AK-47 bandits shoot Brazilian

– in Cuyuni mining camp raid

A Brazilian dredge owner was shot three times by heavily armed bandits who descended on his camp at Arangoy, Cuyuni River early yesterday morning, robbing and beating his employees before escaping.

A joint services team has since been dispatched to the area, the police said in a press release last evening.  Edmilson De Souza Arango, 32, of Robb Street, was up to last night receiving treatment at the Georgetown Public Hospital. He sustained two gunshot wounds to his back and another to his left arm but is in a stable condition.

The police said investigations revealed that a group of six men armed with guns entered the mining camp around 6.30 am yesterday. In the camp at the time were Arango’s wife, Maria Chaves Silva and five workers, comprising three Guyanese and two Brazilians. “The men began to assault Chaves Silva and the five workers using their firearms while demanding gold.

During this, Edmilson De Souza Arango approached the camp and was shot and injured to his upper back. The armed men then took away a quantity of raw gold from the workers and escaped,” the police said.

Police sources said that the bandits were armed with “Ak-47’s and small guns”. Following the incident, a plane went to the area and returned to the city with the injured man last yesterday afternoon.

Arango and Silva are unable to speak English and a friend, who operates a business in the area, came to the city with them. The woman, who asked not to be identified, told Stabroek News that she learnt that around 6.30 am, Arango had gotten up and was brushing his teeth when three men accosted him. They demanded money and gold but he told them that he had nothing to give, she said, adding that production had not been going well. There were three other bandits inside the camp.

Police sources, meanwhile, said that when the bandits arrived at the camp, they started shooting and Arango concealed himself. He came out when the bandits threatened to shoot his wife and was shot.

“After they shoot him, they search the whole camp and carry away everything,” the friend told this newspaper. The bandits looted the camp, gun-butting the employees in the process.  Through an interpreter, Silva said that the bandits took passports, gold scales, metal detectors and clothing. She said they demanded gold and money from her but she told them that she did not have any. The Brazilian national was beaten about her upper body and head with a revolver. Silva said no gold or cash was taken since they did not have any, but “costume jewellery” brought from Brazil–which the bandits apparently thought was made of real gold–was grabbed during the attack. It was not clear how the bandits arrived at or escaped from the remote area, which has few roads.

The businesswoman, meanwhile, related that after the bandits left, Arango called her camp via two-way radio and she and others went and assisted in transporting him to the landing and then by boat for three hours to the nearest airstrip, from where he was flown to the city.

Arango had been operating in the area for four years and this is the first time he has been robbed.

Last June, another Brazilian miner, who was attached to another camp in the same area, was shot five times by bandits. Jose Leache, 46, had sustained wounds to his abdomen, both thighs and left hand.

Reports at the time had stated that Leache was heading to the Aranka Landing on an All Terrain Vehicle (ATV), along with his wife, Neach Da Silva, and an employee on June 1 last year, when four masked bandits, two of whom were armed with guns, struck. The men held them at gunpoint and ordered Da Silva and the employee to get off the vehicle after which several shots were discharged at Leache and the men escaped. He was hit and later transported to the Georgetown Public Hospital.

Stabroek News had been told at the time that the men emerged from the bushes and forced the ATV to stop. The men attacked Leache and shot him while Da Silva hid behind the vehicle and the employee ran to the landing which was close-by to alert persons there. The bandits were unable to take anything from Leache, as Da Silva was shouting and persons alerted by the employee came out. The bandits quickly disappeared into the bushes. Leache was taken to the landing and transported from the area by boat.

It was the second time that he had been attacked for that year. During the first attack in February 2008, the bandits attempted to shoot him but the gun did not fire.