![]() |
|
Gun, cash taken; niece terrorised
As confusion
reigned in the main shopping area of the city on Wednesday, four men armed with
cutlasses,
|
|
But at the Princes Street shop, Chandra Singh told Stabroek News yesterday,
four unmasked men entered and one of them asked for $20 worth of Bristol
cigarettes.
"I was at the back of the counter when four men approached me for
$20 Bristol. Seeing that they looked so suspicious, I took the Bristol in front
of the building and hand it to them. Then they got me busy, [asking] about Busta
drink, if I don't have a cold one. I said I don't have no drink. With that, I
was trying to see if I could run out, but a tall, brown skin, grey-head chap
tried to block me in front," the 50-year-old businesswoman stated as she
recalled the attack.
According to her, one of the men, who is short and has
plaited hair, scrambled her T-shirt at the back and pulled her inside the
building. Her 78-year-old uncle, Ganase Singh, who is
a retired headmaster, was in the shop at the time.
"After then, three pounced
on my uncle and throw him on the shop floor and start kicking and stamping him
on his face, his mouth, his chest... They tied him up, hands behind [his back],
his feet and stuffed paper in his mouth," the woman related.
Ms Singh said
the short bandit with the plaited hair then placed a knife to her throat and
demanded money and jewellery.
"All four of them had long knives, [so]
whatever sales, I handed over to them. That was $20,000. Then the one with the
plait hair asking, `What happen to that big man money?' I brought him inside and
I showed him the press. He took a file and wrenched the padlock."
From the
wooden press, the bandits carted off $11,000 cash, as well as US$50, which
someone had given the old man as a gift. Ms Singh said the bandits then started
demanding her uncle's gun, threatening to kill her if she did not hand over the
weapon.
"He took a big dress and stuffing it to my mouth, forcing it down my
throat and still asking questions. Then they start pulling the drawers on the
writing desk, looking for the gun." The bandits found the .25 `Burnadeli'
pistol.
After finding the gun, Ms Singh said, the bandits demanded more money
from her. She acquiesced and showed them where she had stashed $60,000.
"They
took the bag with $60,000 and ran me down the step with speed. Then the plait
hair one and the three walked out and go through South Alleyway (one lot away),"
the woman told this newspaper. During the ordeal, carpenters were at work
constructing a new building next door to the Singhs, but apparently no one knew
that anything was amiss.
The woman is adamant that her attackers were not
from the area.
The old man told this newspaper: "I never dreamed that this
would happen to me in my life. I hoped I [would have] died before this had
happened...[it] would be stored up in my mind for the balance of my life." He
has been operating the business since 1950.
Like the victim of last week's
murder/robbery at Meten-Meer-Zorg, West Coast Demerara, the Singhs complained
about the length of time the police took to respond.
"I have been a teacher
for 40 years and a headmaster for ten years and this was the reward I got from
teaching students," the old man lamented.
81-year-old Ramjit Singh, a retired headmaster