Forensic Science Centre in St James.

At the baby's humble home on Thursday, relatives were in deep shock over the incident. Sharmela Deonarine, 42, recalled how death has been following her family.

On August 27, 2020, she said, her son, Vijay Ramsaroop, a student of Princes Town East Secondary, collapsed suddenly and died. An autopsy showed his death was from natural causes.

“Exactly 11 months later, Vijay's older brother Michael Deonarine, 25, and his wife, Crystal Jagroop, were murdered at their Gangaram Trace home, a short distance away from us,” Deonarine said.

This double-murder is yet to be solved.

“And now this little one come and dead. I can’t understand why anyone would do that to a baby,” she said. She also disputed the suspect's claim of being frustrated by the baby's constant crying.

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