Students of the Strathspey
Primary School and residents protested yesterday
following the attempted kidnapping
of a student on Wednesday by two men
who entered the school building and snatched
the11-year-old girl.
40
armed youths from
neighbouring Buxton
More
people moving
Strathspey
still a
'ghost
town'
after
post-jailbreak robberies
The students, most of whom are in Level Four, the same
level as the child who escaped her kidnappers, held
placards and chanted outside the school calling
for the army to leave the area and President
Jagdeo to demit office for failing to
tackle the crime situation.
They were supported by their parents and other
residents who placed obstacles on the main road,
School road, which they claim is used as a getaway
route by bandits. The residents said that since the
surrounding villages had placed barricades on most of
their main roads, bandits were now in the habit of
using that road to commit their acts and escape.
Yesterday the students, some of whom were in uniform,
had placards calling for 24-hour protection.
“24 hour
protection for children”,
“Crime must come
to an end”, “Army
must go,
police must stay”, “No
children, no future”, “Govern-ment
dragging foot on crime situation”,
“Indian
people must be respected” and “Robbery
day in, night in” read some of the placards
held up by the students.
Residents made several allegations against members of
the Guyana Defence Force (GDF) who they claim are not
doing enough to protect them from criminals.
The students told Stabroek News that following the
attempted kidnapping of their colleague they were
afraid to go the school which was without any
protection.
They walked up and down in front of the
school’s-building chanting sometimes for the army to
go and the police to stay, or on other occasions for Jagdeo
to go.
Recalling what transpired on Wednesday one of the
students said that they were in the classroom when the
two men entered. He said one of the men asked for “Motti
daughter” and no one res-ponded, but
somehow the men recognised the girl and one of them
grabbed her. The child said that the girl started to
scream and held on to the furniture but the man
wrenched her away and left the building. She described
how the remaining students in the class started to
scream and said that some of them had to be comforted
by teachers.
Headmaster Basdeo Singh, who has only been at the
school for three weeks, said he was in his office when
the incident occurred.
He said when he went to the door he saw the two men,
one of whom was armed, and the other carrying the
screaming girl in his arms. Singh said as the two men
rushed out of the school-building he went to the
window and screamed out to residents.
Singh said that a plumber who was in the school
compound at the time and who had his car rushed to the
vehicle and drove behind the men who had been joined
by another.
He said a few minutes later he saw the child running
back to the school screaming.
Yesterday when Stabroek
News visited the child’s home her
parents were reluctant to speak about the issue except
to say that the child was safe. They said that they
did not receive any threats prior to the incident and
were alarmed that the girl was singled out by the
bandits.
A resident said that after they were alerted some
residents fired shots at the bandits.
He said the man in the car hit the bandit who was on a
bicycle with the child, causing him to fall and then
the child managed to escape.
One of the men fled on the bicycle while two others
abandoned their cycle and fled on foot. One of them
was forced to jump into a trench in his bid to escape.
It was at this stage, the residents claimed, that an
army patrol approached. They said that when the patrol
arrived the men were only one hundred yards away. One
eyewitness said the patrol chose not to follow the
bandits on the dam but decided to take the embankment.
He said in the meantime the bandit that had jumped
into the trench had time to strip off his clothing,
which was hampering him from escaping, and they all
fled into a half-built concrete house from where they
engaged the police in a shootout before escaping into
Buxton. The residents claimed that by the time the
police arrived the bandits were able to find cover.
“If deh army did
follow them dem men woulda get caught...” one
resident said.
Contacted yesterday a GDF source denied the allegation
made by the residents.
Giving an account of the event the army officer said
that around 10:20 am there was a joint GDF and police
patrol on the public road when they heard shoots being
fired in Strathspey and both units responded.
This was supported by the release issued by the police
which said that with the assistance of a GDF patrol
the police exchanged fire with the men who fled into
Buxton.
The GDF senior officer said when the patrols arrived
in the area the residents told them that the men had
fled towards Brushe dam. He said that the patrols then
split, the police went towards the Bladen Hall
Multilateral School and the GDF went towards the
embankment. The officer said that the GDF patrol
arrived about five minutes after they had heard
gunshots in the area of Bladen Hall and later learnt
that the police had fired at two men who had escaped
into Brushe dam.
The officers pointed out that the soldiers have no
more power than an ordinary citizen to arrest, detain
or make searches.
“It is only when they are physically in support of
the police can they lend support. The GDF cannot act