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30 april 2008

Jamaican woman busted with cocaine in dartboard jailed

   Sentenced to four years imprisonment

Mitchelle Mckenzie

One of the three Jamaicans busted with cocaine in a dartboard, at Cheddi Jagan International Airport, Timehri, last week Friday, was yesterday sentenced to four years imprisonment.

Magistrate Hazel Octave-Hamilton, before whom the trio appeared, also fined Mitchelle McKenzie $860,400, the value of the narcotic in Guyana. The Court ordered, as well that, the prisoner, 28, of Nigrel Post Office, Westmoreland, be deported at the expiration of her sentence.

She had pleaded guilty to having trafficked 956 grammes of the drug by attempting to export it but her two alleged accomplices, Dwayne Oneil Morris, 28, an entertainer and sign artist, of Paradise Norwood, Montego Bay and Gaston Samuels, 38, of Lot 64 Johnstown, Lucea Hanover, also in Jamaica, pleaded not guilty to different charges.

Particulars of one offence said, between April 15 and 26, Morris aided and abetted Samuels to export the same amount of cocaine. Samuels denied that, on April 24, at Lot 136 Fifth Street, Alberttown, Georgetown, he trafficked in a narcotic by giving the cocaine to McKenzie.

Gaston Samuels and Dwayne Morris

Customs Anti-Narcotics Unit (CANU) Prosecutor Oswald Massiah successfully objected to bail for Morris and Samuels on the ground that they are not Guyanese and their cases were put off to July 22.

He said McKenzie, who claimed she is a clothes vendor, entered Guyana and stayed at an apartment building in Alberttown.

According to Massiah, she was returning to Jamaica via Barbados, when she checked in a suitcase that was searched by a CANU rank while she was processing her travel documents.

During that search, a box containing the dartboard was found to contain the illegal substance. Massiah said, after being told of the offence, the woman admitted knowledge and control of the cocaine. Attorney-at-law Mr. Euclin Gomes, who represented all the Jamaicans, said McKenzie left behind a two-year-old child and is now four months pregnant.

The lawyer said she came to Guyana because of the social and economic pressures she was enduring in her homeland as a single parent. Gomes said the convict claimed that, if it was possible for her to re-live the moment, she would not have participated in that unlawful act. My country is very beautiful and special. Why is she coming to disrespect my country? Magistrate Octave-Hamilton asked. (Telesha Persaud/Guyana Cronicle)
 

   21 years imprisonment each for three gun robbers

Three men, who went on a robbery rampage, were each sentenced to 21 years imprisonment, after they pleaded guilty to a series of offences last week Wednesday. Magistrate Chandra Sohan, inflicted the custodial penalties on them at Albion Court, Corentyne.

Wayne Winter, of Lot 61 Albert Street, Corriverton, Wilfred Sandy, of Number 51, Corentyne, also in Berbice and Gavin Foster, of Lot 28 Ujaama Housing Scheme, La Bonne Intention (LBI), East Coast Demerara, were convicted on joint charges of robbery under arms committed on Kampta Rambarran, Azad Taki and Chandishwar Persaud, on April 21, at Number 48 and Hogstye, respectively, both Corentyne, Berbice villages.

The magistrate imposed a five year sentence on each count of the three robbery charges, but ordered that they run concurrently. In addition, the convicts got individual three year jail terms for illegal possession of a .38 ‘Taurus’ revolver and four matching rounds, that would follow consecutively.

Police Inspector Fazil Karimbaksh, prosecuting, said the prisoners hired PKK 75 from a car rental service and proceeded to Number 48 where they held Rambarran, a 71-year-old shopkeeper, at gunpoint and robbed him and his wife of $10,000.

Subsequently, the trio went to Hogstye, about a mile away, where Winter, pretending to be a customer as Taki was closing his shop, hit the unsuspecting man on his head and relieved him of $167,000. Meantime, Foster held a gun on pump attendant Persaud and stole phone cards and cash amounting to $53,000 from him.

They were all proceeding along the Corentyne Highway, with Sandy driving, when they were apprehended by Police at a roadblock in the vicinity of the Albion Station where their booty was recovered from them. Winter and Foster, expressing regret for what they did, said they were out to have fun in the ‘Ancient County’ but were short of money.

Prosecutor Karimbaksh had asked the Court to take into consideration the seriousness of the crime and impose maximum sentences. (Jeune Bailey Van-Keric/Guyana Cronicle)


29 april 2008

   Guard assisting cops with probe into Tiger Bay shooting death

Travis Parks

Investigations are ongoing into the shooting death of 22-year-old Travis Parks, at Tiger Bay allegedly by guards attached to the MMC Security Force on Sunday. Stabroek News was told that one of the guards was assisting police with investigations.

It was not clear if he was being detained. Parks’ mother, Michelle Parks said she give a statement to the police yesterday. She said no one from the security company had contacted the family. 

Parks was shot in his back on Sunday after being asked about a gold chain, which he reportedly denied knowing anything about. According to residents after being pulled out of a bushy lot where he had gone to relieve himself and accused of stealing the gold chain, Parks was shot in the back as he was being led to the security firm’s vehicle.

Residents said the men then picked up the bullet casing and got in their vehicle and drove away despite pleas for them to assist. Parks was eventually transported to the Georgetown Public Hospital by another vehicle, where he succumbed while receiving treatment. A post mortem will be performed on his body tomorrow. (Stabroek News)
 

   Pirates attack four fishing boats

Grab millions in cash, equipment and catch

Pirates attacked and robbed the captains and crewmembers of four fishing boats on Sunday of millions of dollars in outboard engines, gasoline, engine leads and fish glue. The attacks, which had eased up for a while, reportedly occurred shortly after a few persons were released from the custody in Suriname.

The sea bandits, who were armed with guns, did their first attack early on Sunday morning near Mahaica/Mahaicony before heading east towards Berbice. The crew were relieved of an outboard engine and were left to drift until another boat went to their rescue. 

The attackers then pounced on another fishing boat - belonging to a resident of Number 79 Village, Corentyne - at Whim around 1 pm and demanded that the crew hand over gasoline, engine leads, a quantity of fish glue and cell phones.

As the pirates made their way along the Corentyne, the crew of a fishing boat belonging to Stephen Henry of Kilcoy were attacked near Eversham. They were robbed at gunpoint of 200 lbs of fish glue valued $1.6 million and a 48-Horsepower Yamaha outboard engine worth $720,000.

The crew related that the pirates ordered them to “hand over all cell phones.”According to reports, the crew work mainly in that area and their engine had broken down causing them to spend 25 days away from home. They continued working after the engine was replaced and were heading home with their catch when the attack occurred.

Another boat was robbed near Number 55 Village after 3 pm and the pirates made off with 21 gallons of gasoline and an engine lead before reportedly heading in the direction of Suriname. Stabroek News learnt from a member of the East Coast Anti-Piracy Committee that government would be making radio sets available to the fishermen, but “they [officials] have to put down the antenna before we can get the sets to purchase and use.”

Chairman of the Number 66 Fish Port Complex, Pravindrachandra Deodat, told this newspaper that piracy continues to cripple the fish industry. He said “Guyana and the world at large were already struggling with rising food prices and if this [piracy] continues there would be more disaster.” He said police in Suriname and Guyana need to work together to bring the situation to an end. He opined that a few suspects who were held in Suriname and later released were responsible for the attacks.

According to the chairman, the suspects were deported from Suriname “after nothing solid was found against them. They just paid a fine for illegal entry at Springlands Magistrate’s Court.”Members of the complex claimed that the suspects had been making threats to the fishermen, who subsequently reported the matter to ranks at the Number 51 Police Station. Shortly after, they said, the men went into hiding.

According to Deodat, “We [members] have been doing our best to clamp down on the piracy and we look forward to the government to work closely with [Suriname] to screen the persons who were held and let them face stiff penalties in Guyana.”

He mentioned that Kevin Narine who is wanted in Guyana for robbery under arms and rape was held in Suriname but local police “made no effort to arrest him. They should bring him back to Guyana and charge him because soon Suriname would release him…” (Stabroek News)
 

28 april 2008

Twenty-two year old conductor.....

   ....... shot dead in Tiger bay

Allegedly by guards from a security service

Dead: Travis parks, also called Charlsie

A 22-year old minibus conductor was shot dead yesterday reportedly by ranks of an armed security guard service while on an errand to buy ice for his mother and siblings who were picnicking in the Botanic Gardens.

Dead is Travis Parks, also called Charlsie, of 108 Rasville, Roxanne Burnham Gardens, South Ruimveldt. The second of eight children for his mother Michelle Parks, Travis worked on a Number 45 (Lamaha Hospital Minibus), but was off duty yesterday.

His tearful mother told the Guyana Chronicle that she and a few of his brothers and sisters were in the Gardens having fun when shortly after 13:30 hours she requested him to go and purchase JR Burgers in Kitty for them. She said he willingly did so and spent a few minutes with them on his return, then said he was going to the zoo. However, he later decided he was going to buy ice and set out with an ice pitcher.

Witnesses said that as he was passing through Tiger Bay, when he was confronted by the armed guards who were at the time pursuing a citizen who apparently had a problem with someone in the Stabroek area. Parks was shot in the back and slumped to the ground bleeding.

Meanwhile, eyewitnesses said the guards who allegedly shot him reportedly drove off, and left him bleeding on he ground. A passing motorist picked up the wounded man and rushed him to the Accident and Emergency Unit of the Georgetown Public Hospital.

The dead man’s mother said that about twenty minutes after he had left the Gardens, his step father called her on her cellular phone and informed her that he had just received word that her son was lying on the roadway bleeding with a gaping bullet wound in his back.

Hysterical, she rushed down to the hospital where her son was already being attended to by doctors. She was cautioned to wait in another part of the building while the doctors worked. However, the anxious mother, after waiting a few minutes and not hearing anything more, darted into the treatment room where she beheld her son looking lifeless. The doctor then revealed to her that the patient was not responding. He was pronounced dead around 16:30 hours.

Meanwhile, back at his home last evening, the family was in deep anguish. Travis leaves to mourn: his mother Michelle Parks, foster-father Lester Jones, two sisters and five brothers.


Bartica attack -

   Gunmen may have left stolen weapon in Linden deliberately

Says victim

John Sauers

Weeks after gunmen invaded their township killing 12 people in a one-hour rampage during which large quantities of gold and guns were stolen, Barticians are still living in fear. And as the security forces struggle to capture the killers, one of the victims of the attack said he was convinced that the gunmen deliberately dropped a stolen weapon in Linden to place blame on another group.

Chunilall Baboolall, owner of CBR Mining, one of the business places which was invaded on the night of February 17 and from where close to one dozen firearms were stolen, told Stabroek News on Tuesday he found it strange that after carrying out such a “clean” operation, the gunmen would have left behind one of the weapons in Linden.

“Something is wrong there and it is clear the weapon was dropped there to blame other people,” Baboolall asserted. Police had not published any ballistics results of the weapons used in the killings, but President Bharrat Jagdeo had said that the gunmen who invaded Bartica were the same men who killed 11 people at Lusignan three weeks earlier.

Observers believe that two different gangs committed the crimes with some persons venturing to say that the killing at Bartica was motivated by robbery. Like many other Barticians, Baboolall said he was not sure who was behind the attack; what he is certain about is that residents assisted the criminals.

On March 7 the joint services had issued a statement revealing that they had unearthed one of the 11 12-gauge shotguns that had been stolen from Baboolall abandoned in a camp at Bucktown, Wismar, Linden. The lawmen had also retrieved Baboolall’s Guyana passport and his National Insurance Scheme card.

The documents were found along with a quantity of eating utensils, a searchlight, a green tarpaulin; a hacksaw blade, and an empty plastic water container, among other articles. The businessman told Stabroek News during an interview in Bartica that the slaughter was the work of outsiders ably assisted by people in the community.

He said there were people who recognized the gunmen and maybe that is why so many people were killed. In addition to stealing the weapons, the gunmen murdered Baboolall’s watchman and carried away two safes containing gold and money. But there was a third safe in the house and Baboolall is questioning why the criminals did not remove that also.

Asked how he was coping since the incident, Baboolall said business had been slow. He said he was among the many residents who were living in fear, noting that even the increased presence of the joint services in the area had not made him feel better. “The men who committed the act were dressed in military type clothing so even the police and soldiers around have not made me feel better,” the businessman said.

‘Security climate stable’

Sub-divisional commander responsible for Bartica and surrounding communities, John Sauers, who was rushed to the area following the killings said that for now the security climate in the community was stable. Sauers said like everything else residents were still recovering from the event, but the security team up there was providing the reassurance to them.

On the night of the killings the gunmen had visited the home of the officer in charge shortly after slaughtering the three policemen at the station. The Deputy Superintendent said once he got into the area his major task was to provide the kind of leadership which would boost the morale of the traumatized ranks, some of whom were at the station the night when their colleagues were killed. At present the joint services team at Bartica comprises an army captain and another senior rank from the Tactical Services Unit.

Sauers said the team conducts regular patrols and cordon and search operations in and around the Bartica community. Asked what his biggest challenge was now, Sauers said to rebuild the police-civilian relationship and motivate his charges. Commis-sioner of Police Henry Greene had admitted that the ranks at Bartica were not alert enough on the night of the attack, but Sauers said he had been talking a lot to his officers about them being vigilant at all times.

“I have been talking to them to be alert, vigilant and security conscious,” Sauers said. He said he had also impressed upon the ranks the need to cultivate a good relationship with members of the public. Asked to what extent crime was a problem in Bartica, Sauers said the community was relatively quiet on the crime front.

He said the slaughter had certainly changed the way people thought about Bartica, but maintained that if one were to examine the records they would see that apart from that incident the area was stable. “Apart from the one-off robbery and now and then a murder, the people in this community live quite good,” Sauers remarked.

On the quality of the troops based there at present, Sauers said it was adequate to quell the threats of the gunmen. Acknowledging that there might have been lapses in the past, he said that things had changed and there was a greater level of awareness and vigilance on the part of the ranks. “We are confident that everyone will function according to his mandate and will be able to deal with any threat,” Sauers, the former public relations officer of the police force stated.

School attendance normal

Chairman of Region Seven, Holbert Knights said at the level of the regional administration they had been working to reduce whatever psycho-social impact the killings would have had on children and residents as a whole. Knights said that residents had not forgotten the tragedy although many had moved on. He said immediately after the killings schools were virtually closed as parents kept their children at home, however the situation had returned to normal.

“We are seeing normal attendance and performance in schools, but we are still mindful of the psycho-social effects the tragedy might have had on the schoolchildren,” the regional chairman said. Knights disclosed too that during his many walks around the community there were people who complained about not being able to sleep well, while others said they usually avoided visiting certain places.

Around 9.45 on the night of February 17 an estimated 15-20 gunmen descended on Bartica. Reports were that three of the men were left to guard the river while more than ten others assaulted the community in the hour-long attack.

The police outpost was first attacked and three officers were killed while two others were seriously wounded. The gang of gunmen carted off several firearms and ammunition from two strongboxes at the outpost. Baboolall’s business CB&R Mining was then attacked and it was there the gang shot dead security guard, Irving Ferreira, before escaping with 12 rifles and a quantity of gold, among other items.

The other persons killed in the attack were Bartica residents Edwin Gilkes and Dexter Adrian; policemen stationed at the Bartica Police Station – Lance Corporal Zaheer Zakir and Constables Shane Fredericks, Ron Osborne and Deonarine Singh who was from Wakenaam; Ronald Gomes of Kuru Kururu, Ashraf Khan of Middlesex Essequibo, Abdool Yasin, Errol Thomas of Tuschen East Bank Essequibo and Baldeo Singh of Montrose East Coast Demerara were shot execution style at the Transport and Harbours Stelling.
 

26 april 2008

Roger Khan had ordered hit on Davendra Persaud

   Court documents

Roger Khan

In one of the most shocking revelations since the indictment of businessman Roger Khan on drug-smuggling charges, the US government on Thursday disclosed that he had ordered the executions of Davendra Persaud, who was gunned down in Palm Court over three years ago, as well as several of its informants and other drug dealers.

The US did not name the informants, who were described as cooperating witnesses, but sources said they might have been the five men killed on Diwali night on Robb Street next door to Nigel’s Supermarket in 2002.

The revelations were made in the Eastern District Court of New York after Khan’s attorneys got hold of a sealed confidential document, which contained an interview between Persaud and the US government in relation to a narcotics case against another Guyanese Delven Adams, who was a member of Khan’s organisation. The US’s objections to the defence obtaining the document could potentially spark a heated court session slated for Monday.

Davendra Persaud

In a letter dated April 24, and addressed to Justice Dora Irizarry, US Attorney Benton Campbell said he was apprising the court of an issue that the government will raise at the status conference scheduled for Monday. Campbell said that as part of Khan’s lawyers’ opposition to the US government’s motion for an anonymous jury, they attached several exhibits.

One of these was a report from the US Customs Service, now Immigration and Customs Enforcement (“ICE”), of an interview with Persaud. Campbell said this report was an official and confidential internal ICE document, used for investigative purposes, that was disclosed by the government to defence counsel at trial in a case against Delven Adams and others.

Adams was busted in the US with drugs in 2004. According to Campbell, the report and some other material were disclosed to defence counsel in that trial pursuant to Rule 806 of the Federal Rules of Evidence, because it could be used to impeach Persaud, whose statements were admitted as co-conspirator statements through other witnesses.

Campbell said the US government satisfying its obligations, however, did not entitle defendants to file or otherwise disseminate that material outside the litigation. He argued that in the Adams trial, the government had serious concerns about witness safety, in large part because Persaud’s testimony as well as testimony from 3,500 material witnesses implicated various individuals in Khan’s organisation.

However, Campbell disclosed that Persaud, who was a co-conspirator of Khan, the Adams’ trial defendants, and the government’s cooperating witnesses in the Adams’ case, was gunned down in Guyana on Khan’s orders as he perceived that Persaud was cooperating with the US government.

“In an effort to protect witnesses, Judge Frederic Block ordered the defence attorneys in that case not to disseminate the 3,500 material to anyone other than their clients. Unfortunately, Judge Block’s order was violated – as defence counsel in this case has possession of this Customs report. The government did not provide this report to defence counsel in this case, and it was only disseminated in the Adams case,” Campbell wrote to the judge.

He said the US government was writing to inform the court of the issue, and to request the court to inquire of Khan’s lawyers at Monday’s status conference: how, from whom, and when they obtained the report. The government also wants to know whether they have obtained any of the statements of the 3,500 material witnesses disseminated at the Adams trial; and whether they have disseminated any of this to anyone else. “We further request that the court order the prompt return to the government of any such material in the defence’s possession – including all copies they have made of such material,” Campbell requested.

He said while Khan’s lawyers might not have been aware of Judge Block’s order, this inquiry was important not only because a court order was violated, but because the potential danger to witnesses and their families in this case could not be overstated. “It is imperative that the government has complete knowledge of the full scope of the information disseminated about its prior witnesses, so as to take necessary safety precautions,” Campbell stated.

Khan’s lead attorney, Robert Simels in a response yesterday told the court that the documents were obtained from the clerk’s office on March 31, this year. Simels said following the court appearance in this case his associate requested an opportunity to obtain a copy of the criminal complaint against an individual named Brentnoll Hooper in the file entitled US vs. Adams.

Simels said the clerk provided a box containing courts transcripts and other documents. “In reviewing the file my associate noticed that Persaud’s documents were in an envelope ‘not sealed’ in the file. She made copies of same,” Simels said in his letter.

Khan is facing charges for conspiring to import cocaine into the US. Late last year this newspaper had reported that US was to introduce as evidence a ledger of Persaud, who was also a boutique owner, which contained the names of alleged drug dealers.

Persaud was gunned down at Palm Court in October 2004 by unknown persons. One of Khan’s lawyers here had told this newspaper that the US might be hoping to use some of the persons on Persaud’s ledger to give evidence against Khan.

Persaud was shot close to 15 times, in what appeared to be an organised hit, orchestrated by a gang of four. Persaud had been charged locally in relation to drugs and later became an informant for the US government. Reports were that four men, two of whom were wearing masks, turned up at the Main Street bar in a white Toyota Sprinter car registration number PJJ 1767 a little before 10 pm.

Two men remained in the car, another stood guard at the gate, while one went up to Persaud and shot him. The gunman reportedly stood over him and opened fire at close range. Police had arrested a number of persons for questioning, but they were all released. (Stabroek News)


Cocaine found in dartboard

   Three Jamaicans held

A CANU official emptying the compressed cocaine from the base of the dart board yesterday.

Three Jamaicans were yesterday morning intercepted at the Cheddi Jagan International Airport after a search of luggage belonging to one of them unearthed a quantity of cocaine with an estimated US street value of US$20,000 concealed neatly in a dartboard.

Two of them are in the custody of the Customs Anti Narcotics Unit (CANU) while the other was taken to a city hospital under police guard after officials suspected that he had swallowed some of the substance. 

A CANU officer explained that around 6.30 am the three Jamaicans — one female and two males, who are in their late 20s — were outgoing passengers on a Caribbean Airlines flight CA424 destined for Jamaica via Barbados. He said officers at the airport profiled the female Jamaican and her suitcase was checked in her presence and then dart board was discovered.

A preliminary check on the board discovered the substance which appeared to be cocaine.
Following interrogation of that passenger, CANU officers subsequently proceeded to take the other two Jamaicans off the flight.

The CANU official said further investigations led them to an apartment at Fifth Street, Alberttown. There, officers recovered fibre glass, plywood, a round piece of wood resembling the bottom of a dart board, fabric used in dartboards, knives, a spatula, scissors and carbon which was also found in the lining of the board after they cut it open and found the cocaine.

The Jamaicans, whose travel documents revealed that they had travelled to Guyana on April 15, had occupied the apartment. Officials broke open the dart board in the presence of media operatives at CANU headquarters yesterday and removed the substance, which weighed just over two pounds.

Asked whether the detection could have been made by sniffer dogs, the officer said yes and added that once the dogs were effective enough they would have been able to pick up the drug even though it was carefully concealed. However, he pointed out that CANU did not own any such dogs, noting that the sniffer dogs that operate at the airport were owned by the Police Narcotics Branch. (/Stabroek News/Heppilena Ferguson photo)
 

   Fire destroys Hamson’s General Store

The raging flames at Hamson’s General store this morning. A fire that started before midnight last night destroyed the Regent Street store.

A fire that started just before midnight last night, destroyed Hamson’s General Store and on Regent Street leaving millions of dollars in losses. Up to press time this morning the building next door was still burning.

Firemen were battling to save others neighbouring buildings but with very poor resources.

Lack of water and the heavily grilled store front prevented firemen from making any headway in controlling the fire, when it had just started. Paint and other combustibles in the hardware store would have fuelled the intense flames.

When Stabroek News arrived at the scene last night around 11:30, just one fire tender was present and thick smoke covered the lower portion of Regent Street downwind from the fire. The thick, gray smoke made it almost impossible to see.

The smoke emanated from the store for quite a while no flames could be seen. However, efforts by the firemen to enter the building were halted by the heavily-grilled store front. Chainsaws and metal-cutting equipment were used to no avail.

Persons on the scene said they saw smoke emanating from the building at just about 11.15 pm and the fire service was contacted. One arrived shortly after but when the water the tender had brought was finished, empty hoses lay on the ground as the fire grew inside the store. Attempts were made to source water from the drains but this took some time. Another tender arrived, but the water it had brought was used up in a few minutes. After that, firemen assisted by members of the public ran about frantically trying to get water from any source.

No water: Empty hoses at the Hamson General Store fire this morning.

Around this time, a man, said to be the owner of the store, arrived. He immediately drove his vehicle repeatedly into the grilled entrance to the store but still the heavy grillwork did not give.

Shortly after, with a sudden burst, the flames broke out of the building lighting up the dark area. A large crowd had gathered and as word of the fire spread many exclaimed about the fact that there was virtually no action by the fire service.

“What fire service? This is nah no fire service”, one man commented. However, even as they attempted to get more water, some firemen braved the heat and ventured on the roof of a neighbouring building to direct water to the flames.

After their water had been exhausted, the fire tenders left and for a little while the fire grew with virtually no attempt made to fight it. The fire service eventually sourced water from the South Road and North Road canals. But many hoses lay on the ground empty and at the height of the inferno as just about three hoses were in operation.

There were intermittent explosions and at the back of the store, an almost blue flame burnt. Hamson’s General Store sold hardware, building materials, electrical items, pipes and fittings among other items. This newspaper was told that it was only recently that new stocks were taken in.

Many persons expressed shock at the intensity of the fire and fears grew as the fire appeared to be growing. When this newspaper left the scene this morning, the fire at the store had all but died down, but the building next door was still in flames. Up to press time this morning it was still burning. (Gaulbert Sutherland/Stabroek News)

 

25 april 2008

At 2008 Police Officers Conference…

President Jagdeo advocates predictable judiciary for crime fight

   Appeals to Acting Chancellor to ensure fair, impartial judiciary

President Bharrat Jagdeo and Acting Police Commissioner Mr. Henry Greene in conversation at the opening of the Police Officer’s Conference.

President Bharrat Jagdeo yesterday reiterated his call for the Police and Army to get “by any means whatsoever” the gunmen who left 23 persons dead in two massacres earlier this year.

He cautioned that, if their aim is to disrupt national life, the killers may repeat their actions. But the Head of State, addressing the opening of the annual Police Officers Conference, acknowledged that the Police face an “uphill task”, given the lack of “intelligence to engage.”

Towards this objective, Mr. Jagdeo said the Government will soon roll out a rapid legislative programme to give the Police additional arsenal for fighting crime. President Jagdeo said the new legislation that will come on stream would greatly equip the Force to carry out its functions.

He noted that a two-week timeline, for the Ministry of Home Affairs and the Ministry of Legal Affairs to address legislative and administrative measures to implement the recommendations coming out of the Trinidad crime summit of CARICOM heads, is almost up.

Mr. Jagdeo said that technology, including video conferencing, would help the Police in their intelligence gathering and Government was also exploring setting up 500-1000 Closed Circuit Television (CCTV) at strategic locations, which would be manned by the Police.

President Jagdeo examines the Police Guard of Honour before the start of the Police Officer’s Conference.

He said wire-tapping legislation is to be developed to track telephone conversations and this would be implemented in a controlled manner, so as not to invade on the privacy of citizens.

However, once the laws are promulgated, President Jagdeo said he expects that judges and magistrates would respect the wish of the legislators.

“We need a predictable judiciary,” Mr. Jagdeo declared, telling the gathering, including Acting Chancellor Carl Singh, that, in the recent past, there have been 60 cases in which persons were granted bail for non-bailable offences.

President Jagdeo accused some judges and magistrates of “judicial law making” and stressed the need for them to comply with the will of the legislature. He advocated for a fair and impartial judicial system that binds itself to the laws of the country. The annual Police Officers Conference was to be held earlier this year, but was postponed because of the massacres.

Earlier, Acting Police Commissioner Henry Greene painted a grim picture of the crime situation facing the country. “These are serious, serious times,” he stated, noting that the situation has retreated to 2002, when five gunmen (all of whom are now dead) broke out of the country’s main jail in the city and went on a crime spree. Greene said the Police have intelligence which suggests that it is the same gang which operated following the February 23, 2002 jailbreak that is involved in the latest spate of criminal activities.

“The issues of 2002 have not left us…this gang has resurfaced,” Greene said, pointing out that the massacres at Lusignan and Bartica on January 26 and February 17, respectively, sent the country’s murder rate to double what it was last year. But Police are yet to track down Rondell ‘Fine Man’ Rawlins, who has claimed responsibility for the Lusignan massacre and a $50M reward is on offer for information leading to his capture.

Greene told the forum at Eve Leary that the events of Lusignan and Bartica “are still upon us” and warned that things are not “honky dorey”, given the lull in violent crimes since the last massacre. He said, until the massacres occurred, the Force was seeing benefits from its crime fight, when, at the end of last year, there was a 23 per cent reduction in serious crimes -- the lowest in five years. Greene said, while crime continues to evolve, the mandate of the Police remains the prevention and detection of it and the preservation of peace. He said, even though the Force might not be able to wipe out all, the country must feel at peace.

He said the dire challenge facing the Police in confronting crime is not unique to Guyana and alluded to meetings of Police and Army chiefs from around the region who came up with a nine-point list of recommendations which were shared with Heads of Government of the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) and helped to formulate the initiatives which were taken in Port of Spain recently. However, Greene was optimistic about the help from all stakeholders, while referring to the British funded Security Sector Reform Programme (SSRP) and the Inter-American Development Bank funding for the Citizens Security Programme.

Under the SSRP, British experts are being sent here to strengthen the crime intelligence capability of the Police Force and build a uniformed rapid response to serious crime. Greene said, while the British are assisting the Police to develop an adequate rapid response team at the Tactical Services Unit in Georgetown, the Police Force itself is currently working to ensure that all stations have fully equipped ones. (Neil Marks/Guyana Cronicle)
 

   Four arrested after arms cache find

Police arrested four men following the discovery of an arms and ammunition cache on Wednesday night.

A release said it happened between 17:00 h and 20:00 h when a party of policemen, acting on information received, searched three premises at Lanaballi, along the Essequibo River.

The release said the find comprised three unlicensed .38 revolvers and two shotguns, together with 151 twelve gauge cartridges, 10 twenty gauge cartridges, five .32 rounds and sixty-two .38 rounds of ammunition. (Guyana Cronicle)
 

   Guyanese illegal in US held with huge sum of money in car

A Guyanese who is illegal in the US was found with a huge sum of money when he was arrested and charged after behaving disorderly during a traffic stop in Pennsylvania.

The man who was identified as Ivory Anthony Weaver, 48, in a Centre Times Daily report, was at the time carrying US$351,164 in a cardboard box in luggage. Police in the area said they suspected it to be drug money.

According to the Centre Times Daily, Weaver was uncooperative and unruly when the officer stopped him at the traffic light for speeding on Tuesday which resulted in the police using a taser to subdue him. The police said they found indicators of criminal activity and obtained a search warrant. They later found the money.

Weaver resisted arrest when the police seized the money. He was arrested and charged with resisting arrest, false identification to law enforcement, and disorderly conduct. The report said he is from an illegal immigrant from Lauderdale Lakes, Florida. He was placed for $25,000 and immigration detainers. (Stabroek News)
 

24 april 2008

   Four arrested during abduction probe

Pictured: Farouk Kalamadeen & Jiffi Lubes on North Rd & Light Sts

A member of the special constabulary is among four persons arrested by the police during a search at a Princes Street house on Tuesday night in connection with the abduction of Jiffi Lubes owner, Farouk Kalamadeen.

An unlicensed .32 pistol along with five matching rounds was also seized from the house, a police statement yesterday said.

According to the statement, about 8:30 Tuesday night, while conducting investigations into a report of abduction, ranks searched a house on Princes Street, Georgetown, where the weapon and ammunition were found. Four men have been arrested and are in police custody assisting with the investigations, the police statement said. It is not clear whether the men are also being questioned in connection with Kalamadeen’s abduction.

Weeks after with no sign of him or a ransom demand, several questions continue to be asked as regards the real motive behind the disappearance of the Jiffi Lubes owner. During several interviews with this newspaper, the former motor racer’s relatives have expressed optimism about his safe return.

Police had previously arrested three men, but released them later after they did not glean anything substantial. Family members when questioned yesterday said they had not heard any word from the businessman or his abductors. They said however that they will continue to hope and pray for his safe return. Stabroek News had been told that Kalamadeen might have been picked up by foreigners with whom he had problems, but his wife, Nariman Kalamadeen, had said that was not so.

It had been reported that unidentified men snatched the businessman while he was walking along the Houston Public Road on the morning of April 2. The 54-year-old Kalamadeen left his D’Aguiar Park, East Bank Demerara home around 6 am on April 2 to go on his daily jog.

He was last seen wearing a blue sweat suit, track boots and a cap. Family members said they had checked every corner in the Houston, Mandela Back Road area, interviewed almost all the security guards in the block but no one had a clue as to where the former motor racer might be.

Two weeks ago, the businessman’s sister-in-law, Member of Parliament Bibi Shadick told this newspaper that the people who were holding him were confused. She asserted that relatives were not giving up hope. Shadick also had said that in Guyana whenever someone wanted to kill you they would do it. Reacting to reports that Kalamadeen might have been held over some transaction, Shadick, an attorney-at-law, said such rumours abound but the man’s relatives have not given them any credence.

She told this newspaper that they had received a telephone call from overseas where the caller informed them that an official working on behalf of the government said that Kalamadeen was being held by a local drug enforcement agency. Shadick said too that there had been rumours that he was being held by the US. (Stabroek News)


Joint Services working relentlessly....

   .... to dismantle criminal enterprise

Rohee

Home Affairs Minister Clement Rohee says the administration and the Joint Services are relentlessly continuing their efforts to dismantle the criminal enterprise, which created havoc in January and February this year by killing 23 persons in Lusignan and Bartica respectively. The Government Informa-tion Agency (GINA) reported yesterday that Rohee gave the assurances at a meeting with residents and the business community of Bartica during a visit to the community.

GINA said Rohee addressed the large gathering at the Modern Hotel and during his address said that one of the main objectives is to dismantle the criminal enterprise, which he said was larger than “men running around with guns”. citing the harbouring of criminals by certain persons in society.
He spoke of “persons who facilitate the criminals and armed gangs. They provide them with transportation, safe housing, information, weapons and food. In other words, they sustain them and that is what this criminal enterprise is all about.”

Outlining the ways in which the issue was being tackled, Rohee pointed to the passage of the law which subjects anyone found harbouring criminals to a penalty of imprisonment as well as a heavy fine, “because we cannot have a situation where persons purporting to be innocent are giving accommodation to criminal elements while they are plotting and planning their activities.”

GINA said the Summary Jurisdiction (Offences) (Amendment) was passed in the National Assembly for penalties for those who are engaged in harbouring criminals. The Bill provides for the offenders on conviction to be liable to a fine of not less than $50,000 or more than $80,000 together with imprisonment for a period not exceeding three years.

According to GINA, the minister also called for an understanding among the masses that though everything was  not being shouted from a roof-top, there were ongoing efforts to prevent and make it difficult for criminal gangs to carry out another similar event.

“Is not only to dismantle the criminal enterprise but to contain them, make it difficult for them to execute activities of the types that were executed at Lusignan and Bartica… It’s not about sitting back and waiting for when they will come. One has to take preventative measures,” he said.

According to GINA, too residents and members of the business community were afforded the opportunity to voice their concerns on security-related matters and to offer suggestions on crime fighting during which several issues were raised including, noise nuisance, youth involvement in drugs and sexual offences in riverain communities.

Suggestions put forward included the need for a better community/police relationship and for every passenger arriving by boats to be subjected to security checks at the Bartica Police Station.

Meanwhile, prior to the meeting, the minister addressed members of the Joint Services at the Bartica Police Station where he expressed on behalf of the government appreciation for their work and  reiterated the need for better community/police relations arguing that if there was a disconnection only one set of persons will benefit; the criminals. (Stabroek News)
 

23 april 2008

Cops run out of leads in Serrao murder

   Say mistaken identity avenue remains open

It has been almost a year since 27-year-old Navin Serrao was killed in a drive-by shooting at Thomas Lands, Georgetown and even as the police have run out of leads, a top ranking officer says the case of seeming mistaken identity remains open.

On the night of June 7, the former Hadfield Street resident, was driving his friend’s Toyota 212 car. He had just picked up the friend’s mother from her home in Kitty and was driving West along Thomas Lands.

A car, still unidentified up to today, drove alongside him and gunmen started pumping bullets at Serrao. This was around 8.50 pm. He died from several gunshot wounds to his head, neck, hands, arms and chest.

Mere days after the killing, acting Police Commissioner Henry Greene had commented that he believed it might be linked to some drug deal. Greene’s comments had left Serrao’s relatives furious and they had insisted that the police should do thorough investigations before making such pronouncements.

In recent telephone interview, a top-ranking member of the force told this newspaper that the police, “ran out of leads” in this case, but that it was still pretty much open. However, the source revealed to this newspaper that the owner of the car which Serrao was driving that fateful night, “had problems with persons and so we went along those lines in our investigations but we did not come up with anything of evidential value.”

The officer said the police believed the bullets might not have been meant for Serrao and so diagnosed the case as one likely to be one of mistaken identity. He said all the leads the police were working with have been exhausted and though many persons were questioned in relation to the killing but there has never been enough evidence to lay charges against anyone.

No answers

The memory of the man’s killing is fresh in the minds of those who were closest to him. During an interview with this newspaper, his sister Rihanna Moore, who also acted as his custodian from childhood, could not control her tears. It was as though the incident happened only yesterday.

Asked whether the family had heard anything about any progress in investigations, Moore told Stabroek News, “we have gotten no answers and we don’t know anything because we have no kind of information as to who killed my brother.” She said the family had been told that the police were still conducting investigations.

Recounting the night her brother was killed, Moore said she had received some money from her mother for her daughter’s birthday and was heading to he internet café to call her mother to say thanks. She had taken her children to a Chinese restaurant for dinner. She said she knew Navin was in Sandy Babb Street, Kitty with his friends, since he had spoken to her earlier that night. She said it was around 9.30 pm that she received a call informing her of her brother’s demise.

Accepting the way Serrao died has been hardest for his family, his sister said, even as they refuse to point fingers at anyone. “We don’t have any evidence who did it and I feel this is why the police too could not have come up with anything,” she said. But she said she remained hopeful that solving the case would be a priority for the police.

In the meanwhile, Moore said, she has put her trust in God and that He would bring her and her family the justice they deserve. “We are leaving everything to him.” She said her mother has since been forced to return to Guyana since the death has been hard for her to bear.

“Every day we still cry the grief is still pretty much fresh in our hearts. He was very close to me. He was like my child. A day hasn’t passed without tears in this house. He was such a jovial person and we really miss him,” she said breaking into tears. “My brother was a nice person and it’s hard for us to accept the way he died. We were not prepared for this. I mean if he had gotten into an accident and was killed that way the feeling would be different.”

Already for this year, there have been two execution-style killings, with nothing groundbreaking in investigations. On March 10, Marcyn King the sister of Rondell ‘Fineman’ Rawlins was shot as she was walking home from work. Police had warned, following this killing, that they would not tolerate the killing of innocent persons and that all efforts would be made to arrest and prosecute the perpetrator(s) of the act.

Later in March, gunmen executed George Barton at Laing Avenue in what appeared to be a well-planned drive-by attack. Barton called ‘Burlin’, 48, lived at 34 Howes Street, Charlestown. His teenage daughter Anika Barton, who was with him at the time of the attack, sustained gunshot wounds to her right leg.

The teenager had told the media that while she and her father were walking, four men pulled up in a white car and called to him by name. The motive for the man’s slaying could not be ascertained. Relatives had speculated that the killers might have trailed Barton from his home.

Barton entered Laing Avenue from the western end with his daughter and was only a short distance in when a white car, as described by eyewitnesses, drove up approaching from the eastern end and opened fire. This was around 8.10 pm. Barton was shot around three to four times. The car then sped off in a westerly direction. (Stabroek News)


   Three held with gun after two robberies at Corentyne

Three bandits who reportedly committed two robberies on the Corentyne were taken into custody when police unearthed a .32 snub-nose revolver in a blue AT 192 Carina motorcar, PKK 75, which was intercepted during a roadblock at Albion. Reports are that the bandits first robbed an off-licence liquor restaurant at Number 48 Village belonging to Kampta Rambarose, 78 and escaped with $10,000. This was around 6.30 pm.

Rambarose, his wife and a grandson were in an adjoining kitchen at the back of the business place when the bandits held them at gunpoint and removed the money from a drawer in the shop. They then made good their escape in the waiting car that was hired from Raj Taxi Service at Springlands.

The bandits then attacked and robbed Azad Taki of A. Taki Filling Station & Variety Store at Hogstye of $90,000 and a quantity of GT&T and Digicel phone cards. Taki told this newspaper that around 7.45 pm he was in the snackette, about to close the door when one of the bandits pounced on him.

He said the man was neatly dressed and at first he thought he was a genuine customer and was about to go and attend to him. He was shocked when the bandit whipped out a gun from his right-side pants pocket and stuck him up. “He pointed the gun to me and ordered me to hand over all the money; I give him everything I had and even had to show him that the drawer was empty…”

Taki said he did not realise that while this was happening, another unarmed bandit was attacking his pump attendant, 53-year-old, Chandishwar Permaul, who put up a struggle. The bandit took the pump attendant into the snackette and had his accomplice deal him a blow to his head with the gun. Taki said he watched the men enter the waiting car and speed off into the direction of New Amsterdam and then called the police.

He subsequently identified two of the men during an identification parade yesterday. The third bandit who was driving the car is said to be the son of a former police officer. Taki said there was a blackout in the area at the time of the robbery but his generator was on. One of the bandits is said to be from D’Urban and Breda streets, Werk-en-Rust while the other two are said to be from Number 71 and Number 51 Villages. (Stabroek News)


Albouystown man shot, wounded while running from cops

   Reportedly wanted in murder of Brazilians

A 26-year-old Albouystown man was shot by police yesterday afternoon around 4.30 pm, reportedly following a chase. A well-placed source said the Hill Street, Albouystown man was wanted in connection with the shooting deaths of two Brazilian miners during a daring daylight robbery earlier this month.

According to reports, the man was shot in his back as he ran from the police and at the same time, he suffered a broken ankle. The police then took him to the Georgetown Public Hospital. Stabroek News learnt that the man was shot at La Penitence Street, Albouystown. One resident pointed out a yard where she said the man lived, not far from where he was shot. But occupants there denied that he lived there and refused to say anything else.

However, one of the yard’s occupants who asked not to be named said that the police would go looking for the man whenever a crime was committed. The resident said the man visited the area frequently because his girlfriend lived there, but he lived with his parents at Hill Street.

Two Brazilian miners – Silverino Pequeno Alves Junio, 45, and Francisco Lima, 46 — were shot dead on April 11, during in a daring daylight robbery at a Regent Street guesthouse were they normally stayed. Two men — Ryan Clemenson, 20, and Charles Hackett, 47, were on Monday charged with robbery under arms and murder. (Stabroek News)
 

22 april 2008

   Two charged with murder of Brazilian nationals

Two men yesterday appeared before Magistrate Hazel Octave-Hamilton charged with the murder of two Brazilian miners at the Regent Guest House and Restaurant, Regent Street, Georgetown last Wednesday.

Ryan Clementson, a 20-year-old taxi driver (no address given) and Charles Hackette, 47, of 99 New Grove Housing Scheme, East Bank Demerara, were not required to plead to the joint charges.

Particulars of the capital offence said on last April 16, at Regent Street, they murdered
Severino Pequeno Alves Junio and Francisco Lima. It is also alleged that on the same day, armed with a gun, they robbed Jose Alenor Ovidio D’Oliveira of $1,500,000 cash.

Police Corporal Shellon Daniels, prosecuting, requested a date for report on whether the armed robbery charge would be disposed of summarily. Attorney-at-law Mr. Adrian Thompson, representing Clementson, said an identification parade was conducted last Sunday in the absence of any lawyers. He said Police are alleging that there was a surveillance tape that captured the two accused.

CHARGED: Ryan Clementson

He is requesting that they be tried quickly because it makes no sense for them to be remanded for an extended period. But Prosecutor Daniels said the virtual complainant in the robbery matter and three others identified Clementson on the tape.

The Magistrate however stated that all such information would be dealt with at the appropriate time. Clementson and Hackette will return to court on May 14. Police, in a press statement, had reported that Alves Junio, 45, and Lima, 46, were shot and killed by two men armed with handguns.

The duo, along with Brazilian miner Jose Alenor Ovidio D’Oliveira and another Brazilian national, had earlier gone to transact business at Pure Diamonds Establishment on East Street, Georgetown, where D’Oliveira collected $1.5M, Police reported. Police said the Brazilians later returned to the guest house where they were staying and were in the bar when one of the bandits entered and ordered a soft drink.

CHARGED: Charles Hackette

However, while being attended to, he pulled out a firearm and attacked D’Oliveira, hitting him in the head with the firearm, and relieving him of the bag with the money. Police said Alves Junio went to D’Oliveira’s assistance and was shot in his head.

Meanwhile, Lima ran out of the building and tried to escape but was shot in the abdomen by the other bandit outside, Police added. The gunmen managed to escape on a motor cycle that was parked nearby.

The Brazilians were rushed to the Georgetown Public Hospital where Alves Junio was pronounced dead on arrival. Lima died while being attended to. (Guyana Cronicle)
 

   Killer dogs victim buried

Bidding farewell: The sons of Mr. Roopchand standing next to the coffin bearing their father’s body during yesterday’s funeral service.

Charles Roopchand, the security guard who was mauled to death by nine dogs last Wednesday morning, was buried after an emotional thanksgiving service yesterday.

A pall of gloom blanketed Roopchand’s 2 C Lusignan Public Road, East Coast Demerara, home as the coffin was wheeled onto the premises beside a huge photograph of him.

His sons could not contain their emotions as relatives began paying tribute to their dad.

Cops (Guyana) Ltd. Executive Chairman, Mr. Gregory Gaskin, fondly spoke of his “best employee” whom he described as a pleasant individual, a friend to everyone, always with an “infectious smile”. “Roopchand’s smiles greeted you at the entrance at the University of Guyana (UG) and he was the last to bid you goodbye in the evening for many years, as most of you can remember,” he said in his tribute.

He pointed out that Roopchand was a model worker and a man of humour, and he pledged his continued support to the family. Several other relatives made remarks and wept openly as they bade farewell to a man they sincerely loved. Among the large crowd of mourners were Minister of Finance, Dr Ashni Singh; Minister in the Ministry of Finance, Ms Jennifer Webster; and Member of Parliament, Mr. Irfaan Ali.

Meanwhile, his only sister who flew from overseas for the funeral, was inconsolable. Joan Roopchand said that Roopchand’s children should be compensated by the owner of the killer dogs and wishes the court will rule a fair judgment for her brother’s life. “He was a family man and was very dedicated to his family and provided for them. It is really sad the way he met his death,” she cried.

Roopchand, the sole breadwinner of his home was on his way to work at Ogle Airstrip Access Road, East Coast Demerara, when he was attacked by a pack of vicious dogs, including pit bulls, and thrown off his feet and dragged off the road.

The man’s eldest son, Michael said his father left home about 05:00h Wednesday morning to relieve a colleague who worked the night shift and the next thing he knew he received the dreadful news of his father’s death via a telephone call from the police.

“When I saw my father’s body I was so shocked; I couldn’t believe he died such a horrible death,” he cried. Roopchand’s wife, Lalita suffered a stroke some years ago and is bedridden; she was unable to attend her husband’s funeral yesterday.

At the time of his death, Roopchand was attached to the Guyana Telephone and Telegraph Company (GT&T) cell site at Ogle Airstrip Road on the East Coast Demerara. Up to press time, the commercial pilot and his killer dogs, including pit bulls, German shepherd and mixed breeds, were still in police custody. (Michel Outridge/Guyana Cronicle/Quacy Sampson photo)
 

   Enmore murder suspect still at large

Shaneiza Khan

Police are still to locate the suspect in the murder of 22-year-old Foulis, East Coast Demerara (ECD) resident, Shaneiza Khan. Khan was discovered dead on Sunday in the Enmore, ECD home that she once shared with her reputed husband of four years, who has not been seen since. 

A post-mortem examination performed on her body yesterday found that she died as a result of her throat being slit. She was also stabbed under the breast. Police are still hunting for her husband. Yesterday Khan’s mother, Bibi Nazmoon Hamid told Stabroek News that documents belonging to her daughter, including her passport, were missing.

Khan was discovered lying in a pool of her blood on Sunday by her sister, Faneeza, who had been told to check on her by Hamid after she had received a call from a neighbour stating that they had heard the now-dead woman screaming on Saturday night and receiving no answer when they called her.

Relatives said that after suffering abuse from her husband, Khan had moved out of the home four weeks ago and after landing a job had gone to collect her clothes on Saturday. She never returned. (Stabroek News)
 

21 april 2008

   Woman found dead with throat slit at Enmore home

Shanieza Khan in happier times (standing centre)

A 23-year-old Enmore housewife was found dead yesterday morning, an apparent victim of a volatile relationship.

The body of
Shanieza Khan was discovered by a female relative in the bedroom of the modest Grassfield house she shared with her companion of four years, and her four-year-old daughter from another relationship.

According to the relative who discovered the body, she went to check on her sister who had left their mother’s house to collect some clothing.

She stated that the man, a cane harvester, started physically abusing Shanieza some four months ago. When the battering became too much, the young woman eventually moved backed to her mother’s home in Foulis approximately four weeks ago.

Shanieza Khan left unaccompanied for Enmore at around 13:00 hours on Saturday, but when the woman next saw her sister, she was lying on the bedroom floor of her house with her throat slit and a knife next to her body – this was around 10 hours yesterday.

The sister told this newspaper that Shanieza was “the best” sibling of the family of five sisters and one brother. She stated that Khan’s husband had made several threats against her. At one point the man hung two ropes in the house threatening to kill both himself and Khan.

Reports were made at the Enmore Police Station but, according to neighbours, the man would constantly evade the officers who came in search for him. Ranks had arrived at the home as recently as Saturday in search of the man but with no success in apprehending him.

A post-mortem on the body of Shanieza Khan is expected to be performed today. Police are continuing their investigations into the incident. (Guyana Cronicle)


Woman’s throat slit at Enmore

   Reputed husband being sought

Shaneiza Khan

Looking to begin life anew after separating from an abusive husband, a 22-year-old woman was instead found dead yesterday, her throat slit, after she had gone to her former home at Enmore, East Coast Demerara (ECD) to collect her clothes.

The body of
Shaneiza Khan, the mother of a five-year-old girl was discovered by her sister, Faneeza, at Khan’s former Enmore residence, a home that she had shared with her reputed husband for four years before moving out a month ago.

Police were yesterday seeking the man, who has not been seen since. A bloody knife was discovered on the bed in the one-room building. Khan’s fully-clothed body was lying next to the bed and relatives said that there were signs that a struggle had taken place.

Sitting on the steps of her Foulis, ECD home yesterday, a grief-stricken Bibi Nazmoon Hamid, Khan’s mother spoke of the abuse that her daughter had endured at the hands of her reputed husband. “He always threaten she, always beat she and we does make plenty report at de police station but they never do nothing”, the tearful woman said.

She recalled speaking with her daughter on Saturday, just before she had gone to her former home to collect her clothes. Hamid said that Khan left at 1 pm on that day and never returned. She had been staying at her mother’s home after moving out from her Enmore residence four weeks ago.

The woman said that at about 10 am yesterday she received a call and a neighbour told her that they had heard screams in the night and said that they had called for Shaneiza but received no response and the place was closed.

Hamid said that she immediately called the police but they advised her to send someone to check and she sent another daughter, Faneeza. She recounted that when Faneeza arrived at the home and discovered what had happened, she called her. “She start foh holler and she seh that the man kill she (Shaneiza) and seh she done dead”, Hamid cried.

As some relatives built a tent to hold a wake and others talked quietly among themselves and with Khan’s daughter by her side, the grieving woman lamented the manner in which her daughter met her death. She said that from the first time that the couple began living together, Khan and her reputed husband always had problems and many times, she moved out of the home and had come to live with her but the man always begged for Khan to return and she always relented.

Hamid said that the man was very jealous and always wanted to know where Khan was and several times beat her in full public view and even exhibited his behaviour towards her daughter in front of her. She said that in recent times, his behaviour had gotten worse. “He always tell she if she lef am, he gon kill she…they doan live good”, she declared noting that he had even told her daughter this in front of her.

She said that he often took away Khan’s belongings and also verbally abused her and though the matter was reported to the police several times, nothing was ever done. The woman, tears streaming down her face said that her daughter had always called her when the couple had had their fights but this stopped after the man took away Khan’s cellular phone.

“She always call me pun a response”, the woman said stating that had her daughter had her phone, she would have called on Saturday night. She said that at some point within any week her daughter would move in with her after a fight.

The woman said that recently this became too much for Khan and she moved in with her over a month ago and lately landed a job. She was going for her clothes when she was killed. Hamid recalled last seeing her daughter before she left and speaking with her during which Khan revealed that she was going for her clothes and though Hamid said she urged her not to, the young woman still went. She received the fateful call yesterday.

Khan leaves to mourn her daughter, mother, five sisters, a brother, her father, step-father and other relatives. A post-mortem examination is expected to take place today.

In recent times, domestic violence has claimed the lives of several persons, including a man. Earlier this month, on April 9 a taxi-driver was charged with the mother of his two children. The man, Haslyn Hodge was remanded to prison for allegedly murdering Tamasha Riddle.

A post-mortem examination found that she had been hit several times in the head and strangled. Her face was in a pillow-case when she was discovered. Just two days earlier, a 71-year-old woman, Jahora Ramnauth was remanded to prison after allegedly beating her 45-year-old reputed husband, Subaschand to death. (Gaulbert Sutherland/Stabroek News)
 

19 april 2008

   Sugrim re-arrested, bailed again

Terrence Sugrim

Terrence Sugrim answered to the name Roy Alvarez in the Georgetown Magistrate’s Court yesterday after being taken there on charges of illegal possession of guns and ammunition and was granted bail in the sum of $1M. This came after he had on Thursday secured bail in a similar sum in the High Court by Justice Jainarayan Singh Jr following a habeas corpus application by his legal team.

Sugrim had been imprisoned after being committed to await extradition to the United States to face trial for allegedly conspiring to traffic in narcotics following an extradition hearing in the Georgetown Magistrate’s Court.

However, after his legal team filed the application in the High Court, Justice Singh found that many factual errors were made by the magistrate during the hearing and they were serious enough transgressions to render her rulings in relation to the committal unlawful and unfair. Bail was granted in the sum of $1M after an application.

Appearing for Sugrim/Alvarez before Principal Magistrate Melissa Robertson-Ogle at the Georgetown Magistrate’s Court yesterday, attorney-at-law Glen Hanoman told the court that his client had been re-arrested after being granted bail. When the case was called, a number of names were called but Sugrim/Alvarez did not respond to any name other than Roy Alvarez. “Your worship, we acknowledge the name Roy Alvarez but not the other names”, Hanoman stated.

Sugrim, 43, of Lot 91 Parfait-Harmonie, West Bank Demerara is charged with unlawful possession of firearms and ammunition. It is alleged that on June 28 also at Lot 91 Parfait Harmonie, he had in his possession two firearms, that is to say, one .32 Tarus Pistol (serial number FUH 83964) and a .32 Walter Pistol number 452067 without being the holder of a firearm licence.

It is also alleged that on the same date and place, he had in his possession 75 rounds of .32 ammunition and 85 12-gauge cartridges without being the holder of a firearm license. He pleaded not guilty to both charges.

Hanoman pointed out that his client had previously been charged with both offences but the charges were withdrawn by the Director of Public Prosecutions. He said that the charges are “clearly a reaction to him being released on bail by the high court”. He made a bail application and the magistrate granted bail in the sum of $500 000 on each charge.

Sugrim/Alvarez and his reputed wife, Michelle Davis had previously been jointly charged with the same offences. However, after the charges were withdrawn against him, Davis faced the charges alone and her matter is ongoing at the Wales Magistrate’s Court. She also faces a charge of harbouring a wanted man. Sugrim/Alvarez was ordered to return to court on May 15 at the Wales Magistrate’s Court. (Stabroek News)


   Alleged poultry thief fatally shot

A Success, East Coast Demerara poultry farmer yesterday afternoon shot and killed a man who was allegedly caught stealing meat birds from his chicken pens. Dead is Omar Mohan of Pigeon Island, also on the East Coast Demerara. Stabroek News was unable to make contact with the dead man’s relatives or anyone close to him last evening.

Reports reaching this newspaper state that Mohan was caught in the Success Public Road poultry farm attempting to steal meat birds. Stabroek News was told that Mohan made an attempt escape and challenged the poultry farmer and he was shot in both legs. He was rushed to the Georgetown Hospital where he died around 7 pm yesterday. (Stabroek News)


   Shot in neck at Ida Sabina

A gunman on Thursday morning shot another man in his neck at Ida Sabina Village, Berbice River, police said last evening in a statement. According to a press release the incident occurred around 3 am on Thursday during which time labourer Kenny Singh, 32, was shot and sustained injuries to his hands and neck.

Investigations revealed that Kenny Singh was aroused by noise in his home and upon checking was confronted by a man armed with a firearm who discharged several rounds at him and escaped. Singh was admitted a patient at the New Amsterdam Hospital, the police release added. (Stabroek News)
 

18 april 2008
 

Beheaded man found in shallow grave …..at Patentia

   Tenants held

Ramesh Singh

The decomposing body of a 54-year-old man, his head severed, was found buried in a shallow grave in his Patentia, West Bank Demerara backyard yesterday and police have detained a couple who were the dead man’s tenants.

Dead is Ramesh Singh called ‘Chukuroo’ of Lot 93 Fourth Street, Patentia Housing Scheme, West Bank Demerara. His son, Mahesh Singh discovered the body at about midday yesterday after he went to check on his father, following reports by neighbours that the man had not been seen around anymore.

The male tenant after seeing Mahesh digging at the spot reportedly attempted to flee but was caught after being pursued. The decomposing body, the head severed and one of the arms already falling off, was pulled out of the grave shortly after 5 pm yesterday. The man’s clothes were also buried with him.

Undertakers removing the body of Ramesh Singh from his Patentia yard yesterday.

Shocked neighbours told Stabroek News that they had last seen Singh around Phagwah but in the following weeks he was not seen anymore. This was related to his relatives and Mahesh, who lives at Mahaica, visited the home last Sunday to check but his father was not there.

He told reporters that he had last seen his father some months back and he was okay. However, after receiving reports that his father was “missing”, he visited the home last Sunday and said that he was told by the tenants that they had paid his father $40 000 in rent, and Singh had gone to Suriname.

Mahesh said that documents belonging to his father and clothes were also missing and he didn’t believe the couple’s story. A relative said that suspicions were further heightened after the man’s pension book was discovered as Singh never went anywhere without it.

Mahesh returned to the home yesterday and was told by neighbours that they had seen the male tenant digging a hole, sometime ago supposedly for a new toilet. Mahesh said that he went to the area pointed out and along with another man they began to dig and saw a portion of a body.

He said that the male tenant had been observing them as they dug and sometime during that action left. Mahesh related that he pursued the man and caught up with him some distance away. He said that the man had a cutlass and “he tek out the cutlass on me”. However, he was subdued and the police were notified and came and took him and his wife into custody.

Curious residents of Patentia waited behind the police tape as investigators did their work at the scene.

Following the discovery, a number of shocked residents gathered in the immediate area, discussing the event, prevented from going closer to the home by police tape. Several persons climbed on a mango tree to get a closer glimpse of the yard and many persons exclaimed that nothing like this had ever happened in their area before.

Police ranks from the West Demerara division were present in numbers but any further action in relation to the body was delayed as they awaited investigators from Georgetown. It was a long wait due to the prolonged closure of the Demerara Harbour Bridge but when the two investigators finally turned up after 4 pm, they went to work immediately taking photographs and measurements.

The body of Ramesh Singh being placed in a metal casket as police look on and investigators examine another spot.

The grave was in the south-eastern portion of the yard in the shade of some banana and sugar-cane plants in the overgrown garden. After taking photographs both in the yard and inside the home and measurements, the task of uncovering the body was started.

As the dig continued a stench permeated the air and what appeared to be clothing were pulled out of the grave before the decomposing, still clothed corpse was extracted minus the head and an arm. The head was under the body and after that and the arm were pulled out; the body was placed in a metal casket-like container and taken away.

Meantime, neighbours had recalled that the tenants, a couple had moved into the home shortly before Singh was no longer seen around the place. He had lived alone previously. They said that Singh usually sold produce from his garden and “was always about the place”.

“He was a strong man”, one neighbour said stating that they never expected that he would die this way. They said that he sometimes drank and had friends over to the home but never harmed anyone. Neighbours could not recall hearing a fight or any noise to suggest that such a gruesome act had taken place. They said that last Tuesday, the male tenant had a celebration for his wife’s birthday.

Singh leaves to mourn his three children, two of whom are in Venezuela and other relatives. Up to last evening several persons were at the Wales Police Station giving statements. (Gaulbert Sutherland/Stabroek News)
 

17 april 2008

   Dogs maul security guard to death

Mauled to death: Charles Roopchand

A vicious attack by a group of dogs, believed to have consisted of pit bulls and cross breeds, on a security guard left him dead early yesterday morning along the Ogle Airstrip Road, East Coast Demerara.

The owner and his nine vicious dogs were yesterday taken into custody after the dogs attacked and killed a security guard who was on his way to work at Ogle Airstrip Road, East Coast Demerara.

Dead is Charles Roopchand, 54, of Lot 2 ‘C’ Lusignan Public Road, East Coast Demerara. According to reports shortly after 05:30 hours yesterday the dogs pounced on the Cops security guard as he was walking to work.

For him death was instantaneous as the dogs chewed on the man’s neck and face while they dragged his body several feet from the road. Reports said Roopchand tried desperately to fend off the ferocious dogs after they threw him off his feet but he was quickly overpowered and mauled to death.

A woman who was jogging was also attacked and mauled by the dogs after they killed Roopchand. She was however, treated at the hospital and sent away. Roopchand’s son, Michael, 24, told the Guyana Chronicle that his father left home about 05:hours for work and he later learnt of his demise via a telephone call from the police.

Roopchand’s sons yesterday in deep shock

The shocked and grieving young man said that his dad was the sole breadwinner for the family of two siblings and their ill mother who is bed-ridden.

At the time of his death Roopchand was attached to Cops Security Service where he provided security for the Guyana Telephone and Telephone (GT&T) tower at Ogle Airstrip Road, East Coast Demerara.

At Roopchand’s residence yesterday, his three sons were still in deep shock as they recounted the last time they saw their father.

Meanwhile, it is unclear how the dogs actually got out of the yard where they are housed but when the police was summoned the owner was alerted and managed to contain the dogs. (Michel Outridge/Stabroek News)
 

Dogs kill guard

   Pastor’s wife wounded, owner in custody

A pack of vicious dogs attacked and killed a 53-year-old security guard on the Ogle Airstrip Road, East Coast Demerara (ECD) shortly after six yesterday morning, before turning on a Goedverwagting woman.

Dead is
Charles Roopchand of 2C Area H, Lusignan, ECD, while Desire London, the wife of Bishop Philbert London and resident of 123 Goedverwagting, ECD, was treated at the Georgetown Public Hospital for her wounds and sent away.

The animals, which according to reports were Pit Bulls, Rottweilers and German Shepherds, were captured by members of the police force’s canine squad and their owner taken into custody to assist with investigations.

The police said yesterday that they have taken nine dogs into custody. At the time of the attack, Roopchand was on his way to the GT&T cell site located farther south on the road, to relieve a colleague. London was headed in the same direction, on one of her routine early morning walks.

Reports indicated that the dogs had somehow managed to escape from their owner’s yard and were seen running around in a large pasture nearby. They first attacked Roopchand and he managed to jump over a drain that was half filled with water. However, he was pulled down by the dogs in another drain, a few feet away. There, the animals bit and clawed at his face and neck.

Just then, London approached, completely ignorant of what was occurring and two of the dogs turned on her. They first attacked at her legs, throwing her to the ground. However, she prayed and put up a fight with her hands. The dogs withdrew completely when former government minister Dr Dale Bisnauth approached with a stick.

London was subsequently taken to the hospital by her husband, while Roopchand’s body was taken to Lyken’s/Newburg Funeral home. Police later arrived on the scene and captured the dogs. Their owner was taken to the Sparendaam Police Station for questioning.

Stabroek News was told that Roopchand had told a workmate, on several occasions, that the dogs would rush at him whenever he passed that area, though he’d never been bitten before. Other people also reported seeing the animals jumping against the fence which appears to be sturdy, on numerous occasions.

When Stabroek News arrived on the scene, the area was deserted, but numerous bloodstains were visible on the road. Blood was also evident in the muddied drain, where Roopchand took his last breath.

The house, which is the last on the eastern side of the road near a pasture that extends all the way to the entrance of the Ogle Aerodrome, was locked up and no one appeared to be home. At her home, hours after the incident, London was still in her walking clothes which had specks of blood and was in noticeable pain. Both wrists and the lower part of her left foot were heavily bandaged.

Send the angels

Recounting her experience, London said she saw about four dogs running in the pasture. A young man, talking on a cellular phone, was walking ahead of her. All of a sudden, she said, two of the dogs attacked her legs. She said she fell, but kept trying to fend off the dogs with her right hand.

The young man, who she said was the owner of the animals, did not go to her aid; neither did a passing group of estate workers. She said that they all stood some distance away while the animals bit and pawed at her. During the attack, the woman recalled, she just kept saying, “Holy Spirit send the angels”, and it was around this same time that Bisnauth arrived, armed with a stick.

London said that following the attack, she went to the house the dogs were from and spoke to the owner. She said she enquired as to the reason for the dogs being loose and he in turn asked her if she wanted to be taken to the hospital. London said she told the man that she had called her husband and he would take her to the hospital.

At that point, she was still unaware that the dogs had already killed someone. At the hospital, she said, her wounds were dressed and she was given an injection. She then journeyed to the Sparendaam Police Station where she made a statement. Her husband, Bishop London told this newspaper that he felt sorry for the owner. 

“Her trauma for the dog bite is not nearly as much as what he is going through,” the pastor said adding that no human being would maliciously loose any dog to kill or bite a person. He said one could only imagine the shock the man was in, but added that since the dogs have already tasted human blood, they would need to be put down.

At Roopchand’s house, there was intense grief. When Stabroek News arrived, his three sons, ages 23, 12 and ten years old, along with close relatives, were all standing in front of the building. Roopchand’s wife, who had suffered a stroke some years ago, is bedridden. With a dazed look in his eyes, Michael, the eldest of the three said that his father left for work around 5.30 am. He said the police at Sparendaam later called and informed him of the tragedy.

At the COPS headquarters in Lamaha Street, there was a similar atmosphere as his superiors and workmates expressed disbelief at the gruesome tragedy. Chris Thompson, the Operations Manager said that Roopchand worked with the company from 1999 to November 2005 and then returned in June the following year.

The manager told this newspaper that after he failed to show up at work yesterday, his workmate, who he had to relieve, called his home and was told he had left for work. Thompson said he then received a call that a man wearing a COPS cap was lying at the side of the road. Believing that the man might have collapsed, he said, he went to the scene only to find Roopchand with his throat and scalp ripped open. He said that at first, he could not even recognise the man, but the mouth was familiar.

Thompson said that from all appearance, when the dogs attacked him, he ran and his cap flew off. He said when he arrived on the scene, the employee was lying on his back. While issuing a call for these types of dogs to be banned from Guyana, Thompson expressed concern for Roopchand’s family especially the children.

 “Jailing him [the owner] doesn’t make sense, he should pay his [Roopchand’s] family, to help his three young children,” Thompson said, adding that he could only imagine what was going through Roopchand’s mind, while he was being attacked. Other employees expressed shock over the incident.

While in recent years, there have been no reports of killings by dogs,  there have been several pit bull attacks. On February 29, two pit bulls attacked two residents of Tucville and two employees of the Guyana Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, after a woman allegedly loosed them on a group of children who had been playing in the area. The woman was later charged and the matter settled in court after compensation was paid to those attacked.

Then on October 1 last year, two pit bulls attacked a 57-year-old jogger near Well Road, North Ruimveldt. The 13-minute ordeal left Lennox Wade, a miner/furniture manufacturer, with huge gouges in one of his legs and arms and countless bites about his body including his neck and back. He had to undergo several operations to repair his damaged ligaments and was to have gone overseas for treatment. (Stabroek News/Zoisa Fraser)
 

On Regent St…Gunmen slay 2 Brazil miners

   Snatch $1.5M

Silverino Pequeno Alves Junio

Gunmen yesterday afternoon killed two Brazilian miners and injured a third during a robbery at a guest house on Regent Street before escaping on a motor bike despite police foot patrols in the city.

Dead are Silverino Pequeno Alves Junio, 45, a dredge owner who had been living in Guyana for the past five years and Francisco Lima, 46. Junio was shot in his head while Lima was hit in his abdomen. A third man, Jose Alenor Ovido D’Oliveira was gun butted and was treated at the Georgetown Public Hospital and sent away.

Police in a statement last evening said that the incident occurred around 1:10 pm. According to the police, investigations revealed that the men along with D’Oliveira and another Brazilian had earlier gone to do business at Pure Diamonds Establishment on East Street, Georgetown, where D’Oliveira collected $1.5 million.

The Brazilians later returned to the Guest House where they were staying and were in the bar when one of the bandits entered and ordered an aerated drink, the police statement said. “While being attended to, he pulled out a firearm and attacked D’Oliveira, hitting him in the head with the firearm while taking away the bag with the money,” the police statement noted.

Jose Alenor Ovido D’Oliveira, one of the Brazilians attacked by bandits yesterday afternoon, leaving the Georgetown Hospital after being treated. (Jules Gibson)

Alves Junio went to D’Oliveira’s assistance and was shot in his head, the police said, noting that upon seeing what was happening Lima ran out of the building to escape and was shot in the abdomen by the other bandit who was outside.

The two armed attackers then escaped on a motor cycle that was parked nearby. The police said the two men who were shot were rushed to the GPHC where Alves Junio was pronounced dead on arrival and Lima died while receiving medical treatment. D’Oliveira was treated and sent away, the police statement added.

When Stabroek News arrived at the scene shortly after the shooting a large crowd had converged outside the guest house. Members of the Guyana Police Force were also in attendance but detectives were finding it hard to relate to the Portuguese-speaking Brazilians.

Speaking to reporters at the scene of the shooting, the owner of the guest house, who asked not to be named, said that two men on a motorcycle rode up at the business place. He said one of them entered the lower flat of the guest house where he accosted D’Oliveira.

The Regent Guest House shortly after yesterday afternoon’s attack. (Jules Gibson photo)

The owner said that at the time D’Oliveira had been carrying a pouch with around $2M which was snatched by the robbers. The gunman then lashed the Brazilian to his face with his weapon, causing him to collapse on the floor.

The owner related that while D’Oliveira was on the ground the second gunman whipped out his weapon and fired two shots, one hitting Junio to his head and the other drilling a hole in Lima’s abdomen. The gunmen then escaped on their motorcycle before members of the police arrived.

The owner said that he had been doing business in Guyana for several years now and had never been attacked. He told Stabroek News however that his business place was outfitted with security cameras and the gunmen might have been captured. Police collected the cameras yesterday and up to press time last night they were said to be analyzing the tapes.

Fatal spot: It was in this bar below the Regent Guest house where the two Brazilians were shot. (Jules Gibson photo)

Meanwhile, the owner of a small business yards away from the guesthouse told Stabroek News that she was sitting chatting with a friend when she heard the shots but mistook the sound for noises coming from Hanson General Store just opposite the guest house.

The woman said whenever labourers from the store offload heavy items from containers, loud sounds are heard and so she just felt that this was happening again. “But then I heard the sound again and I realize that it sounded like gunshots and it happen so quick because by the time I looked out I just saw plenty Brazilians staying at the hotel, running out on the road and some were crying,” the woman said.

She told this newspaper that she heard two shots. According to her only moments earlier the police foot patrols were seen in the area and stressed that they needed to focus their attention more on that part of Regent Street which she said became very desolate and lonely at certain times of the day.

“They got to be round here more because the last time 2J’s got robbed and only a little while before they were here and now this,” she added. Over the years a number of Brazilian-operated businesses have suffered attacks at the hands of criminals roaming the streets. There is a significant Brazilian population in the city connected with the mining industry. (Nigel Williams/Stabroek News/photos: Jules Gibson)
 

16 april 2008

Businessman found dead with bullet to head

   Suicide suspected

A man died from a gunshot wound to the head yesterday afternoon at a Stevedore Scheme guesthouse in what is so far being ruled as a suicide. Dead is Edmond Jonas, a forty-year-old businessman of 163 Stone Avenue, Campbellville.

Undertakers from Lyken’s Funeral Service removed the man’s body from the guesthouse at around 7 last evening. A clearly visible wound was on the right side of the man’s head. Ranks of the Guyana Police Force were on the scene carrying out their investigations and workers from the guesthouse were tight-lipped as to what transpired earlier.

On learning of the man’s death, relatives broke down in grief and disbelief, some of them expressing that only on Sunday they were on a trip with him to Linden. At the man’s home, relatives were inconsolable. (Stabroek News)
 

15 april 2008

Schoolyard killing

   Teen freed

Freed: Letitia Bowen leaving the courtroom yesterday.

In tears and shouting “thank you, thank you”, to the jury, former Richard Ishmael Secondary School student, Letitia Bowen was acquitted of a manslaughter charge and two other counts of unlawfully wounding with intent yesterday in the High Court.

Emotional relatives hugged her as she left the courtroom still weeping. The 19-year-old was on trial for the killing of Jacklyn Levius, which occurred in the school compound just over two years ago and the wounding of Wanda Small.

After a lengthy trial before Justice Roxanne George, a jury found her not guilty on all three counts in proportion of ten to two. Before she left the court, Justice George told Bowen that she (Bowen) knew what happened on that day. When Bowen stepped out of the dock, she made her way over to a relative of Levius and tearfully apologised for the woman’s death.

The jury spent a few hours deliberating before returning with the verdict. For over a month now they sat and heard as the prosecution’s case unfolded and later, the case as presented by the defence.

State Counsel Ganesh Hira who presented the prosecution’s case had set out to prove that Bowen reacted excessively on the day in question — November 11, 2005 — when she was approached by Levius and Small in the school compound. He argued that the schoolgirl had a knife on her person that day and that she used it to injure Levius and Small.

Several prosecution witnesses were called during the trial including Small who was with Levius when she was stabbed. She testified that she and Levius were with a group of seven women who turned up at the school that day after a relative who attended the school called home to say that she was being picked on.

Small recalled that after they approached Bowen there was an exchange of words. According to her, Bowen was armed and shortly after the confrontation a knife-wielding Bowen stabbed her and Levius. But Small’s evidence was challenged repeatedly during cross-examination and bits were found to be conflicting with her original testimony in the Magistrate’s Court.

Other prosecution witnesses testified to being at the school compound and witnessing a scuffle between Levius, Small and Bowen — they could not recall seeing the actual stabbing. The story coming from the women who visited the school was that they went to lodge a complaint with the Head Teacher of the school against Bowen and were waiting for her to appear at the HM’s office when Levius and Small broke away from them and went to meet her halfway.

Bowen’s defence was that she acted in self-defence on that day when the two much older women confronted her and started beating her in the school compound. In a statement to police shortly after, which was tendered as evidence during the trial, the teenager said she was helpless and that no one went to her assistance. She said that a knife fell from one of the women who accosted her and that she picked it up and used it break free from their grip.

The young woman said she had no intention of killing or injuring anyone. She later maintained her story in a statement from the dock and had apologised then for the death of Levius and the injuries that Small received. Senior Counsel Bernard DeSantos appeared in association with Pamela DeSantos on Bowen’s behalf. (Stabroek News)
 

12 april 2008
 

   Man shot after barber shop robbery

Michael Thomas


A 24-year-old man is in the Georgetown Public Hospital (GPH) under police guard after being shot following a robbery at Joseph Pollydore Street yesterday.

A gun was recovered from the man when he was taken to the medical institution, sources said.

Michael Thomas, who told police that he lived at Lot 6 Sophia, Bel Air, was admitted to the GPH with a gunshot wound to his lower back.

He was said to be in a stable condition after undergoing surgery. According to reports, the incident which led to Thomas being shot occurred around 1 pm yesterday while he was at a barber shop at Joseph Pollydore Street.

After having his hair cut, he reportedly whipped out a gun and demanded that the barber hand over his valuables. He then attempted to escape but while he was running away an alarm was sounded and a passer-by, who is said to be a licensed firearm holder, pulled out his gun and shot him in the lower back. The bullet exited from the side.

The injured man still attempted to run away but collapsed on Norton Street as he attempted to escape into a bushy empty lot. When this newspaper visited the area yesterday persons were tightlipped and said that they had not seen anything. Following his collapse, Thomas was taken to the GPH where he underwent treatment, including an x-ray examination.

He was later taken to the operating theatre for an operation on his wound. The items that he had reportedly stolen were recovered and police sources said that a .32 revolver was also recovered from him. Thomas reportedly told investigators that he is a deportee and all his relatives live in Trinidad. Police are investigating the matter. (Stabroek News)
 

   Man shot at Mahdia after row

A 46-year-old North Ruimveldt man was yesterday taken to the Georgetown Public Hospital (GPH) for further treatment after he sustained a gunshot wound on Thursday. According to a police press release the incident in which the man, Patrick Hermonstine, was shot occurred at approximately 4.30 pm on Thursday at Mini Hole Backdam, Mahdia.

Investigations, the release said, have so far revealed that Hermonstine was involved in an argument with a man who pulled out a handgun and discharged rounds at him, hitting him in his abdomen.
Hermonstine was initially treated at the Mahdia Hospital before he was transferred to the GPH yesterday.

When this newspaper visited the GPH he was unconscious but according to a source was in stable condition. The release further said that the suspect has not yet been arrested. (Stabroek News)
 

   Woodbine hotel manager murdered

Murdered Rawle Grimes

The bloody and battered body of well-known Woodbine Hotel Manager
Rawle Grimes was discovered early yesterday morning lying next to his car in Le Repentir Cemetery, Georgetown. His sister, Marcie Grimes, told the Guyana Chronicle she learnt of her brother’s death via a telephone call from a relative.

When she reached the scene, the police had already cordoned if off and she was unable to view the body. The young woman said her brother was murdered in the most gruesome manner, according to people who saw the body and told her about it. She was told that he was bleeding from the nose and mouth, and his shirt was stuffed in his mouth.

Marcie Grimes added that her brother’s head was bashed in and he was lying in a pool of blood just near the middle gate in the cemetery. The body was discovered by passers-by on their way to work, and by the time the Police arrived, a large crowd had gathered for a glimpse of the man they all knew. Some shouted loudly, while his relatives erupted in loud wails of grief.

The 29-year-old left home as usual for work on Thursday night. He returned to his 468 East Ruimveldt, Georgetown home shortly after 1:30 h and left to go out, his brother, Teddy Grimes, said. The car he drove was parked next to his body and was taken away by the police when his body was removed by undertakers. At the man’s home yesterday, relatives could not contain their grief as they held the pictures of their loved one. (Guyana Cronicle)
 

April 10, 2008

Bartica slaughter

   Miner charged with 12 murders

Roger Simon

Almost eight weeks after the gruesome slaying of 12 persons at Bartica, a 44-year-old resident of the community appeared at the Georgetown Magistrate’s Court yesterday, charged with the murders.
Roger Simon of 25 Fifth Avenue Bartica, a miner and father of nine, was not required to plead to the 12 indictable counts of murder.

After reading the charge to him, Principal Magistrate Melissa Robertson-Ogle carefully explained to Simon that a preliminary inquiry would be conducted to determine whether there was sufficient evidence to commit him to stand trial in the High Court.

Simon stood in court with his head lowered and his eyes red, struggling to control his emotions. He wore a Bob Marley t-shirt with the quote: “Just can’t live that negative way…Make way for the positive way” and many in the courtroom were heard whispering, “Which way did he take?”

After the charge was read, the magistrate asked Simon if he wished to say anything. He declined to make a statement to the court. It is alleged that on the night of February 17 at Bartica, Simon murdered nine civilians: Edwin Gilkes, Irving Ferreira, Ronald Gomes, Baldeo Singh, Dexter Adrian, Deonarine Singh, Abdool Yassin, Ashraf Khan, Errol Thomas and three police officers; Ron Osborne, Zaheer Zakir and Shane Fredericks.

Simon was remanded to prison and the matter was transferred to the Bartica Magistrate’s Court for May 14. On the night of February 17 at approximately 9.40 pm, some 20 gunmen attacked Bartica slaughtering one dozen people including three policemen during an hour-long strafing.

It was reported that the gunmen attacked the police station first, killing three policemen and freeing prisoners. They then took the vehicle assigned to the police station on a rampage, terrorising the community and murdering an additional nine persons.

According to previous reports, the gunmen arrived in the area by boats and departed in similar fashion taking with them firearms they had grabbed from the police station and from a mining company. The attack on the Bartica community came amidst supposedly heightened security across the country following the slaughter of 11 people at Lusignan, East Coast Demerara three weeks earlier.

Police have blamed wanted man Rondell ‘Fineman’ Rawlins and his followers for the attacks. James Anthony Hyles, 19, called ‘Sally’, of 70 Friendship, East Coast Demerara has been charged with the Lusignan murders. He allegedly killed Clarence Thomas, Vanessa Thomas, Ron Thomas, Mohandai Gourdat, Seegobind Harrilall, Seegopaul Harrilall, Shazam Mohamed, Shalem Baksh, Seecharran Rooplall, Dhanrajie Ramsingh and Raywattie Ramsingh.

In comparison to Hyles’s court appearance, Simon’s was calm and quick. Hyles was taken to court and charged on February 21 and chaos visited the Georgetown Magistrate’s Court on that day. Before Hyles arrived at court, his relatives and friends were already outside the court compound loudly voicing what they described as “an injustice”. His relatives created a noisy chaotic scene in the courtroom that day and Magistrate Robertson-Ogle was forced to withdraw from the bench for a period of time during which security was enhanced. (Sara Bharrat/Stabroek News)
 

April 08, 2008

Man held in Jiffy Lubes owner abduction

   Crime chief

Farouk Kalamadeen

Amid growing fears about the fate of the owner of Jiffi Lubes seven days after he went missing, Crime Chief, Seelall Persaud, yesterday said that the police have arrested one man and have received information that Farouk Kalamadeen was abducted.

Persaud did not divulge much, but speaking to reporters yesterday at Houston, East Bank Demerara during a function, he said that the man in custody was arrested based upon information received by the police.

He said that they had received information suggesting that Kalamadeen had been abducted. According to Persaud, the police were not aware of any demands for ransom and as such, they were not treating the matter as a kidnapping.

Meanwhile, Stabroek News was told that Kalamadeen might have been picked up by foreigners with whom he had problems, but the man’s wife, Nariman Kalamadeen, said that was not so. “My husband was not involved in anything illegal I can attest to that. We have been involved in business together from day one,” she declared.

Mrs Kalamadeen said she could not understand why people were suggesting that the former motor racer was involved in illegal business. As time elapses many are fearful of the fate of the Jiffy Lubes owner, who disappeared some where in the Houston, East Bank Demerara area while jogging last Wednesday morning. 

Stabroek News was told that the businessman was snatched by unidentified men in a dark-coloured car. The man’s family maintained that he did not have any problems with anyone as far as they were aware. They said there had been no demand for ransom. Mrs Kalamadeen told Stabroek News last week that she was confident that her husband had not run off from her and his family and it was clear he was being held against his will. However, she could not say why her husband was being held.

Relatives said that police had been monitoring the situation and had been in contact with them on a regular basis providing updates on their investigations. The 54-year-old Kalamadeen left his D’Aguiar Park, East Bank Demerara home around 6 am on Wednesday to go on his daily jog. He has not been seen since. He was last seen wearing a blue sweat suit, track boots and a cap.

The businessman’s wife said that they have since checked every corner in the Houston, Mandela Back Road area, interviewed almost all the security guards in the block and no one has a clue as to where the former motor racer might be. “He is not on the track where he left to go, the hospitals do not have him; we combed the area thoroughly. So then he is being held against his will,” Mrs Kalamadeen asserted on Thursday last.

According to her from all appearances, her husband might have been snatched as soon as he exited the gated Barrington Place, D’Aguiar Park community, noting that none of the security guards along the route he walked every day saw him on Wednesday morning.

PNCR member and former MP, Lurlene Nestor, in a recent letter to editor urged an investigation into the phantom squad activities and the violence that broke out along the East Coast Demerara following the 2002 jailbreak. Nestor pointed out in her letter, which appeared in this newspaper on Saturday, that such an investigation had become necessary, since there are emerging situations that resemble that of the notorious “death squad period, 2002-2004”.

She said the recent slaying of Marcyn King, sister of an alleged mastermind of the recent massacres, painted a picture of revenge killing similar to that of George Bacchus, late death squad informant.

She said other situations which begin to mirror the phantom squad period were the recent killing of George Barton and now the disappearance of Kalamadeen reminiscent of the numerous young men who remained absent from their homes after they  disappeared during that infamous time. (Stabroek News)


   West Coast Berbice man killed in hit and run

Rabindranauth Persaud

A 21-year-old bakery assistant of Number 11 Village, West Coast Berbice who left home around 8.10 pm on Sunday to meet friends was killed in a hit-and-run accident at Bath Settlement around 10.30 pm. Reports are that Rabindranauth ‘Gregory’ Persaud was walking along the road on his way home, when a white car headed in the opposite direction, hit him and did not stop.

An eyewitness told Persaud’s relatives that the car turned into a street at a fast rate and that no one pursued it because there was a blackout in the area at the time. Relatives learnt that persons telephoned the police and they arrived and took Persaud to the Fort Wellington Hospital where he was pronounced dead on arrival.

His aunt, Julie Prashad who took care of him after his mother died while he was still small, said she learnt of the incident through ranks of the Fort Wellington Police Station. She said the police found her nephew’s cellular phone in his pocket and called the last number that he had dialed.

A relative who was at the Timehri International Airport at the time received the call from the ranks and immediately informed her around 11.55 pm. She said her husband; Chamanlall Nandram went to the hospital’s mortuary to identify the body. 
 
Prasad said that her nephew had received a call from his friends earlier on Sunday and made arrangements to meet them at Bath Settlement. She said he told her he was going out with them and would be back soon. He never made it home alive.

She told this newspaper the young man was employed at Boodram’s Bakery at Enmore, East Coast Demerara and his employers provided accommodation for him but he would travel often to visit her. He said he was supposed to leave Berbice early yesterday morning to return to work. He leaves to mourn his father and a brother. (Stabroek News)
 

April 07, 2008

   Brazilian miner stabbed to death

A Brazilian miner was on Saturday morning stabbed to death during a scuffle with another man at Kamarang (Cuyuni/ Mazaruni). Police in a statement last evening said that they are investigating the circumstances surrounding the death of the miner,
Valdemar Vara Da Silva, 55, which occurred at about 9:50 am on Saturday.

According to the police, investigations revealed that Da Silva and the suspect, who is one of his employees, had an argument over payment for work done during which the suspect allegedly fatally stabbed Da Silva about his body and escaped. (Stabroek News)
 

   Caricom expresses shock at tragic Suriname plane crash

Caricom Heads of Government have expressed shock at the loss of lives from the tragic plane crash which killed 19 people in Suriname and offered their deepest sympathy to the Government and People of Suriname and in particular to the relatives of those who lost their lives.

This was done during an informal session the Heads had on the first day of the just concluded April 4 to 5 Special Meeting which had as its thrust to ‘fully ventilate the crime and security issues facing the Region and to agree on a Strategy and Plan of Action to stem the rising tide of violent criminality’.

The discussions at the informal session centered on the views and perspectives of the Heads of Government with respect to the future of the Community as well as the strengthening of the Governance arrangements of the Community, a statement noted.

It stated too, that the Heads reiterated their strong commitment to the integration process and the completion of the arrangements for the CARICOM Single Market and Economy and also agreed that in order to achieve the goal of a Community for all, ways must be found for the greater inclusion of the Associate Members of the Community.

They mandated that an appraisal of the implementation of the CARICOM Single Market arrangements in each Member State be conducted with a view to improving its operations.

The Heads meanwhile, also, expressed sincere thanks and appreciation to the Prime Minister of Trinidad and Tobago for providing the environment which ensured a fruitful and productive discussion. (Guyana Cronicle)
 

April 05, 2008

Bell 206 no crime fighter

   Luncheon: Look for results

The Bell 206 chopper

The two Bell 206 helicopters purchased by the administration to fight crime are not suited to the task says Captain Gerry Gouveia but government spokesman Dr Roger Luncheon says the nay-sayers should look out for the results.

The helicopters costing a total of just over US$1.5M ($300M) are used machines with the one already here having chalked up over 10,000 flying hours.

The helicopters had been specifically acquired by the administration in response to the upsurge in criminal violence, culminating in the two recent massacres at Lusignan and Bartica which claimed the lives of 23 people.

One of the choppers with serial number 3012 flew into Guyana from Costa Rica on Wednesday. Luncheon told a press conference yesterday that the second chopper would arrive in two weeks.

President Bharrat Jagdeo had disclosed at a press conference two weeks ago that his administration had already made payments on the two helicopters which were sourced from Costa Rica and the United States to aid in aerial surveillance. Jagdeo had also said that a private engineer had been recruited to assess the craft to ensure they were quality choppers.

                                                        Captain Gerry Gouvea

Managing Director of Roraima Airways, Gouveia told Stabroek News in an interview yesterday that there was no question as to whether the country needed helicopters but he said Guyana needs choppers that could transport 8-10 men from one location to another and also do emergency medical evacuations and other tasks.

“But the helicopters we are buying cannot do all of these and I wonder whether it was a waste of taxpayers’ dollars,” Gouveia commented. He argued that the Bell 206 chopper which flew in on Wednesday was a 1980-manufactured machine with limited capacity to transport troops and unsuited to fighting crime.

“This is a tourism helicopter”, Gouveia said of the chopper, sitting at Camp Ayanganna presently. “By no means it is suited to support our security forces, it could only carry two passengers, cannot carry logistic support and in terms of rapid response and speed this is a joke and a comedy,” Gouveia declared.

Information about the chopper obtained by this newspaper showed that it has a total flight time of over 10,000 hours and has passed through at least three hands. Gouveia said that no aviation professional he spoke with here said that they were consulted by the government or the army on the purchasing of the machines.

Advice

Luncheon however disagreed with this, noting that the administration had sought the advice of Lex Barker, the owner and operator of the only Bell 206 helicopter in the country and also Mike Brassington, a Guyanese pilot residing in the US.

Luncheon said both of these men were competent officials in the aviation sector and he was certain that their advice was sound. “But let us wait on the results…ask me one year from now about the effectiveness of the helicopters,” Luncheon challenged.

Pressed on whether local aviation experts were consulted, Luncheon said there was no need for much advice, since the administration’s technical people in the army Air Corps unit along with others played the role as advisers.

“In every step they provided quality assurance standards to us in ensuring that we are getting value for our money,” the Cabinet Secretary said. Stabroek News was unable to elicit a comment from the hierarchy of the army on the issue, but according to reports Major Mike Charles, the army’s top pilot did not play a lead role in the purchasing of the helicopter.

Gouveia said that the GDF air corps at present did not have the human resource capacity and experience to make those kinds of decisions. He further stated that it is sad that a good intention by the government went bad. According to Gouveia the chopper could not carry more than four passengers and this was not ideal for fighting criminals who have resorted to hiding out in the backlands.

He questioned if 25 gunmen attacked a location in the interior whether the security forces would fly in four men, leave them there and go and pick up another four in order to confront the criminals. However, Luncheon said that it wouldn’t be four men, but eight since the administration has acquired two choppers.

“What you want us to do? We didn’t have any helicopter and people were complaining. Now we have two and they are still complaining,” Luncheon remarked. He told this newspaper that the administration would not have bought the helicopters had it not considered all the drawbacks.

In addition, the Head of the Presidential Secretariat (HPS) told Stabroek News that both choppers would be fitted with infra-red search lights capable of lighting up half of a football field. He said this would enable the security forces to track down criminals in the night whether in the urban centres or amidst bush.

But Gouveia countered, saying that the 206 choppers are single-engine craft, which according to aviation standards in Guyana are not allowed to travel at night. Captain Gouveia also said that from what he knew the chopper which arrived here on Wednesday did not have the instrumentation to allow it to fly at night. “I don’t think we procured daytime helicopters…the helicopters would be used as needed,” the HPS asserted.

Gouveia said with all the efforts that were being made here to respond to any flood crisis, other natural disasters and crime it is inconceivable that the government would purchase that type of helicopters. “The money we spent on buying these two junks could have been used to fix the Bell 412, a far better quality helicopter,” Gouveia argued.

The Bell 412 has been out of operation for over two years now and Gouveia believes that mismanagement and lack of proper maintenance have contributed to the state it is in. He said the GDF had previously used the chopper, acquired under the PNC administration to do commercial work.

Captain Gouveia is an experienced aviator with an Airline Transport Pilot Licence for fix-winged aircraft, spent twelve of his formative years in the Army Air Corps, serving as Training Officer and subsequently Chief Pilot before resigning in December 1987. (Nigel Williams/Stabroek News/GINA photo)
 

April 04, 2008

   Kaneville man wounded in ‘shoot-out’ with police

Stephen Mohamed in hospital yesterday

A young man was shot by police ranks yesterday morning at Kaneville, East Bank Demerara, reportedly in an exchange of gunfire, and he is currently at the Georgetown Public Hospital awaiting surgery to remove the bullet.

According to a police press release Stephen Mohamed was shot at around 9:45 yesterday morning when police approached a group of four young men following reports about their threatening behaviour.

The young men, the release stated, opened fire on the ranks who returned fire hitting Mohamed in the right hip. The other men managed to escape.

The release said that an unlicensed .32 pistol and nine matching rounds were recovered by the police. Kaneville residents told Stabroek News that Mohamed called `Cheesy’ was recently involved in another shoot-out with the police.

One villager said that she had witnessed Mohamed being picked up by the police at his Kaneville home and placed in the back of a police pick-up. However he escaped at that point. Another woman recalled that she was washing clothes when she heard about seven gunshots. When she ran to the front of her yard she recalled seeing Mohamed running down the road and dashing away from the police.

Mohamed told this newspaper at the hospital that the bullet is still lodged in his hip and he is expecting surgery to have it removed. He said that he was never involved in any previous shoot-out with the police and that yesterday’s events resulted from an affair he is having with another man’s girlfriend.

Mohamed said the man reportedly told the police that he [Mohamed] had robbed him and they came looking for him.Police are continuing their investigations in the matter. (Stabroek News) 
 

   New Police Chief is here

New Police Chief Commissioner Ronald Donger and Minister of Justice David Dick

Philipsburg - Minister of Justice David Dick  who arrived on St. Maarten on Wednesday with the new police chief commissioner Ronald Donger  took him to the Philipsburg Police Station yesterday where he presented the man who will be leading the Police Force of the Windward Islands for the next two years.

Minister Dick also officially presented the new chief to the Lt. Governor and Chief of Police Franklyn Richards as well as to the island leader of government yesterday afternoon.

Donger was hand picked by the Minister of Justice to fill the position after he decided to move former chief commissioner of police Derrick Holiday from his position.

When Holiday was removed late January the police union fought against outside management saying that St. Maarten has its own people who can manage the police force of the Windward Islands, however, the minister was able to broke an agreement with the police union and the civil servant union where they agreed to have the new chief as a coach for the next two year. An MOU was signed February 28 which paved the way for Donger’s appointment.

Asked when the new chief will take office the Minister said that he cannot give an exact date until all his meetings are completed. He said those meetings is expected to continue today as well. (SMN)
 

Loor’s Sentence Cut by Half - Acquitted on Bribery Charge

   Naf.15,000 Fine - Soon to be Released

Convicted Police Commissioner Marcel Loor (file Photo)

Pointe Blanche: ---- Convicted Police Commissioner Marcel Loor can truly say he won his appeal since the court of appeals cut the four year prison sentence by half and acquitted him on the bribery charge even though the four panel judge say they saw the proof but was not convinced enough. Instead of paying Naf600,000 in fines as imposed by judge Luis De Lannoy Loor has to now pay a mere Naf 15,000.

The appeal court in its decision convicted Loor to 24 months in jail, six of which are suspended. If Loor should behave himself in prison he will earn the one third discount that he is entitled to meaning that he should be out of prison by June of this year.

The verdict was given to the convicted Police Commissioner at the Pointe Blanche Prison yesterday. In an invited comment Chief Prosecutor Taco Stein said that they are not happy with the verdict but at least they got a conviction.

Asked if they intend to appeal the case in the Supreme Court Stein said that he did not receive the verdict in writing as yet and he still has to discuss the case with his colleagues before taking a decision as to how they will move forward. He further explained that the Supreme Court will only look at the case if the appeal court made an error in the law. Stein said that since he did not receive the verdict and studied it as yet he could not say if there was any legal error.

Marcel Loor was arrested on June 19 for forging immigration documents, bribery, tax evasion and money laundering. Prosecutor Martin Hemelaar requested a four year prison sentence and Naf100, 000 in fines. Judge De Lannoy did not show any mercy on the police commissioner during his trial, and described Loor as a money wolf in sheep clothing. (SMN)
 

   A domestic flight carrying 17 passengers and two pilots....

......crashed in Suriname yesterday morning killing all on board.

Rescue workers carry the remains of passengers of a Blue Wing Airlines Antonov AN-28 plane that crashed in a remote gold-mining area of Suriname with 19 passengers and crew on board. (REUTERS/Ranu Abelakh)

The Antonov 28, owned by Blue Wing Airline which also operates a scheduled service out of Guyana crashed just 1800 meters away from landing at an airstrip in the gold mining town of Benzdorp in the interior of the country close to the French Guiana border.

Reuters in a report last evening on the incident said that concerns over the airline’s safety standards had prompted restrictions on the carrier flying into neighbouring French Guiana. However that report said those restrictions were lifted last year.

Reports out of Suriname indicate that the aircraft was scheduled for touchdown at 11 am, Suriname time [10 am local time] and had already prepared for landing but was forced to suddenly pull back up since another plane was on the runway. Reports also indicate that the plane did not generate enough power for the sudden elevation and hit a tree, causing it to explode.

Emergency teams including military troops and police as well as a privately owned emergency company were rushed to the crash site, reports said. Stabroek News was informed that that all the bodies were recovered and flown to the Zorg en Hoop airport at Paramaribo where many government officials were present. Several hundred people including relatives and friends of the victims also flocked the airport, the source added.

Captain Soeriani Jhauw–Verkuyl, 36, who piloted the plane, and was also co-owner of the airline and co-pilot Robert Lackin, 23, were the two names released up to press time last night. This newspaper was told that the names of the others are to be officially released today.

From reports received, none of the persons killed in the accident are Guyanese. This newspaper was told that one of the persons killed was an employee of state owned telecommunication company Telesur while ten others were sub-contractors of the company and the other six persons were regular passengers residing in the area who were returning home.

Blue Wing over the last four to five months has been conducting a regularly scheduled service out of Guyana to Paramaribo. Local airline operator Gerry Gouveia, proprietor of Roraima Airlines said his company manages ground handling for the airline which travels three times a week to Suriname, from Guyana.

The most recent plane crash in Suriname occurred in December 2001, when a two-engine airplane from local Gam Air crashed into a mountainside, killing all 10 people on board, including six Brazilian musicians and a popular Surinamese singer travelling to a carnival celebration, authorities said. (Stabroek News)
 

April 03, 2008

   Twenty feared dead in Suriname plane crash

PARAMARIBO, Suriname: A passenger aircraft belonging to local Blue Wing airline carrying 20 people, including two pilots, crashed in Suriname on Thursday morning, aviation authorities have confirmed. The accident took place near the gold mining town of Benzdorp in the interior, close to the French Guiana border.

According to John Veira, Head of the National Aviation Department, all passengers are feared dead. Initial reports indicate, he said, that the Antonov aircraft allegedly hit a tree and subsequently exploded. Currently, the first emergency teams including military troops and police are being dispatched to the crash site, while the privately owned emergency company Hi-Jet Helicopter Services is also involved in the rescue operations.

According to Veira, the crash took place as the plane was attempting to land at the local airstrip. The aircraft was scheduled to land at 11.00 a.m. local time. “Probably there are no survivors,” said Veira. “We received information of the crash around 11.00 a.m.,” he further added.

“The aircraft was supposed to land at 11.00 a.m. but plunged into the forest,” the official noted. Reports indicate that one of the pilots was a female, while several of the passengers were workers from state-owned telecom company Telesur.

Gold miner Arnold Joram said that the ill-fated plane had already started landing when it suddenly had to pull up because another plane was on the runway. The plane allegedly couldn’t gain enough power, hit a tree and exploded in mid-air. Miners and local villagers rushed to the crash site in a bid to rescue possible survivors.

The most recent plane crash in Suriname occurred in December 2001, when a two-engine airplane from local Gum Air crashed into a mountainside, killing all 10 people on board, including six Brazilian musicians and a popular Surinamese singer traveling to a carnival celebration, authorities said.(Caribbeannetnews/Ivan Cairo)
 

Plane crash in Suriname kills at least 19 people,....

   ..... aviation officials say

PARAMARIBO, Suriname -- A plane crashed en route to a mining region in southern Suriname on Thursday, killing at least 19 people, officials in the South American country said. The twin-engine Antonov-AN28 was operated by a Surinamese carrier, Blue Wing airlines, said Kenneth Dors, Suriname's air traffic services director.

Dors said 19 or 20 people were on board, including two crew members, but officials were still trying to determine the exact number. All died in the crash. Another official, Brian Desouza, flight safety division manager for the aviation authority, said 19 were on board and all were apparently Surinamese.

The plane took off from the capital, Paramaribo, and crashed in a wooded area near the airstrip of its remote destination in the country's interior, Desouza said. Authorities had not yet determined the cause.

"The local people have reached the aircraft; they know what the situation is," Desouza said. "We're putting up investigation teams." Suriname is a sparsely populated former Dutch colony on the northeastern shoulder of South America. (The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
 

   Many perish in Suriname air crash

At least 19 people have been killed after a domestic flight crashed in the former Dutch colony of Suriname. Kenneth Dors, air traffic services director, said the twin-engine Antonov-AN28 that went down on Thursday morning was run by a local airline, Blue Wing Airlines.

The plane took off from the capital, Paramaribo, and was heading to an area in the country's interior where many foreigners work as miners, most of them Brazilians.

Dors said 19 or 20 people were on board, but officials are still trying to determine the exact number. The cause of the crash was not immediately known. (Aljazeera.net)
 

   Small airplane crashes in Surinam, 19 die

CARACAS, April 3 (Xinhua) -- A two-motor aircraft crashed Thursday in south Surinam, killing all 19 passengers and crew members aboard. The Antonov AN28 Russian-made aircraft belonged to local Blue Wing airline, according to news reaching here from Surinam's capital of Paramaribo.

Surinam's Air Traffic Director Kenneth Dors said the causes of the accident are not known yet. The aircraft had lifted off from Paramaribo and crashed in a jungle region close to its destiny south of Surinam, a country of northeast South America.

According to a press release, some 20 people were traveling aboard the aircraft, including two pilots. Aeronautic Security Manager Brian Desouza said local inhabitants have reached the site of the crash. (Chinaview)
 

April 02, 2008

   Man sought over Laing Ave murder

                                                     George Barton

Two weeks after unknown gunmen killed Charlestown resident, George Barton, police yesterday issued a wanted bulletin for Aman Lallchand, a suspect in the killing. According to the bulletin Lallchand is wanted for questioning in relation to investigations being conducted into the murder of Barton.

Wanted: Aman Lallchand

Barton known as ‘Georgie Berlin’ was killed while in conversation with his daughter, Anika Barton at Laing Avenue, Georgetown, on the night of Thursday March 20, the police bulletin said. The dead man’s daughter was injured.

Police say that Lallchand who is also known as Randy Persaud or Amar Lallchand is 22. He is of mixed race and 5’ 8”.

His last known address is Lot 671 Diamond Housing Scheme, East Bank Demerara. Anyone with information that may lead to the arrest of Lallchand is asked to contact the police on telephone numbers: 225-2700, 226-2917, 226-4585, 225-2317 or the nearest police station.

Relatives of Anika told this newspaper recently that the child’s life was in danger. The teen is now out of hospital after taking her own discharge and her relatives have vowed to protect her at all costs. Prior to the issuing of the wanted bulletin relatives said that it seemed as if the crime would go down in Guyana’s crime pages as unsolved.

Reports were that two Thursdays ago, George Barton received a telephone call in the company of his daughter to go to Laing Avenue. As the two made their way through the street just after 8 pm, a car with four men pulled up alongside them. One of the occupants shouted `B’, referring to George, before opening fire on him. He was shot in his back, neck and legs.

The car drove up a little and turned around. The gunman now armed with a much smaller gun fired several rounds at the teen hitting her thrice in the knee and once in the buttocks. Reports are that seconds before she was shot, one of the occupants told the gunman that she had to be killed too. (Stabroek News)
 

   Three die in Land of Canaan fire

The ruins of the home at Land of Canaan.

A fire of unknown origin swept through a Land of Canaan, East Bank Demerara home early yesterday morning killing an elderly woman and her two grandchildren who had attempted to flee but were trapped inside by thick smoke and the raging flames.

The tragedy at the Lot 6 Old Road home claimed the lives of Basmat Arjune, 63; nine-year-old Melvina Singh; and five-year-old Shemar McPherson.

Suresh Moreno, 24, escaped from the inferno after leaping from a veranda, but he sustained severe burn injuries. He was admitted to the Georgetown Public Hospital where his condition was listed as critical.

Shemar Mc Pherson

Moreno struggled to save his cousins shortly after the flames erupted, removing them from the bedroom and nestling them in his arms but they were separated when a door collapsed knocking him to the ground.
Arjune managed to run from her bedroom and got as far as the front door. She apparently struggled with the door but was unable to open it to get out.

                                      Melvina Singh

It was around 1 am that Old Road residents reported hearing loud screams coming from the home and rushed outside to find it engulfed in flames. Within minutes, the structure was gone and the three occupants had perished.

The fire service showed up a while after the fire broke out and, according to residents, arrived without water. The fire tender had to travel to a neighbouring village to fill up and return. However, residents said it was already too late for the home and its occupants when the tender first showed up.

An inconsolable Jean Moreno, who lost her mother and two children in the blaze, stood outside of the levelled home yesterday and repeatedly asked `why?’. She was away at work when the fire broke out and rushed home to the devastating news. “Is mommy and my babies! Is mommy and my babies! Why? How and why?” Jean Moreno said as neighbours and relatives hugged her. She has one surviving daughter who spent the night away from home.. The child was traumatised yesterday.

Jean Moreno told Stabroek News that the source of the fire was unknown. She related that power to the home had been cut a few weeks ago and they were using lamps. However, she was adamant that the lamps were always put out before they went to bed leaving the home in complete darkness. She said persons in the area confirmed that the fire started in the lower flat of the two-storey structure where no one was at the time, adding that this was strange and puzzling.

Basmat Arjune

The woman recalled that in the past three weeks there had been two break-ins at the home. She resided in the lower flat of the home while her mother and nephew, Suresh lived upstairs. In the first instance, money was stolen from her and in the other, a meal she had prepared was eaten.

Recounting to this newspaper what her nephew Suresh told from his hospital bed about the incident, Moreno said they had all retired to bed. Her two children were left in the care of her mother since she had to work. An intense heat awakened Suresh and he jumped out of his bed to see flames in the home.

Suresh rushed to his grandmother’s room but she was not there. Smoke was thick in the home and the fire was spreading so he ran to where the children were sleeping and awakened them. The boy and girl could not bear the smoke so he removed most of his clothes and covered their faces.

Suresh Moreno

Moreno said Suresh had both of her children in his arms and was making his way out of the burning house when a door fell on them. The children were flung in different directions. When Suresh managed to get up, he could not find them. He called out to them but there was no response. She said her nephew did not want to leave the home without the children or his grandmother but he was forced to get out when the fire engulfed the entire upstairs.

Suresh jumped from the verandah and managed to get up and run into the street where residents ran to his aid. He was rushed to the Diamond Diagnostic Centre where he was treated and transferred to the city shortly after. According to Moreno, Suresh is torn apart by the incident and is not accepting that he did enough. She said the family is trying hard to get him to calm down and focus on recovering.

                                                   Mahendra Brijmohan

Arjune was described as a humble woman who never showed anyone a bad face. She was well liked in the area and was remembered as the woman who showed up for service at church one hour in advance. Another daughter, Camille Moreno said her mother had been ill for three months and had been staying at her up to a few days ago, when she went back to Land of Canaan.

The fire also destroyed a section of Mahendra Brijmohan’s home, which is next to the burnt out home. Brijmohan was awakened by an intense heat near his bed. He recalled that the fire was singeing the section of the home where his bedroom was, forcing him and his family to flee.

Residents assisted in a bucket brigade that he started soon after, which helped to save the house from further destruction. He said a number of items in his home were destroyed by the heat alone. But he pointed out that items can be replaced while his neighbours have lost their lives. (Iana Seales/Stabroek News/Jules Gibson photo)
 

   ‘Sick’ cop, fireman charged with robbing Alness woman

A female Police Constable and two men who allegedly robbed a Corentyne woman were remanded to prison when they were taken before the Whim Magistrate’s Court yesterday. Constable Rochelle Humphrey; Marvin Humphrey, 25, a fireman of Samaroo Dam, Pouderoyen, WBD and Cecil Davis, 24, of Canal No. 2, WBD were charged with robbery under arms.

The three were charged following investigations into a report of robbery allegedly committed on Janice Solomon of Alness, Corentyne, on March 28, 2008.

It is alleged that Constable Humphrey, who was on sick leave at the time, Marvin Humphrey and Davis went to the home of Janice Solomon under the pretext that they were all members of the Police Force and were conducting a search for drugs.

During the incident they allegedly held the victim at gunpoint and took away cash and jewellery to the total value of $820,000. They were subsequently arrested at the New Amsterdam Market after allegedly being identified by Solomon.

According to a police press release last evening, the force is conducting investigations into another report of robbery involving the trio along with another report of robbery involving Cecil Davis. Additional charges are likely to be laid. The trio was remanded to prison by Magistrate Krishendat Persaud and the matter continues on April 14. (Stabroek News)
 

April 01, 2008

   Anti-piracy revolving fund launched

Communication system to go on stream in two weeks

Rudolph King, president of the Tactical Commercial Equipment Sales Inc (left) shows fishermen the wristwatch equipped with GPS. On the table are other pieces of equipment that will be imported by the company.

The Ministry of Agriculture yesterday launched its Anti-Piracy Revolving Fund, designed to provide financial assistance to fishermen and boat owners who have suffered at the hands of high seas bandits.

Meanwhile, government has provided the Guyana Defence Force (GDF) Coast Guard with $15 million to set up a state-of-the-art communication system, which would allow for a more effective response in the event of a piracy attack. This new system, which is being set up in the Berbice, will be ready in about two weeks. Fishermen will have to purchase radios at a cost of US$300.

Delivering the feature address at the launching at the Carifesta Sports Complex, Agriculture Minister Robert Persaud said there have been significant developments in the quest to deal with the piracy issue, which has been a problem for years. He said piracy and pirates “have become part of our lives, in the region and other places”.

He spoke briefly of the collaborative efforts by his ministry the police and the Coast Guard to tackle this problem, adding that not much success had been achieved so far. It is the plan that in time, the communication will be stretched to other parts of the country.

The minister said the fishing sector was a significant contributor to about 13,000 households and a major player in the economic development of the country. He said that through collaboration with the Ministry of Finance, some materials used in the fishing industry were no longer attracting VAT.

He pointed out that all these developments clearly showed government’s commitment to support the sector stressing that collaboration was needed in order to combat piracy. Persaud said the Revolving Fund, had been a vision for many years. He called on all fisher folk to make full use of it. The fund Rennita Bentick, the fund’s administrator, said it was a non-profit one geared at helping fishermen get back on their feet following a piracy attack.

She said the registration process would be done at the co-op societies, which are expected to play a vital role in its implementation. The plan is to evaluate the fishing outfit – boat, seine and engine – and then O.25% of its total cost would be calculated. This would represent the annual cost for registering the outfit. Bentick said this could be paid monthly, quarterly, half yearly or annually.

All boat owners, whether or not they are members of a fisherman’s cooperative society, who consider themselves possible victims of piracy, could become members. To register, boat owners must present a valid passport or national identification card; valid maritime administration licence and fisheries licence; proof of ownership of their outfit, valuation of the outfit by the co-op society and proof of address for those who are not members of a co-op society.

To claim assistance, a detailed report must be made at the nearest police station, following a piracy attack. The boat owner would then fill out a claim form within 48 hours after reaching ashore and after making the police report.

The communication system

This is likely to be up and running in Berbice in about two weeks. Coast Guard Commander, John Flores, said the system would eventually benefit the entire country. The equipment has been acquired and would be installed from Number 66 Village Rosignol to Albion. However, fishermen must acquire radio sets, which with the help of government a distributor would be importing and reselling to fishermen. Flores said that without these radios, the system would not work effectively.

Rudolph King, the president of Tactical Commercial Equipment Sales Inc, who is importing the equipment, said that initially the equipment was to be installed at the police stations, but this changed to the fishing complexes at the request of the co-op societies. King said the two pieces of communication equipment were a wristwatch fitted with GPS and a radio that floats. He called on all fishermen to stay on the correct frequency and use it only for emergencies.

Fishermen were pleased yesterday with the launching of the fund. Bhawise Harpaul, of the Upper Corentyne Fishermen’s Co-op Society said that on many occasions the members could not go back to work after an attack. He said his society recognised that government was doing its part and to do their part, each member would contribute one trout a month; the money from that would go to the fund. (Stabroek News)

 

 

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