Mom fears teen missing

Two months ago, 18-year-old Kevin Livian left his hometown of Airy Hall on the Essequibo Coast, Region Two (Pomeroon-Supenaam), to search for employment in the interior of Guyana and his family now fears him missing, since they have not had contact with the teen since he left home.
Mother of the missing teen, Tessa Livian, contacted Guyana Times and relayed her fears, while disclosing that her son used to reside with his grandmother in Airy Hall, while she lives in Wakenaam, Essequibo River, with his two other siblings.
This publication heard that Tessa last communicated with her son in late May 2017 and subsequently learnt that he intended to leave for the interior with a friend for work.

Missing Kevin Livian

The distraught parent elucidated that she had allowed her son to leave home on the basis that he had promised to return in June, the latest.
However, the teen never made any form of contact with his mother or relatives since his departure and his mother related that she became anxious when she was not getting through to his mobile phone, but was pacified when someone told her that signal coverage is a problem in the hinterlands.
A hopeful Livian fruitlessly awaited the arrival of her son during June month and she became suspicious upon becoming aware that the unnamed friend her son reportedly had left to go with was at home, prompting her to question him about her son’s whereabouts.
“When I ask he weh Kevin deh, he said that Kevin in the backdam since June,” she stated.
Tessa indicated that she has since filed a missing person’s report at the Parika and Bartica Police Stations, in hopes that information would surface leading her to the whereabouts of her son.
Moreover, the grieving mother proclaimed that the teen has never “disappeared” or “ran-away” from home prior to the incident and it is for this reason that she fears that the worst may have befallen her eldest child.
Anyone with information on Kevin Livian’s whereabouts is asked to contact his mother, Tessa Livian on cellphone number 604-9347 or the nearest Police station.