Gunmen
terrorise another East Coast village
-- Buxton
gang victim dies

KILLED:
Jainarine Singh, also called 'Teach'
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LESS
than 24 hours after a Buxton gang shot and
killed an Annandale resident in the latest
raid in the East Coast Demerara village,
gunmen again yesterday rampaged through
nearby Vigilance/BladenHall, terrorising and
robbing residents.
Retired
teacher, Jainarine
Singh, also called 'Teach', who
was shot in the head and was hospitalised
after a gang of armed bandits swept through
Annandale on Friday and robbed a supermarket
of about $110,000, died early yesterday
morning.
Singh,
42, was shot in the head after the gunmen
fired indiscriminately during their escape
into the violence-prone neighbouring village
of Buxton.
And
yesterday, a gang of
about 10 armed youths from Buxton proceeded
to terrorise residents of Vigilance South in
broad daylight as they went on a rampage,
attacking, beating, robbing and molesting
dozens of villagers.

TRAUMATISED:
Nandranie Pooran and two of her
children, four-year-old Evon and
two-year-old Shoba.
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The
invasion of part of Third Street (School
Road) Vigilance South, took place around
11:00 hrs yesterday when mostly women and
children were at home, since the men were
out working.
The
traumatised residents told the Chronicle
that the gunmen barged into their homes. The
attackers terrorised and robbed the poor,
hapless and defenceless occupants, mainly
women and children.
One
woman told this newspaper she was molested
by a member of the marauding gang.
The
visibly traumatised woman said one of the
gunmen lifted up her blouse and brassiere
and started to hold
her exposed breasts.
The
31-year-old housewife said the man also
attempted to push his hands into her
pants but his bid failed because she was
wearing a tight pair at the time.

A
GRIEVING Nalini Singh mourns the
death of her husband, Jainarine
Singh at their home in Annandale,
East Coast Demerara yesterday.
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Rose
Sukhdeo, 58, tearfully pointed
out that they barely "scrape out"
a living and that these "heartless
criminals" would just come and take
away whatever little they have.
"People
struggling to mek a living. Nobody in this
area ain't get TV or cell phone or CD
players anymore. Them come and tek
all," Sukhdeo's daughter, Mumtaz
lamented.
One
resident opined that the criminals operate
in a fashion similar to repossession teams
from hire-purchase stores.
"Dey
come, collect and carry away yu TV and CD
player like they were authorised to do
that," the resident asserted.
Mumtaz
and her family suffered the most during
yesterday's ordeal.
According
to her, three gunmen stormed their humble
home at Lot 77 Third Street, Vigilance South
and terrorised
she, her five-year-old daughter Waheeda,
11-year-old Samantha; 13-year-old Shawn and
her mother-in-law who were at home at the
time.

BHOOKRAM
Singh, left and his daughter-in-law,
Veronica Ross.
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She
said the gunmen walked away with a CD player
valued at $140,000, one stabiliser valued at
about $10,000, a new pair of Clarks footwear
valued $10,500, a quantity of ladies
footwear worth more than $25,000, two gold
rings and a pair of earrings valued about
$6,000 and some household articles.
Sukhdeo
said this reign of terror has been ongoing
and that every Saturday they've come to
expect the brazen criminals to attack and
rob them.
One
resident feels that only Indo-Guyanese
are being victimised and terrorised in this
way since, for instance in yesterday's
ordeal, all five houses attacked were Indian
households while
Afro-Guyanese living in neighbouring houses
in the street were not robbed.
During
the ordeal yesterday, Esardai Khan,
54, of Lot 76 was home alone.
Khan
told the Chronicle she was cleaning shrimps
when she saw the gunmen entering her
neighbour's yard and pointed "long
guns" at the household, including her
daughter-in-law.

THE
bullet hole on the cap Singh was
wearing when he was fatally shot on
Friday.
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The
terrified woman said she immediately went
into her kitchen where she put down the
shrimp bowl.
Suspecting
that the men would also enter her yard, Khan
said she slipped out of the kitchen and went
to the back of her yard where she hid in the
outside toilet (latrine).
From
the vantage point of the latrine, she said
she saw the gunmen enter her yard shortly
after and storm into her house.
She
said she watched, trembling, as the men, in
a jiffy, marched out of her yard carrying
her TV set and a stabiliser.
The
men also struck at two houses down the
street from the Khans, where a 48-year-old
woman, Somarie Patiram, was home
alone. The men terrorised her before leaving
with her television set.
While
all this was going on, Nandranie Pooran,
38, of Lot 96 Third Street, Vigilance South,
said she was cooking at the time when she
heard the gunmen running up the stairs of
her humble home which was barely furnished.

TERROR
SCENE: Third Street, Vigilance
South, East Coast Demerara. (Cullen
Bess-Nelson photos)
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She
said she tried to block the door in a
desperate bid to prevent the gunmen from
entering but they kicked it open and
shattered the window panes.
She
said one of the gunmen pointed a gun at her
and demanded that she hand over all the
jewellery or else he will kill her.
Obviously
deeply affected by the horrifying
experience, she said she pleaded with the
gunmen: "Ow baba, me nah gat nutten,
nah kill me, me poor."
She
said the men apparently realised that her
house had nothing of any real value and they
left, joining the others in the street who
were moving to neighbouring houses on their
terror rampage.
Pooran
was home with two of her children,
four-year-old Evon and two-year-old Shoba
and a neighbour's daughter, Mucho. Her
husband returned home from sea less than two
hours after the incident.
Residents
pointed out a house in Friendship which is
located just a stone's throw from where the
invasion took place and where they claimed
the gang took the stolen TV sets and other
items.
They
said they watched the men as they calmly
walked away with their loot and into the
house.
Pooran
said that of the three men who attacked her,
two were of African descent and one looked
like an Indian.
The
house diagonally opposite the Poorans
(Lot 75) was attacked by gunmen just two
Saturdays ago, and yesterday the occupants
of the house all fled as the gang again
invaded.
Bhookram
Singh, 59, who lives at Lot 75, told
this newspaper that two weeks ago, gunmen
walked into his house, picked up a 19"
Sharp TV he had worked hard and saved for
and had bought the day before, and casually
walked out with it.
"They
come in me house and carry way me TV. Then
dey ketch me daughter-in-law and propa beat
she," Singh recounted.
His
daughter-in-law, Veronica Ross, 27, said the
men cuffed and slapped her several times in
that attack.
In
that ordeal, she said the gunmen carried
away her cellular phone and a bit of
jewellery she had on. Ross said that during
yesterday's attack, she took no chances and
fled the scene, running away to the next
street.
"Every
Saturday them chaps this a come ya and
terrorise we," Singh said.
Sunday,
January 19, 2003