Bajnauth said they waited for the police patrol, which never
came and eventually they locked up the house and turned in.
However, they were uneasy as the men were still in the area and
no one actually went to bed. She said it was as though they had
a wake.
Around 3.30 am, she said, they saw a man standing on the
outside stairs peeping through a window and someone shouted at
him. Shots rang out then, she said and another man jumped from a
water tank downstairs onto the shed attached to the top flat,
broke a window on the veranda and entered the home. She said
others also entered the home, all armed with guns, and all the
relatives were ordered to lie on the floor and not to make any
noise. They were ordered to hand over money and jewellery.
She added that while these men were upstairs others were
downstairs and they were firing shots, perhaps to scare off
anyone who might have attempted to go to their aid. The men who
wore brown clothing and masks then took the children into one
room and the adults into another room, which they ransacked.
They removed everyone's jewellery and a large amount of local
and foreign currency. The men also took away a large suitcase,
which had not been opened since the relatives arrived, as well
as several passports. Bajnauth said the men took Cdn$40 which
her niece had given to her for Mother's Day and which she had
placed in a wallet in the wardrobe.
She recalled the men taking Cdn$10,000 from her
brother-in-law and more money from her sister and niece
including their jewellery. The men beat their terrified hostages
about their bodies with their guns, ransacked the entire house
and damaged a few household appliances including a fan and a gas
cooker.
Bajnauth said the men paraded up and down in the house as if
they lived there.
Other family members said the ordeal went on for about an
hour and although they had screamed no one came out nor did the
police arrive until sometime after. The men later escaped by
jumping over a back fence and going into a canefield. Family
members said the gang numbered about eight and they knew who to
look for, who had money and how much as at one point they had
said that the money they had been given was not enough.
The police issued two releases on the matter yesterday. The
first said that around 3.20 yesterday four men - three armed
with guns and one with a cutlass - robbed the family. The
release said that the suspects entered the yard and fired two
shots, one of which shattered a window. The victims were forced
to open the door after threats were made. Upon gaining entry the
suspects were assaulted and robbed. Police said the bandits took
$124,000, CDN$55,300 (around $10M), jewellery and documents.
While fleeing, the bandits discharged two more rounds, the
police said.
The second press release issued last evening said that
"the Guyana Police Force wishes to express its concern over
this incident in light of the reported poor response by police
ranks. As a consequence, the Assistant Commissioner in charge of
the Office of Professional Responsibility (OPR) has been tasked
to investigate and report in relation to police action taken
prior to and after the robbery".
The poor response by the police to crimes has been a
longstanding problem all across the country and in Berbice it
has led to several protests and calls for wholesale changes to
the staffing of the police division and command of the area.
The house at Betsy Ground that armed men attacked yesterday. (Keisha
McCammon photo)
A ransacked room of the Betsy Ground house.