The
father said he called the Vigilance Police Station
on his cellular phone but the line was busy. He then
called the head of the Community Policing Group in
the area and the police arrived shortly after.
Sookra
said he lifted his daughter to his car, which was
parked under the house, but it had mechanical
problems and she was transferred to a police
vehicle.
He
said he went with his two wounded children and the
police vehicle drove into the Vigilance Police
Station compound where an officer checked his
daughter for a pulse and shook his head in pity.
They
were then transported to the city hospital where
Christine died while receiving medical attention.
Her
brother Ryan witnessed doctors checking his sister
and pronouncing her dead.
"Me
son sit right there and saw when they wrapped her
up...he keeps crying all the time," the
grieving father said.
Three
bullets fired from under the house by the attackers
pierced the wood floor, the bed and ceiling without
hitting any of the seven occupants lying on the
floor, Sookra said.
"I
don't know how God save us and the bullets passed
right through the mattress and the roof," he
said.
Jagdesh,
16, the eldest child, said he saw when his sister
fell after she was shot but thought she was only
lying low to shelter from the bullets.
"I
thought she was going to lie down on the floor and I
pushing she and telling she go under the bed,"
he said.
He
said that after they realised his sister was not
moving, his father said she had been shot and
started crying for help.
Just
then, his other brother, Ryan, called out that he
too was shot, and Jagdesh said he ran for a cup of
water to wet their wounds.
"She
(was) just...breathing and stopping, breathe and
stop and she (jerking) up every few minutes or so,
and (we) take a cloth (her white baby shawl) and
wrapped up she head."
Kishore
Mohamed said he was forced to give the men his
fortnightly salary, which he had collected just
Friday afternoon.
He
said he and his wife Marai Nagamootoo and their two
daughters were at home sleeping and were aroused by
rapid gunfire in the neighbourhood. Minutes after,
their window panes were shattered and their door
kicked open.
Four
men entered the house, placed Mohamed to sit and
interrogated him, ordering him to hand over money
and jewellery.
The
porter said he handed them everything he had without
hesitation and the men left.
A
neighbour said he too was awakened by the gunshots
at Sookra's house and later heard a man calling out.
"I
heard `Inside! Inside! Inside!' but with much
aggression. As the sound came closer to my house, I
hear 'Is phantom - open up."
He
said that after he went into hiding in his dimly
lit, grilled and tightly secured house, he heard the
men breaking his louvre window, and another who
appeared to be the group's mastermind, insisting
that they should not shoot.
"The
person continuously was adamant that he doesn't want
shooting," while another kept insisting that
"somebody" had to be inside the house, he
said.
The
men left and went next door to Mohamed's.
The
neighbour said he saw four men armed with heavy guns
and outfitted in black attack the family while
another stood guard on the road with a long gun.
He
watched them kick down the neighbour's door and
witnessed the robbery in the house, lit by a lamp,
before they ran on a dam at the back.
"The
way they were dressed, one would have been easily
tempted to believe that they were the (black
clothes) police", the villager said.
He
said the men stood on the dam "bitterly arguing
among themselves for about five minutes as to who
did it (the murder) and why. One got the impression
that it was unintentional but criminals are
heartless people."
Her
teacher said Christine would occasionally visit his
home for help with her schoolwork, and described her
as "very mannerly, very respectful,
cooperative, very ambitious in terms of schoolwork
and outstandingly beautiful."
Distraught
residents of Coldingen are calling on the government
to establish a police station and run electricity
lights in the village.
"This
area needs police protection and electricity...there
is need for police patrol," an elderly resident
said adding, "What is the point having all
these telephone lines and no basic utilities?"
A
neighbour, Surujpaul Budhu, cried bitterly as he
related what he saw and heard.
"At
around 12:30, me and my wife were asleep and we
heard some gunshots...I heard one thief say 'Wake
the man up'. My wife Rosy started screaming and I
locked her mouth with my hand and out the light in
my house and we lie down flat."
Budhu's
tears fell faster as he recalled just lying in his
house, unable to do anything to save his neighbour.
"I
couldn't do anything Ryan called out to me. He said
`Uncle' three times. I'm afraid...next thing I
heard, police come, then I heard Christine
died." He said he too travelled to the hospital
with his neighbour.
Sookra
said that just a few days ago, he and Christine
fixed her bicycle, and his wife took her shopping -
all in preparation for school Monday.
He
said that for the past two weeks, his only daughter
had been sleeping on the bed with him and his wife
while her visiting cousins used her bed.
Crying
bitterly, he said he is scared of losing his wife
too as he feels the tragedy is too much for her to
handle.
"My
wife is a stroke case...I begging God and me
daughter who died to take care of her mother, two
brothers and father."
The
mother, Angela Sookra, cried uncontrollably and
complained of feeling "too weak to say
anything."
A
few minutes later, she broke down and tearfully
talked about her only daughter and last child.
"She
was a loving girl...Look how me daughter small, me
daughter ain't even enjoy life...I see me daughter
life lef she body, and I can't do nothing fuh help
she."
Nearly
two hours before the Coldingen attack, residents of
neighbouring Enterprise called police after they saw
two strange men acting suspiciously in the village
at around 22:40 hrs.
Police
said the men started running after they spotted a
police patrol and one of them was arrested after the
officers gave chase.
Further
investigation led to the questioning of a woman at
Dazzel Housing Scheme, a few villages away, but
while police were on their way to her house a gunman
fired shots and escaped.
Police
said they searched the house and found 10 grams of
cannabis.
They
said they arrested an illegal French national and
the woman.
East
Coast residents are in fear of heavily armed gangs
following the crime wave of 2002-2003.
Gunmen
10 days ago launched a deadly attack on the Appanna
family at Non Pariel.
In
that attack, a 14-year-old girl hid under her bed
while bandits stabbed her father, Davechand Appanna,
45, to death. Her mother Hemrajie, 42, was left
unconscious from a fractured skull and stab wounds.
Residents
from that village have been fleeing since that
attack and have called for a police outpost in the
area.
Days
after, gunmen shot and killed a young policeman
during a police operation in Buxton.
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