The Vincentian PDF-14-09-2018

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The National Newspaper of St. Vincent and the Grenadines

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FRIDAY,

SEPTEMBER 14, 2018

VOLUME 112, No.37

www.thevincentian.com

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RAPED AND MURDERED;

COMMUNITY IN DISBELIEF Stories by KENVILLE HORNE VILLAGERS IN THE COMMUNITY of Lower Questelles, are in a state of anger and disbelief following the brutal death of one of their own. The body of Yolande McMaster, also known as ‘Crazy’, was discovered by a young man, who went to pick limes in a yard, on Monday 10, sometime around 8 am. An autopsy revealed, that McMaster was raped and suffered blunt trauma to the face and back of her head. Continued on Page 3.

The area where Yolande McMaster’s body was discovered.

YOLANDE FOUGHT HARD; SAYS SISTER L-R: Yolande McMaster and sisters Sharon Ollivierre and Pearl McMaster in happier times.

PEARL MCMASTER, the younger sister of Yolande McMaster who was raped and murdered in Lower Questelles between Saturday night and Sunday morning, said that her sister struggled with alcoholism, but was a special person who did not deserve such a horrible death. “I just want persons to know that Yolande was a special person. Yolande was kind, helpful, jovial, and everybody in the village knew her for that, and she battled alcoholism,” said Pearl, during an interview with THE VINCENTIAN newspaper on

Tuesday, adding that her sister was also one to put up a fight. “She was a fighter, and she fought her demons of alcohol, and she also fought perpetrators over the years.” She revealed that her sister had been attacked more than twice, and she would always fight; but it wasn’t to be this time. “I think she has always been taken advantaged of because of her drinking. Nonetheless, Yolande was a human, and she did not deserve to go the way she went,” said Pearl. She said she and her sister were very close, although they

took two different paths. “I was the one who had to pick up Yolande more or less, and she wasn’t afraid to come to me. She could have been hard-headed, we knew her for that… but as I said, it was a sickness.” Recounting the last time she saw her sister, Pearl said that Yolande left home on Saturday for a funeral in Clare Valley. Prior to that, she was at home for almost three weeks in a sober state. “There were times she will be sober for two or three weeks, sometimes a month, and after that, she would start back to

Continued on Page 3.

Yolande Mc Master.


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