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Top Stories for Thursday, July 11, 2002
Government welcomes condemnation of violence by CARICOM, donors FOREIGN Trade and International Cooperation Minister, Mr. Clement Rohee yesterday said the Government and people of Guyana welcomed the condemnation by the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) and major western countries of the storming of the Office of the President and other acts of violence in the city by protesters last week.
Bandits beat,
terrorise Mahaica family
...claimed they were
'Police'
By Mark Ramotar

ATTACKED:
Businessman Heman Narine and his wife Meshele.
![]() The Chinese woman who rents a section of the Narines' business premises and who had to immediately close the 'Pearl Restaurant' she operates there. (Corwin Williams photos) |
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TERRORISED:
The couple's three children, from left, Amar, Rookmani and Leno, who celebrated
his 18th birthday yesterday.
Heman
Narine, also called 'Tinnie', 41, his wife Meshele, 37, and two of their
friends who work with Demerara Distillers Limited (DDL) were sitting in front
of their beer garden at Belmont, Mahaica (adjacent to the Twilite Cinema)
around 20:10 hrs when the incident occurred.
Narine,
who had a gash over his left eye due to the beatings he received at the hands
of the bandits and which required six stitches, told the Chronicle yesterday
that two of his three children, Leno, 18, and Rookmani, 11, were also outside
with them at the time of the incident. Amar, 16, was in the upper flat of the
two-storey premises looking at television.
His wife
Meshele recalled that four unmasked men pulled up alongside the beer garden in
a gold-coloured car with the number plate HA 94. It is understood that the car
might have been the same one hijacked Sunday night from a taxi service in
Georgetown.
Meshele
said one of the men, wearing a bullet-proof vest, came out of the vehicle with
a gun in his hand and told them that he is a "Police" and that
"they should go upstairs".
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| ![]() The business place at Belmont, Mahaica where the armed bandits struck. |
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"We
were all sitting outside; my husband and children and two friends and we were
having a drink. Then all of a sudden a car pull up and the men jump out and
said 'Police'. They had guns and they tell all of us to get inside and go
upstairs and by chance, I don't know how, but I manage and escape from them
and I started to scream on the road because I didn't know what was happening
inside," Meshele told the Chronicle.
"After
they (the bandits) left, they fired a couple of shots on the road...and then I
see my husband coming down the step with blood on his face bleeding and then
my children said they carried away everything," she lamented.
Residents
said one of the men was dressed in Army wear (camouflage vest), while another
had on the bullet-proof vest. They were all said to be wearing topes.
"Actually,
the thing happened so quick. As soon as the car stopped, the men came out with
the guns. We couldn't do nothing. All dey tell we is 'Police, Police' and leh
we go inside...," Meshele recalled.
The
couple's eldest son, Leno, who celebrated his 18th birthday yesterday on a sad
note, told this newspaper that they were all sitting outside near the entrance
of their beer garden chatting and having a nice time when the bandits struck.
"They
come out with their guns. Mom luckily escaped; she get away from them. So was
me, my dad, my sister and the two friends - the five of us dey ordered to go
upstairs. When we were going up the step, I was walking a little slow and one
of them took the gun and hit me and my father to go upstairs quick and when we
reach upstairs they order all of us to lie on the ground," a visibly
shaken Leno recalled.
The
teenager said that one of the bandits pointed the gun at them as they pushed
them to stay on the floor and would frequently nudge them in their backs with
the machine gun. He said the other two bandits proceeded to empty their
pockets and strip them of all the jewellery they had on at the time. He said
the men also went inside the bedrooms and started to "tumble up the whole
place and tek what they want".
Leno
said the men relieved him of the gold hand band he was wearing and the two
finger rings which he had on. He said too that the men told his father to get
up from the floor and to hand over all the cash and jewellery. They also
proceeded to deal him several blows about the body and face with the gun butt,
after which he collapsed on the floor, blood streaming down his face.
"When
they hit daddy, I was going to get up and one of the men took the gun butt and
hit me in the back and push me down back on the ground," Leno recalled.
He said
after his father collapsed on the floor, the bandits proceeded to terrorise
his 11-year-old sister, Rookmani.
"They
went to my sister and say dey gon kill she but I beg them to 'don't shoot she'
because she is my lil sister," Leno said.
The
young man said the bandits then escaped with all the cash and jewellery they
could find along with his parents' and his sister's passports.
During
all of this, Amar who was looking at television immediately prior to the
incident, told the Chronicle that he ran into his room and hid under the bed.
Residents
also lamented the fact that they are not safe in their own homes anymore and
lashed out at the seeming inaction on the part of the Police to capture the
bandits wreaking havoc on the lives of innocent persons.
"They
(the Police) don't ever ketch anybody (bandits). When last you hear the Police
ketch a thiefman? Them does tek ages to get to the scene and when they do
arrive, they come with a lil gun and spend some time and then leave. You don't
hear nothing after that. The bandits still on the loose and ready to strike
again and the Police ready to go over the same cycle...," asserted one
distraught resident who preferred anonymity.
The
Narines own the business premises, but rent out a section to the left to some
Chinese nationals who are using it to operate the 'Pearl Restaurant'. The
right section is rented to some other persons, while the family lives in the
middle section and upper flat of the building.
The
Chinese woman who is operating the 'Pearl Restaurant' told this newspaper that
no patron was at the eatery at the time of the incident. "Me see thiefman
come and me fast hustle fu close up," she said in broken English.
A
neighbour said he saw the entire incident from the start. According to him, he
had just finished eating dinner and went out into his yard when he saw the car
pull up and the men coming out with guns in their hands. "I knew they
were not Police but bandits," the resident, who is a licensed firearm
holder, said.
The
neighbour, who declined to give his name because of fear of being victimised
or attacked, admitted that he owns a small handgun but that when he saw the
two men with their machine guns, which he believes are AK-47 assault rifles,
he knew that putting up any sort of resistance would have been both futile and
stupid.
A report
was made to the Police.


