Army,
police rescue kidnapped businessman
- businessman, who was rescued with the help of
the GDF and is said to be a
relative
of the President
By Kim Lucas
Sunday, May 18, 2003
Loud
cheers erupted in the troubled village of Buxton yesterday
morning after a Guyana Defence Force (GDF)-led operation rescued
businessman Viticharan Singh from a house on Company Road. Four
men have since been arrested and handed over to the police.
The
business place of Viticharan Singh who was kidnapped on Tuesday
afternoon.
A
gang of armed bandits snatched Singh from his De Hoop, Mahaica
home on Tuesday during a robbery attack. Several attempts were
made during the week to rescue the 55-year-old businessman, one
of which resulted in the death of GDF Lance Corporal Shemton
Dodson on Thursday morning.
Following Dodson’s death, Stabroek News understands that the
army deployed a second company to the troubled East Coast
Demerara communities between Buxton and Cove and John on
Thursday night.
After intense intelligence gathering, the GDF got a breakthrough
and, together with some members of the Guyana Police Force,
launched a series of cordon and search exercises in Buxton early
Friday and part of yesterday.
This newspaper understands that the first in a series of
searches took place at 4:00 am yesterday and the forces searched
a house at the corner of Church of God Road and the railway
embankment. Two men, one of whom was the 27-year-old brother of
Tshaka Blair who was shot and killed by police last year April,
were arrested.
Army sources said that the operation that rescued Singh took
place at 10:48 am. The man was found in a house on Company Road,
Buxton, eight yards south of the railway embankment. People said
the man looked “gaunt and weak.”
He is reportedly being treated at a city hospital.
Two more men were arrested during that exercise. One of the men
is believed to be the older brother of 18-year-old Quacy Blair,
who too was shot and killed by the police earlier this year.
Sources said that based on the reaction of the villagers after
the businessman’s release, it appears that the criminal
stronghold on the village may be weakening.
A joint police/army press release yesterday stated: “About
11:40 hours kidnapped businessman Viticha-ran Singh of De Hoop,
Mahaica, East Coast Demerara, was found in a house in Buxton by
a joint army/police team which acted on information. The
businessman was handcuffed and [his] feet were bound. [He] was
discovered in [a] house south of the railway embankment. The
house was locked and from all appearances, abandoned. Two
persons have since been detained and are assisting the police in
their investigations.”
Stabroek News
understands
that it was the silence of Singh’s family that kept him alive.
Ever since the businessman was snatched, his relatives
maintained that no ransom had been demanded for his return. They
told the media that the kidnappers had not made contact with
them.
However, law enforcement agencies yesterday claimed that the
kidnappers were demanding $40M for Singh’s safe release, but
the man’s family had reportedly claimed that they were only
able to raise $4M. Stabroek News understands that the kidnappers
had agreed to accept that amount.
“But the silence is what kept him alive; negotiations were
going on all they time,” one source claimed.
This
is the car which was used on Tuesday afternoon to transport the
kidnappers of Viticharan
Singh to and from De Hoop, Mahaica.
(Ken
Moore photos)
Four armed men grabbed Singh from his home around 6:00 pm last
Tuesday, bundled him into a dark Marino, HA 8754, and took him
to a house on Company Road, Buxton. The GDF later intercepted
the car at Beterverwagting Public Road with only the driver
inside. That man has since been handed over to the police. He
claimed that he was hijacked.
Since Tuesday evening, the army and police had been scouring
several East Coast locations, but came up empty handed. The man
reportedly told the police yesterday that just before he was
carted away, two armed men emerged from a car in front of his
home and asked for the owner. Singh reportedly denied that he
was the owner, but the gunmen suspected that he was lying. After
he was placed in the car, the man told authorities, two men sat
on either side of him until they got to Buxton.
Over the last four days, Singh was reportedly moved several
times. It was based on information that he was in a house at the
corner of Barnwell Street and Church of God Road early Thursday
morning that the army and police moved to the location and
engaged three men in a shootout, which resulted in the death of
Lance Corporal Dodson and two of the gunmen.
Singh’s kidnapping was the latest in a series since the crime
situation in the country started spiralling out of control last
year. However, his rescue is the first of its kind for the army
and police.
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