After day of tears, vigil of hope for missing Montreal boy's family - Action News
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Montreal

After day of tears, vigil of hope for missing Montreal boy's family

An outpouring of support reached the doorstep of Ariel Jeffrey Kouakou's family home in the form of a vigil Friday night, following a harrowing week full of unanswered questions.

Ariel Jeffrey Kouakou, 10, disappeared Monday after he left his Ahuntsic-Cartierville home

A Friday night vigil in support of Ariel Jeffrey Kouakou's family left from the park he was last seen in on Monday. (Navneet Pall)

An outpouring of support reached the doorstep of Ariel Jeffrey Kouakou's family home in the form of a vigil Friday night, following a harrowing week full of unanswered questions.

It was the fifth nightfall since the 10-year-old boy went missing from his Montreal neighbourhood.

About a hundred people walkedfrom the park,where he was last seen Monday after leaving his home inAhuntsic-Cartiervilleto walk to a friend's house.

The vigil reached the family's door, holding candles and signs, and watched as people filed down the stairs.Among them was the boy's father,KouadioFrdricKouakou.

Ariel was last seen in Parc des Bateliers in Ahuntsic-Cartierville, Que., on Monday. (Montreal police)

"We're here for you," members of the crowd said as he approached the sidewalk.

"This is the Quebec I dream about. Thank you very much," he answered, choking back tears.

He told the crowd their positivity was helping bring his son home.

"Jeff will come back to us!" he called out.

He asked the crowd to reconvene there at 11 a.m. Saturday so they could retraceAriel's footsteps together.

'Help mefind my son,' mother pleads

Ariel's mother,Akouena NollaBibie, spoke Friday afternoon,saying she hasn't slept since her sonwent missing.

Through tears, she begged anyone with information about her son's whereabouts to come forward.

"I ask the whole Canadian population to help mefind my son," she said. "I'm speaking from the heart.I'm suffering."

She described her son as "calm andgentle" and said he was devoted to his friends.
Akouena Nolla Bibie told reporters that she hasn't slept since her 10-year-old son Ariel went missing Monday. (CBC)

She spoke alongside her husband who helped her to stand during the brief interview.

The boy's father said that he still has hope his son will be found alive and believes he was kidnapped.

Kouakousaid the family harboursno ill will towardanyone involvedthey simply want their son back.

The family also thanked police officers and volunteers who are participating in the search effort.

Last seen on Monday

A surveillance video taken on Monday from a homeonGouin Boulevard shows Ariel walking, turning as if his name had been called, walking again and then turning again before walking swiftly away.

Earlier in the day, the family issued another appeal asking for help.

"We want to speak to the public. We want to speak to people who live close to here,"said Mireille N'Zi, the boy's aunt.

"If they saw anything, any hints whether they are as minimal as possible or even if they think they are not necessary do not be scared to speak."
Kouadio Frdric Kouakou, the father of 10-year-old Ariel Jeffrey Kouakou, is asking anyone with information about the disappearance to come forward. (Sarah Leavitt/CBC)

Montreal police say they are considering all possible scenarios and haven't ruled out kidnapping.

Here are details about Ariel, who speaks French:

  • About four-foot-seven and 88 pounds.
  • Dark hair and dark eyes.
  • Was last seen wearing a black coat with a hood, grey pants and yellow shoes.

Anyone with information is asked to contact 911 or visit the policecommand post set up on Gouin Boulevard.

Colleagues of the boy's fatherhave set up a crowdfunding effort in order to help the family.

On Friday, the campaign had already more than doubled its original goal, raising almost $3,000.

Residents asked to check backyards, sheds

Police say they don't need more volunteers for now, but areasking the public to keep an eye out for Ariel.

"Instead of coming here as volunteers to help with the searches, if you want to help us, the best way is to check around your home, speak to your neighbours and share information so that we can find Ariel as quickly as possible," said Montreal police spokesperson Jean-Pierre Brabant.

Quebec provincial police, Montreal police, firefighters, volunteers and Ariel's family have canvassed theriverbank and wooded area ofParc des Bateliersby foot, horseback, boat and helicopter.

Thepark, which borders on the Rivire des Prairies, is where Ariel was last seen by a witness onMonday at 2 p.m.

Police officers and volunteers also searched the Cartierville neighbourhood and checked cars as theywent door to door in hopes of finding Ariel.
Volunteers are canvassing the neighbourhood of Cartierville, where Ariel was last seen. Lucy Mauciari, left, and Lina Napolitano, right, showed up to help Friday. (Lauren McCallum/CBC)

Volunteer Lina Napolitanotravelled from Laval to jointhe search Friday. As a mother, she said she felt compelled to help Ariel's family.

"It's impossible that he's nowhere to be found," she said. "And I'm not going to stop until we find him."

Residents have plastered photos of Ariel all over the neighbourhood on lampposts, telephone poles and in local businesses.

Police are asking residents ofCartiervilleto check their backyards, garages and sheds, or anywhere a child could be hiding.

Father calls for newAmber Alert

The familyis asking for police to launch a newAmber Alert for his son after it was withdrawn earlier this week.

An Amber Alert was issuedTuesday afternoon, but was later lifted when police determined hiscase didn't meet the criteria to keep the emergency measure in place.

Amber Alerts are usually issued only when a child is under 18, is believed to have been abducted and be in imminent danger, and when police have information that might help locate them.
Kouadio Frdric Kouakou, Ariel's father, shows a CCTV image of one of the last places his son was seen as the search to find him continues in Montreal. (Graham Hughes/Canadian Press)

This wasthe first time Montreal police hadissued an alert without meeting those conditions, saying it was an "exceptional measure" given that Ariel had been missing for more than 24 hours.

After the Amber Alert was issued, a woman who spoke to Ariel in ParcdesBateliers contacted police.

With files from Radio-Canada and Navneet Pall