Mohamed Omar, who was shot two times in
the head by bandits who robbed his
Enterprise home on Wednesday night, is
thanking God for sparing his life even
though they escaped with a large sum of
money and jewellery.
Omar, 51, of Lot 62 Baroboto
Place, Enterprise `C', East Coast Demerara,
was shot by three bandits who barged into
his home on Wednesday night and fired two
shots at him in their haste to collect their
loot. The robbery took place around 8.15 pm.
On their way out of the area, the three
met a man jogging and hit him in the head
with a gun butt, before commanding him to
lie on the road. The bandits escaped in the
direction of the seawall. The
jogger received seven stitches to the back
of his head where he was hit with the gun.
One of the bullets fired by the bandits
grazed Omar behind his head and flew into
the air hitting the ceiling of the lower
flat while the other hit him on his
forehead. The man was rushed to the
Georgetown Public Hospital Corporation where
he was treated for both wounds.
Yesterday when Stabroek News visited the
man's home he had a bandage on his forehead
and stitches at the back of his head.
"I just thank God for spearing my
life, God is still good," the man said.
Recounting the ordeal, the man who is a
former member of the Guyana Police Force and
an ex-Guysuco worker, said he operates a
minibus on the east coast but it was out of
order on Wednesday. He said he was outside
with his wife Leila Ramjohn and their
ten-year-old daughter, but after some
time his wife and daughter went upstairs.
"I deh sitting down and I just see
three man jump over the fence just so fast,
and I now get up right away and run to the
door [the door leading to the inside of the
lower flat] and push the door in."
However, the man said, the three bandits,
who were all armed with guns and wore masks,
forced the door open. The men then demanded
money and he told them he did not have any.
"One a dem turn and sey `leh we kill
he' and I tell dem not to kill me just tek
all wah deh want. I had three rings on meh
finger and me tell dem fuh tek dem,"
the man said.
He said the men searched the downstairs
of the home but did not find much and as a
result fired the two shots in his direction
before collaring him and taking him to the
upper flat where his wife and children were
hiding. Again, they made demands for money.
Omar said when they pushed the room door
open his wife and daughter were nowhere to
be found and the men threatened to kill him
if money was not handed over.
His wife then came out from behind the
door where she had been hiding, and begged
the men not to kill her husband, who was
bleeding profusely at the time.
The men then took jewellery and an
undisclosed sum of money and escaped by
scaling the fence.
That same day, Omar had uplifted a large
sum of money from the National Insurance
Scheme office (NIS) in the area, most of
which the bandits stole.
When they jumped over the fence onto the
road they came face to face with the jogger
who was returning to his home.
Speaking to Stabroek News, the jogger,
who along with his wife and children were
still shaken by the ordeal, said that while
passing the home he heard what he thought
were squibs and not gunshots. He said
although there were streetlights and the
place was quite bright there was no
indication that Omar and his family were
being robbed, adding that not even the
next-door neighbours knew of the robbery.
He said when the three men scaled the
fence and saw him he saw the surprise on
their then unmasked faces and they fired a
shot ordering him to lie on the ground. One
of the three then hit him behind the head
and searched his pockets but they found
nothing. The men then fired more shots in
the air before sprinting away.
The jogger said what he found surprising
was that none of the attackers appeared to
be over the age of
17. He said two of the youths
were armed with rifles while the other had a
pistol. He said that all three had on coats
under which they hid the guns.
"That is what surprised me, the age
of the men, and it was obvious that they
were surprised when they saw me and they
became confused because when one of them
said they should use the public road to
escape another said no," the jogger
said.
Both the jogger and Omar lamented the
rate of crime in the country, which
sometimes see families building what could
be termed fortresses to keep them safe.
Omar said he had never faced such an
ordeal and both men said that it is not
often that robberies occur in the area. The
other half of Enterprise has felt the brunt
of the crime spree over the last two years.
Omar told Stabroek News that even though
he never experienced a robbery he has always
been afraid. He recalled that whenever he
got home late he would hurry from his gate
to the door, afraid that there could be
bandits lying in wait in his yard. He said
Wednesday's night attack would force him to
want to leave Guyana if he had an
opportunity to do so.
The jogger and his wife also lamented the
country's crime situation pointing out that
persons who could leave the country would be
forced to do so because they are afraid. It
was noted that even though persons would go
to lengths to secure their homes they were
still at risk when they had to leave.
The jogger said when he visited the
Vigilance Police Station only two officers
were on duty and they told him that the
other ranks were on patrol.