Cambio cashier killed as bandits strike
again By Neil
Marks and Shirley Thomas
 CAMBIO
Manager James Persaud
|
|
|
| BANDITS yesterday
shot and killed a cambio cashier in a daring daylight robbery attack in
the city - less than 48 hours after a gang murdered a young rural
constable in a brazen gun assault on a Georgetown Police
Station.
Ramnauth
Persaud, 44, called `Jack', cashier at the Commerce House Cambio on Regent
Street, Georgetown, was killed when gunmen struck at the business place at
around 09:00 hrs yesterday.
The
owner was critically wounded, and a City Constable and a guard at the
cambio were also wounded as the gang escaped with millions of dollars,
shooting at the City Hall compound across the street.
Panic
gripped the usually busy shopping area as shoppers and passersby dashed to
find cover from bullets fired by the gang.
Persaud, a father
of three of New Road, Vreed-en-Hoop, West Coast Demerara, died from
extensive internal damage caused by a gunshot which penetrated the left
region of his chest, medical personnel said.
Dr. Y.
Narine, of the Georgetown Public Hospital Corporation, who examined and
pronounced the cashier dead, said he sustained a gunshot wound
"immediately below his left (breast) nipple, penetrating his chest."
Persaud was dead before he reached the hospital, he said.
The
horrifying attack brought back chilling memories of July 14, 1999, when at
about the same time in the morning, gunmen struck at the cambio, carting
off $20M in local and foreign currency.
In that
attack, the left elbow of City Constable, Michelle Success, was shattered
from bullets the bandits fired at the City Constabulary headquarters
across the street.
Commerce
House Cambio guard Rudolph Ashby, also known as `Tiger', recalled that the
unmasked men yesterday, carrying what he said seemed to be AK-47 guns,
held him up at the entrance of the cambio.
 RIDDLED:
City Mayor Hamilton Green, second from left, examines the
bullet-riddled stairway of the City Constabulary headquarters
building.
|
|
|
| He said two of
the men, heavily armed, made their way to the cambio and opened
fire.
The man
at the counter was the unfortunate cashier `Jack' who was caught in the
hail of gunfire, employees said.
He
leaves to mourn his wife, and his three children Rabindranauth, 15, who
lives with his maternal grandparents at Charity on the Essequibo Coast,
Rajendranauth, 11, and Veronica, 10.
His
brother James Persaud, the cambio Manager, said he had just gone into the
washroom and when he heard the hail of gunfire he secured the door and
stayed there.
In the
cambio, about four other employees sought cover under whatever they could,
giving into the gunmen's demands that they hand over the
money.
According to James, the robbers took "millions, every
cent".
The cambio owner,
Kennard Gobin was rushed to the Georgetown Public Hospital Corporation
(GPHC), with multiple gunshot wounds, but was said to be stable. The GPHC
said he was in the afternoon transferred to a city hospital at the request
of his family.
The
hospital in a press release said he was conscious on arrival
there.
His
doctor, C. Budhu, said Gobin sustained two non-penetrating gunshots to the
left side of his chest. He was also wounded on the left arm, and left and
right forearms.
As the
two gunmen emerged with the booty from the cambio, they opened fire on the
headquarters of the City Constabulary, just opposite the business
place.
City
Mayor Hamilton Green said that fortunately, most of the people manning the
Constabulary were at a meeting at the other end of the
building.
Witnesses said the men then fired in the air, almost at will,
before escaping in two white Toyota Corolla cars.
 SHATTERED: windows of the City Constabulary headquarters
building.
|
|
|
| City Constables
who tried to pursue the men were no match for them and gave up because of
the bandits' "superior" weapons, Green said.
Witnesses said that as gunshots rang out, the hundreds who were
around the nearby Stabroek Market square scrambled in a state of
terror.
Many
scattered to find cover, and stalls in the Vendors' Arcade, in Stabroek
Market and stores on Regent Street slammed tight.
When the
gunfire ended, many hurriedly left the area.
Vendors
around the Stabroek Market picked up their goods, and along with others
began running towards the Georgetown Ferry Stelling area.
Some,
who had just come across the Demerara River by speedboat from
Vreed-en-Hoop, hardly hesitated in going back home.
The
cambio guard Ashby, 53, was treated for a bullet wound on the left side of
his abdomen.
Ashby,
who was fully conscious when contacted by the Chronicle at the Georgetown
Hospital, was stable, but badly traumatised and experiencing severe
pains.
Thanking
God for saving his life, the guard who is normally seated at the entrance
of the cambio soliciting customers wishing to 'change' currency, recalled
that one of the men, after shooting at him, pushed him down, apparently to
get him out of the way.
 ATTACKED: a section of the crowd outside the Commerce
House Cambio that was attacked yesterday.
|
|
|
| Terrified, the
burly man said he crawled for some distance and secluded himself behind a
car outside the nearby Matt's Record Bar as the shooting drama unfolded.
He was later rescued and taken to hospital.
It was
the second such experience for Ashby who has been closely affiliated to
the cambio house for several years.
He was
also on duty outside the building when armed bandits made the early
morning swoop in July 1999.
The
Georgetown Public Hospital Corporation said David Reid and Troy Cadogan
were also treated for abrasions sustained in yesterday's attack and sent
them home.
After
the bandits escaped, a curious crowd gathered in front of the cambio,
causing a traffic jam on Regent Street.
The
Police cordoned off the area to traffic also. Stores reopened shortly
after, but with much caution.
Police
in a press release said they were investigating the circumstances of the
robbery/murder and announced that they had intensified security
arrangements in and around Georgetown.
The
Police said all leads were being followed "in an effort to bring these
criminals to justice".
Cabinet
Friday tasked Minister of Home Affairs, Mr. Ronald Gajraj with ensuring
heightened security at Police stations and outposts countrywide following
the armed assault on the Alberttown, Georgetown Police Station Thursday
night. One Policeman was killed and another injured in that
attack.
Police
Constable Andy Atwell died shortly after 22:00 hrs Thursday, when gunmen
armed with high-powered weapons drove up outside the Alberttown Police
Station in a movie-like scenario and opened fire, gunning down the
Policeman, wounding another on duty and riddling the building with bullet
holes.
Police
said the gunmen drove up in two motorcars, one in front of the station on
Fourth Street and the other on Albert Street, and "blazed away at the
station from both sides".
Police
said Constable Atwell, who was just entering the Enquiries Office, "was
blasted in the hail of gunfire by the four gunmen, who emerged with long
guns, from the white car in front of the station".
Atwell
tried to evade them, but was caught by gunfire from the other car on
Albert Street and collapsed in the station compound, Police
said.
The
gunmen then sped away in the two cars, Police said.
Government
pursuing measures to ensure security of society -- President
Jagdeo PRESIDENT Bharrat
Jagdeo, responding to the recent rise in criminal activities, last night
said his Government is pursuing measures to ensure the security of
civilians, Policemen and the entire society.
At a
news conference at State House in New Amsterdam at the end of a two-day
Cabinet outreach in Region Six (East Berbice/Corentyne), he said he sees
the criminal situation in the country as purely criminal, and not racial
or political.
At
community meetings he held in the region, Mr. Jagdeo said there is a
definite connection between the recent influx of deportees here, from
especially the United States, and recent criminal
activities.
He also
again charged that certain elements of the main Opposition People's
National Congress/Reform have connections to the criminals.
He
criticised human rights organisations and others he described as "gripers"
who have accused the Police of "extra-judicial" killing of criminals, but
who are now being silent about attacks on Policemen, some of whom have
been killed, and the robbing and murder of innocent
Guyanese.
Mr.
Jagdeo told Region Six residents that his Government is doing everything
possible to counter the situation and said citizens in individual
communities should get more involved in crime fighting.
He
reiterated that the Army is assisting the Police Force in joint operations
to get the bandits who have been on a rampage since five dangerous
criminals escaped from the
Georgetown Prison on February 23 last.
There
has been a spate of violent robberies, kidnappings and hijackings since
the five fled the jail, killing a young Prison Officer and seriously
wounding another.
Bandits
yesterday shot and killed a cambio cashier in a daring daylight robbery
attack in the city - less than 48 hours after a gang murdered a young
rural constable in a brazen gun assault on a Georgetown Police
Station.
Ramnauth
Persaud, 44, called `Jack', cashier at the Commerce House Cambio on Regent
Street, Georgetown, was killed when gunmen struck at the business place at
around 09:00 hrs yesterday.
The
owner was critically wounded, and a City Constable and a guard at the
cambio were also wounded as the gang escaped with millions of dollars,
shooting at the City Hall compound across the
street. |