Family member attacks bandits with
stones
By Neil Marks
AN ALEXANDER Village, Greater
Georgetown resident risked his life in fighting off armed bandits who attacked
his brother's family business in the area Friday night.
Family business
Debra Persaud
said that around 19:30 hrs she was sitting in a hammock in front of the
wholesale business outlet at Third Street when she saw five strange looking men
walking towards her.
She said she
alerted her husband, Deoraj Jagdeo, telling him that the men looked like
thieves.
No sooner had
Jagdeo emerged from inside his store than the men attacked him, lashing him on
the back with a cutlass.
Continuous blows followed, Jagdeo told the Chronicle.
Debra Persaud
Debra
Persaud (wife) said she also received lashes from the
cutlass, including one across her chest.
One of the five men stood in front of the store.
Deoraj Jagdeo
The men attacked Deoraj, lashing him on the back with a cutlass.
According to
eyewitnesses, he had one gun each in his two hands, while two others were
strapped about his waist.
Jagdeo's
brother, Jerry, was just opposite where the robbery was taking place and he soon
saw what was going on.
He pelted a
`good size brick' at the man who was beating Persaud.
The man with
the gun started firing in Jerry's direction and he constantly dodged the
bullets, which shattered the glass on the right side doors of his
car.
Jerry said he continued to hurl stones as he wanted to prevent the man from going towards a parked mini-bus, which his niece was in.
Randy Jajdeo (the son)
The
men also beat the businessman's son, Randy, using the butt of the gun to hit him on the head.
Meantime, the
men also beat the businessman's son, Randy, using the butt of the gun to hit him
on the head.
The
businessman's employee, Hemchand Manbodh suffered the same fate.
A security guard who was in the shop at the time was also beaten, and his money and jewellery stolen.
According to
Persaud, she had put together $416,000 to deposit in the bank on Friday, but she
ran late, having had to take care of relatives who arrived in the country that
morning.
The bandits
took off with that money and other valuables belonging to the
family.
Jagdeo said
the stolen cash was what he collected from two days' sales.
He imports dry
goods for wholesale.
When the men
calmly walked away from the area, Jerry said he was about to enter his car when
neighbours told him that his right foot was bleeding.
Then is when
he found out that he had been shot in his right leg. He was taken to the
Georgetown Public Hospital Corporation (GPHC) for treatment and was home
yesterday.
Irate
residents said they called the Ruimveldt Police Station when the incident was
ongoing, but they were informed that the station does not take reports over the
phone.
"When bullets
firing all about, who they (the Police) expect to go to the station?", one woman
angrily asked.
Jagdeo said
that after the incident Friday night, two Policemen showed up at their place and
casually talked to them.
According to
Persaud, Randy and Hemchand were told to go and take a medical at the GPHC, but
they soon left as no consideration was shown to their disposition at the time
and they were asked to sit and wait on a countless number of
persons.
Jagdeo said he
was told not to open his store until the Police returned.
However, up
until 13:00 hrs yesterday, no Police rank had visited, he said.
Sunday, August 25, 2002