Six
bandits
have
left
vegetable
vendors
at
the
Stabroek
Market
broke
and
battered
after
staging
a
daring
early
morning
robbery
near
the
Stelling
View
Market
area
yesterday.
The
robbery
was
a
replay
of
one
at
the
Bourda
Green
earlier
this
month
and
has
left
the
vendors
bitter
and
uncertain
about
their
future
at
the
market.
Stabroek
News
was
told
that
around
seven
vendors
were
robbed
of
thousands
of
dollars,
cellular
phones
and
one
man
even
had
his
firearm
taken
away.
The
15-minute
assault
went
unnoticed
by
city
constables
a
stone's
throw
from
the
Stelling
View
Market.
The
police
and
the
City
Constabulary
have
commenced
separate
investigations,
but
none
of
the
bandits,
who
fled
south
along
Lombard
Street,
had
been
arrested
up
to
press
time
last
night.
Recounting
the
events,
Doodnauth
Ramnarine
said
he
and
other
vendors
were
at
the
market
purchasing
greens
and
other
goods
from
wholesalers
when
the
bandits
struck.
It
was
4.30
am,
Ramnarine
said,
and
he
recognized
four
bandits
all
armed
with
handguns.
But
reports
are
that
another
two
were
terrorising
other
vendors.
Ramnarine
said
he
was
purchasing
ground
provisions,
pineapples
and
other
items
for
another
man
and
had
some
$240,000.
He
said
the
robbers
lashed
him
several
times
in
his
head
with
their
guns
and
kicked
him
before
taking
away
his
money
and
moving
on
to
other
vendors.

He
said
a
watermelon
vendor
known
only
as
Latchman
from
the
East
Coast
Demerara
was
assaulted
and
stripped
of
a
large
sum
of
money.
The
robbers
beat
him
on
his
head
also,
before
relieving
him
of
his
handgun.
Next,
a
woman
was
robbed
of
her
apron,
which
contained
a
large
sum
of
cash.
Mahendra
Dilchand,
another
vendor,
said
he
barely
managed
to
escape
the
bandit's
wrath
by
running
away.
"I
spot
them
when
they
start
to
rob
everyone
and
so
I
run
away
and
hide
behind
a
truck,"
Dilchand
said.
He
told
Stabroek
News
that
he
had
been
selling
at
the
market
since
1979
and
had
never
seen
anything
like
the
terror
unleashed
on
his
fellow
vendors.
Ramnarine
was
so
badly
beaten,
his
head
needed
several
stitches.
He
said
the
bandits
told
them
not
to
make
any
noise
during
the
ordeal.
Dilchand
said
most
of
the
vendors
who
were
robbed
were
wholesalers
and
would
arrive
at
the
Stelling
View
Market
area
from
as
early
as
midnight.
Over
the
years,
he
said,
vendors
suffered
frequently
at
the
hands
of
pickpockets,
who
grabbed
petty
sums,
but
had
never
experienced
such
a
large-scale
robbery.
"We
are
not
safe
anywhere,"
Dilchand
commented,
noting
that
despite
them
paying
up
their
revenues
vendors
were
not
getting
the
kind
of
protection
and
security
they
needed.
Dilchand
said
that
during
the
robbery,
the
City
Council
Revenue
collector
was
busy
collecting
rent.
He
said
the
City
Constables
took
almost
15
minutes
to
respond
despite
being
just
around
the
corner.
It
was
around
the
same
time
on
the
morning
of
March
3,
that
six
armed
bandits
took
control
of
a
section
of
Bourda
Green,
robbing
five
vendors
and
around
ten
customers
of
thousands
of
dollars.
The
police
and
the
City
Constabulary
response
was
also
slow
on
that
occasion.
Bandits
had
also
invaded
Stabroek
Market
last
year,
using
a
blow
torch
to
cut
their
way
into
two
jewellery
establishments
after
the
market
was
closed
and
escaping
with
some
$60M
in
jewellery.