A 38-year-old truck driver escaped with
his life on Thursday when four bandits held
him and his wife at gunpoint during a
botched robbery at Buxton Sideline Dam.
Chandika Persaud called ‘Wrecker’ is
presently nursing two gunshot wounds to his
shoulder, which he sustained while running
away from the bandits.
UNSOLVED Crime
His wife, Sahodra Persaud, a teacher of the
Annandale north nursery school, was rescued
when the Community Policing Group in the
area discharged several rounds, forcing the
bandits to flee. The attack occurred at
about 20:20 hours just as Persaud and his
wife were returning home.
The truck driver, who spoke to this
newspaper from his hospital bed, recalled
that he and his wife were talking to a
neighbour when two gunmen walked up to them
and discharged a round into the air. The
gunmen then led them further into the
village of Buxton where the beating began.
“I lef’ early de morning fuh go and look
wuk up de East Bank. When I de coming back
de police stop me and detain me at
Providence. Dey keep me deh fuh de whole day
till me wife come and bail me. “We lef de
station about seven o’clock and is coming
home we coming home when de bandits attack
we,” Persaud told Kaieteur News.
He said he parked his truck in front of his
yard and was emerging when his neighbour
called out to him.
“De neighbour tell me dat four men de
waiting outside me yard and he ask me if I
see dem. I didn’t see de men, but while
talking to he, me see two people coming
towards me.”
Persaud said that one of the men came up to
him and discharged a round saying, ‘you is
de man I want.’
One of the bandits held unto his hand while
another held his wife and dragged them both
out of the neighbour’s yard.
Some relatives, who lived a few houses away,
said they saw when Persaud and his wife came
home.
They also recalled seeing four men approach
them, but thought that it was members of the
Community Policing Group. “Den we hear
gunshot and we see dem men dragging
`Wrecker’ and he wife across a bridge; we
ain’t know wha happen after,” a relative
told this newspaper.
The truck driver said that while they were
being dragged, one of the bandits demanded
cash and jewellery.
“He ask me whey de gun, money and
jewellery deh. When I tell he dat me ain’t
gat none, he seh, ‘wait you gone know just
now’. He hit me with de gun butt den he
carry we over de bridge and brace me pon a
post,” Persaud said. His wife was kicked
to the ground while the two bandits, who
were by now joined by two more accomplices,
all carrying guns, threatened to kill them.
“I beg dem. I tell dem ah gat two pickney
fuh look after. Me wife all beg dem. One ah
dem with a long gun fire two times, but de
gun didn’t go off, or else I would’a
dead,” the truck driver stated.
Persaud was then placed to lie on the ground
and one of the bandits began chopping him
about his body.
“Like he go fuh juk me in me neck, but I
block,” he added. Then a rare opportunity
presented itself.
Persaud said that all the time he was
contemplating how to get away from the men,
but the fact that his wife would be left
behind was at the back of his mind.
But he threw caution to the wind when the
men who were having problems with their guns
turned and looked away.The precious seconds
enabled Persaud to get up and run,
attracting several gunshots from the
bandits.
“Dey fire two shots behind me, one catch
me pon me shoulder. Me wife de still lie
down deh with dem,” Persaud told Kaieteur
News.
With Persaud gone, the bandits turned their
attention to his wife.
“Dey ask me again fuh de money and I
didn’t answer. Den one ah dem seh shoot
me, but another one seh no,” Sahodra
Persaud recalled.
By this time, her husband had alerted
several residents, including members of the
Community Policing Group who responded by
firing several shots into the air.
“When dem bandits hear de shots, dey run
away. Dem ain’t get fuh tek nothing from
we,” the truck driver’s wife said. The
police were summoned and arrived about 10
minutes after the attack. By then, however,
the bandits had disappeared.
Persaud, covered with blood, was rushed to
the Georgetown Hospital, where he was
admitted.
The police are keeping a close watch on the
area in the hope of quelling any attempt by
bandits to re-start the incidence of armed
robberies, which had plagued the East Coast
of Demerara up to early this year.
Saturday,
July 17th 2004