Mission

Non-Profit, 501(c)(3)

Mission:
The Dragonfly Centre is committed to the elimination of domestic violence against women and their children by providing victim friendly services that promotes the empowerment of survivors; through advocacy, public awareness and education and community based initiatives.

Vision: The Dragonfly Centre envisions a world free of violence against women and their children and social justice for all. We are founded on the vision and belief that every person has the right to live in a safe environment free from violence and the fear of violence and strive to work collaboratively with the community to provide victim friendly services to support domestic violence victims, survivors to the stage of thriving.

Now on Facebook:


Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Facebook produces booklet to help domestic abuse survivors use the website

Even as Twitter is struggling to make a statement against trolls threatening feminists with rape and violence, Facebook has come out with a document guiding survivors of domestic abuse on using the social network.

Facebook has partnered with the National Network to End Domestic Violence (NNEDV) to come up with a Privacy and Safety on Facebook booklet called “A guide for survivors of abuse”. The nine-page booklet enlists ways and methods victims of domestic abuse can use to keep their privacy protected on Facebook.

The social networking website says that the guide is aimed at helping survivors of domestic violence, sexual assault and stalking learn their way around Facebook and remain safe. It will help make sure that while victims manage to remain connected with their family and friends, they can stay away from their account being misused by abusers, stalkers and perpetrators.

Facebook tells you how to ensure your privacy and safety online
Facebook tells you how to ensure your privacy and safety online


Facebook believes that victims should be able to live a healthy social life despite the fear of abusers. “Telling a victim to go offline to be safe is not only unacceptable, it further isolates her from people who love her. Our role, as advocates, professionals, friends, and family, is to make sure that survivors know the options to maintain their safety. That’s the empowering strategy – helping survivors take back the control that abusers have tried to steal from their lives,” says Cindy Southworth of NNEDV.

The guide goes on to elaborate how to review privacy settings to ensure that perpetrators are locked out of the profile and only the right people have access to personal details on the profile. Another important aspect outlined by the booklet talks about tightening security settings by setting up a security question, enabling details of logins and approval requirement. The guide could come in handy for not just victims of domestic abuse but also regular users of Facebook who put up details and images from their lives onto the social networking website regularly.

You can read through the guide, a great initiative by Facebook, here.

Source: http://tech2.in.com/news/social-networking/facebook-produces-booklet-to-help-domestic-abuse-survivors-use-the-website/909628

Saturday, July 27, 2013

Save the Date: September 7, 2013

We are excited to announce that the Dragonfly Centre 

will again be part of the upcoming Women of Color Conference. 

You don't want to miss this exciting event.

 



Dad due to be charged with attempted murder of wife

Friday, July 26 2013
A 28-year-old father of two from St Helena is expected to be charged with the attempted murder of his common law wife.
The woman Talola Grannam is fighting for her life at the Eric Williams Medical Sciences Complex where she has been warded since last Sunday. Grannam told police she has been a victim of domestic violence at the hands of the suspect.

According to reports, at about 6am last Sunday, the 26-year-old woman and the male relative got into altercation at their David Trace home, shortly after returning from a party. Grannam is a mother of two children . Police reports say the man struck the woman and she began arguing loudly with him when he pulled a cutlass and began chopping her repeatedly. The woman received chops to her head and face. One of her fingers was lost in the process and doctors reportedly told relatives, the young mother has lost the use of her left arm.

The suspect then fled the scene, but was held days later in Tunapuna by police and remains in police custody.

Sgt. Lalchan Gobin along with Cpl. Pierre of the Caroni police station visited the scene. Cpl. Pierre is continuing investigations .

Source: www.newsday.co.tt/crime_and_court/0,181282.html

Sunday, July 21, 2013

BABY'S LIFE SAVED

By CECILY ASSON Friday, July 19 2013
FOUR police officers are today being called heroes as their direct involvement is believed to have saved the life of a four-month-old infant boy who was snatched from the arms of his grandmother by a man who later ran off into the forest threatening to kill the child and then himself.
The dramatic rescue of little Sanjay Seepersad on Wednesday evening, took place on the same day another infant, five-month-old Caeli Teelucksingh was rescued by cops in Chaguanas after she was found in a vehicle abandoned by two car thieves, five minutes after the criminals stole the vehicle from Caeli’s parents at gunpoint.

Baby Sanjay’s life literally hanged in the balance as he was found being tightly held by a male relative in the forest some miles from Sanjay’s home at Rampersad Trace, Clarke Road, Penal.

At 6.30 pm on Wednesday, police received a call that a baby had been abducted by a man who ran off into the forest. A frantic Nadia Hosein, 20, was later met by Acting Sgt Victor, Constables Singh and Nanan and WPC Bickram, who were told that a man had snatched Hosein’s son from the arms of his (Sanjay) grandmother.

The officers, accompanied by Hosein, went into the forest and five hours later, spotted the man still holding a screaming Sanjay. The officers drew their weapons and placed themselves at strategic points ready to act in a split second if baby Sanjay’s life became in danger.

Hosein begged the man to hand over the screaming child. The man, Newsday was told, told Hosein to “catch the baby”, but she pleaded with him saying she preferred to walk up to him and take Sanjay. Hosein then walked slowly towards the man while the officers, guns drawn and pointed at the suspect, watched and waited. The man, who stood under a tree, on seeing the officers surrounding him, calmly handed over baby Sanjay to his mother as the officers swiftly moved in and arrested the 29-year-old man who according to sources, appeared to be intoxicated. Baby Sanjay was quickly taken to the Siparia Health Centre where a medical examination revealed he was unharmed.

Up to press time, he remained in custody at the Penal Police Station. It is expected that a file will soon be sent to the Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions for guidance on how investigators should proceed.

Yesterday, a relieved Hosein and her mother-in-law Rajdaye Basdeo, 69, along with other relatives spoke of the hell they all went through while Sanjay was in the grip of his abductor in the forest. Sanjay’s 18-month-old sister Rheanna escaped the man’s fury on Wednesday.

Basdeo said her daughter-in-law has been a victim of domestic abuse who only hours before the abduction, was beaten by the suspect — whom Hosein had a relationship with for the past three years — when she could not help him locate his cellphone charger. Relatives said moments before he abducted Sanjay, the man grabbed an axe and was about to chop Hosein when they were alerted by screams and ran to her rescue with a female relative wrestling away the axe from the man.

“Whenever he drinks, he gets on like this. Things could have been much worse if we have not taken away that axe,” a relative said, adding that this violent tendency was what led Hosein going to court to have a restraining order taken out against him earlier this year.

The man, relatives said, recently breached the order and was charged not only for the breach but also for domestic violence. On Tuesday, he appeared in the Siparia Magistrates Court to answer the charges and was placed on $15,000 bail, relatives said. After he wept and promised to “behave himself”, relatives secured his bail and he was released from custody. “And now look what he gone and do,” a relative said.

Recalling the events of Wednesday evening, Basdeo said, “I was holding Sanjay when he snatched the child away from me and ran. He shouted out that he would kill Sanjay and then himself.”

A male relative took up the story saying that he went into the forest in search of the man. “When I found him, he was holding Sanjay. I told him to give me the child but he said the only person he would give the child to was Nadia. So Nadia went into the bush to get Sanjay but was beaten by the man who refused to release the child,” the man said.

When other relatives telephoned the suspect’s cellphone and he answered it, baby Sanjay could be heard screaming. “I begged him to give the grandmother the child but he refused. He again threatened to kill the child and then himself.” The police were called in.

Hosein yesterday told Newsday that when she came across the man in the forest holding her son, she begged him to release Sanjay. “He told me to catch the child. I told him no, don’t throw the baby. I then walked up to him and took my son,” she said in soft tones.

Newsday was told by relatives that in January, Hosein was placed in a Safe House by police but she left. “I don’t know why he won’t behave himself. He just wouldn’t behave himself,” the soft-spoken young mother said. Relatives later told Newsday that they hope when the man is charged and appears in court, bail would not be granted. They said that Hosein was a loving and forgiving person who in the three years she was with the man, had left him six times only to return after he begged her. Relatives said they would be willing to assist Hosein in taking care of her two children. PC Singh is continuing investigations.


Source: http://www.newsday.co.tt/news/0,180940.html

Friday, July 19, 2013

Night of Terror for Mother and 4 Month Old Baby


Man threatens to drown baby
...suspect in custody

A Penal man is in police custody after he threatened to drown a four-month-old baby boy in a muddy pond.

The 27-year-old suspect is expected to be charged with several offfences, including assault by beating the child's mother with a piece of wood.

Little Sanjay Seepersad was asleep at his family's home at Rampersad Trace, Clarke Road, when the drunken man entered around 6.30pm.

Police said the man began arguing with the child's mother, Nadia Hosein, over a cellphone charger.

The child's older sister, one-year-old Reanna Seepersad, was also in the house.

Investigators said the suspects began beating 20-year-old Hosein about the body. The woman's screams alerted relatives, who lived nearby. But as they attempted to stop the man, he grabbed the screaming baby and ran into a forested area.

Police said he threatened to kill the baby boy. A team of officers led by acting corporal Persad of the Siparia CID and officers of the Penal CID and Task Force mounted a search for the suspect.

He was spotted standing near a pond inside the thick forest around 8.30pm. Investigators said the man threatened to throw the baby inside the pond if they came closer. But as the officers began moving in, the man dropped the baby and ran off.

The officers chased the man through the forest. He was arrested and taken to the Penal police station. The mother and son were examined at the Siparia Health Centre. Hosein was treated for injuries to her both legs.Man threatens to drown baby
...suspect in custody


A Penal man is in police custody after he threatened to drown a four-month-old baby boy in a muddy pond.

The 27-year-old suspect is expected to be charged with several offfences, including assault by beating the child's mother with a piece of wood.

Little Sanjay Seepersad was asleep at his family's home at Rampersad Trace, Clarke Road, when the drunken man entered around 6.30pm.

Police said the man began arguing with the child's mother, Nadia Hosein, over a cellphone charger.

The child's older sister, one-year-old Reanna Seepersad, was also in the house.

Investigators said the suspects began beating 20-year-old Hosein about the body. The woman's screams alerted relatives, who lived nearby. But as they attempted to stop the man, he grabbed the screaming baby and ran into a forested area.

Police said he threatened to kill the baby boy. A team of officers led by acting corporal Persad of the Siparia CID and officers of the Penal CID and Task Force mounted a search for the suspect.

He was spotted standing near a pond inside the thick forest around 8.30pm. Investigators said the man threatened to throw the baby inside the pond if they came closer. But as the officers began moving in, the man dropped the baby and ran off.

The officers chased the man through the forest. He was arrested and taken to the Penal police station. The mother and son were examined at the Siparia Health Centre. Hosein was treated for injuries to her both legs.

Source: Ccn Tvnews, facebook page