Bandits kill
speedboat guard in island attack
`He was a poor man hustling for his daily bread' - mother
Bhagpattie
Islanders said
this was the first time someone was murdered by bandits on Leguan and so the
events of Sunday evening will not be easily forgotten. Dead is Mohan
Singh, 38, of the village of Maryville. He was known around the mainly
agricultural island by the nickname `Padoca'. Among so many others, he leaves to
mourn his beloved wife of 18 years Bhagmanie, 36. Singh and two
other villagers were at a camp on the island, just off the river, keeping watch
on passenger speedboats when they were attacked by a gang. He was shot at close
range in his left eye, witnesses said. Watch camps
are spread around the 18-square mile island to guard speedboats owned and
operated as passenger craft by islanders. The gang of
about seven men first attacked five young watchmen at one of the camps at
Maryville.
By Neil Marks
RESIDENTS of the
Essequibo River island of Leguan remained in shock yesterday at the brutal
killing by bandits of a poor guard and labourer Sunday night.
MOURNING THEIR LOSS: Mohan Singh's mother Bhagpattie,
left, his wife Bhagmanie and their adopted daughter Anniza. (Corwin Williams photo)
A
big
gun
Mr. Davenand Goodridge was one of the men on duty. He said that at around 22:45 hrs, the armed men pulled up in a boat and demanded that they lie on the ground, face down. He said the men tied their hands with rope and ordered them into one of the speedboats they were keeping watch on from the camp.
Dead: Mohan Singh
They were told
to lie down with one of the gunmen hovering over them with " a big gun", he
said.
![]() LEGUAN residents gathered yesterday at the humble home of Mohan Singh to offer comfort to his immediate family. |
A robust Singh
reportedly wrestled with one of the bandits and it was during the scuffle that
he was shot point blank in his left eye.
The other two
guards escaped unharmed. One of the guards reportedly told the gunmen to take
everything they had and the bandits did just that.
They stripped the guards of the jewellery they were wearing and the money they had in their pockets, and took away a boat engine.
Singh was
normally paid on Sunday afternoon when he clocked in for duty and so would have
had his week's wages to take home the next morning.
After
murdering Singh, the gang hurried back to the first camp, stole another engine
and fled in the boat they had sneaked up in.
The gunshots awakened most islanders but there was nothing they could do. Leguan
(map below) has a population of about 5,000, most of them farmers.Islanders said
they are defenceless in the face of such attacks as few have
firearms.
"The only
thing we have to defend ourselves is firewood", a resident
declared.
Singh had only
started working as a watchman in January this year to supplement his income as a
labourer on one of the many rice fields on the island, relatives
said.
His widow,
Bhagmanie, was awakened by her sister-in-law with the news that he had been
shot. In deep shock, Bhagmanie said she was hardly able to keep walking as she
hurried to the camp.
News of his
death came her way before she reached the camp.
However,
Bhagmanie said the Police prevented her from getting near to her husband's body
and she did not see him until around 09:00 hrs yesterday when she was called to
the camp.
Residents said
Police on the island explained that they had to await investigative ranks from
the Essequibo Coast to arrive.
"They lef he
in all the blood. He bleed so much that you couldn't know wah colour clothes he
had on", the widow said.
The other
guards who were attacked, some bruised about their bodies from the blows by the
gunmen, spent hours at the station answering questions from the
Police.
Singh was
known for his humility and his death has shocked the entire island. The male
residents were yesterday talking about forming active community policing groups
to defend themselves.
Singh's
mother, Bhagpattie, 68, is struggling to come to grips with the loss of her son.
She recalled that her husband died when all her children were still young and
she "punished" to bring them up.
The woman said
her son did not fail to "be attentive" to her.
"He was always
courteous to everybody, young and old", she said.
"He was a poor
man hustling for his daily bread", she wept.
The couple
remained childless throughout their 18 years of marriage.
"We had no
children so we were very close. It was just the two of us and we always lived
good", Bhagmanie related at their humble home.
A smile lit up
her face, but it quickly faded when she related that Singh had planned to build
a "better" house.
She said Singh
didn't smoke and used alcohol once in a while.
"The last time
e' drink was his birthday", Bhagmanie said. That was on April
22nd.
Nearby
resident, 16 year-old Anniza Rafeek was like an adopted daughter to the Singhs.
She was regular at their home and even spent many nights there.
The Singhs
thought of her as their daughter and Anniza had come to accept the relationship.
But now the father figure is gone.
"He was like a
father", was all she could manage without causing tears to flow.
All the islanders the Chronicle spoke with agreed that Singh was a nice man, and joked that he was probably the "biggest" man on the island.