‘I thought I was going to die’

….say police sergeant who was brutally beaten and chopped by PPP protesters 

By Nafeez.a Y:ahya 

POLICE Sergeant, Punit lbaran, 42, of East Berbice Corentyne and stationed at the Blairmont Police Station in West Berbice, is thankful for being alive following a life-threatening experience with protesters in the village of Cotton Tree Friday evening.

lbaran and a group of his fellow law1nen were at­tacked by an unruly mob of PPP supporters that left him with both his arms broken, a chop wound to the back of his head, a chop wound to his arm, a cut to the ear as well as several bruises and lacerations ab-0ut the body. Speaking from his bed in the New Amsterdan1 Hospital, Sergeant lbaran told the Guyana Chronicle that he was on duty as was all the other ranks trying to maintain law and order, when the angry 

mob turned their attention to 

the police and started a brutal onslaught on the lawmen with cutlasses and other mis­siles that were hurled at them. 

This, he said started on the public road and he along wtth others ran into the streets hoping to seek refuge in the yards of residents, but the mob followed him and started to hit him about the body with 

cutlasses, iron bars and pieces of wood. lbaran who Joined the force some 25 years ago, related that he and the other ranks were unarmed at tl1e time and were at the mercy of the mob that dealt them “tremendous blows”. 

DRUNK PROTESTERS

“They were drinking and started to behave lawlessly and started to attack us, we ran and jumped over fences to escape them but they followed and started to broad­side and chop me. We were unarmed and all we could do was block with our hands and try to avoid being hit in the head … I thought I was going to die and they suddenly left me and turned to someone else and I begged a man to let me in his yard or they were going to kill me.” 

The father of two contin­ued, stating that he hid in the yard, praying aid trying to bear the excruciating pams about his body, until the mob left. He finally came out bloodied, and saw a detective passing that he shouted out to. The rank and a public citizen took him on a bicycle to his car which was parked nearby and eventually to the hospital along with other injured ranks and a protester. 

Reflecting on the event of tile day, he described the scene as one of”la,,1essness” where the protestors were uncontrollable and setting  alight pretty much everything  insight while using botties, bricks and any piece of debris as missiles to attack the police and others including students, nurses and even members of the media. 

In the aftermatl1, two other officers were seriously injured: Roy Grant and Jefta Fraser, both traffic officers from Division Five, while three students were treated and sent away after the pro­testors attacked a David ‘G’ school bus they were in. A protestor was shot dead by police as he was attacking and chopping an unarmed rank in a street that was trying to get to safety. The two 

traffic ranks were treated and discharged a little after noon on Saturday, while lbaran remains hospitalised. 

Meanwhile, there were three ranks in East Berbice Corentyne, includ­ing Assistant Superintendent of Police (ASP) and a sergeant, who suffered a fractured foot while the constable received inju­ries after Ile was stoned by protesters at Tain. Both ranks bad to seek medical attention. The injured lawmen and students were visited by Minister of Youth Affairs Simona Broomes; Deputy Police Commis­sioner, Maxint Graham; Division Six Commander, Calvin Brutus, and Division Five Commander, Yonette Stephtns. On Saturday, a number of lbaran’s col­leagues also paid a visit to show solidarity and offer comfort. A stranger, who was visiting a relative in the said ward, after realising that the injured sergeant was in the ward, went over to him and! thanked him for bis service as well as wish­ing him a speedy recovery. On Saturday, communities along tbt Corentyne Coast were calm as majority of stores opened for business.

Source: https://issuu.com/guyanachroniclee-paper/docs/guyana_chronicle_e-paper_3-8-2020

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