Five remanded over West Berbice murder

Police escorting some of the accused to court today.
Police escorting some of the accused to court today.

Five men were this morning remanded to prison for the murder of Bheim Evans of Number 11 Village, West Coast Berbice (WCB).

The men: Brian Evans, 22, labourer of Lot 145 Number 12 Village, WCB; Ryan Dhanraj, 27, mason, of Lot 203 Bath Settlement, WCB; Samuel Vanbrook, 22, of Lot ‘B’ Bath Settlement, WCB; James David, 19, Lot 223 Number 10 Village, WCB and Leeward Chung, 21, labourer, Lot 318 Bath Settlement, WCB, appeared at the Fort Wellington Magistrate’s Court before Magistrate Peter Hugh.

The men are charged with murdering Evans on Saturday last at Waterloo, Bath Settlement.

Evans, 54, a labourer sustained injuries about his head and body during the attack, while his son, Tishan Persaud, 21, a labourer sustained injuries to his left arm, head and back.

Persaud had told Stabroek News that on the day in question, he went to a club in Bath Settlement, WCB, and while he was heading over to his sister’s house, the group of five men approached him. “Them snatch me and start to beat me with cutlass, rope and chain”, the injured man relayed.

According to him, the men continued to beat him until his father arrived. “When my father come them say is my father them want and is me father went in one of them house and take a chain and silver chain, gold chain and eight gold ring and them start to beat him.”

Persaud said that at that point the group of men continuously beat both him and his father but after they realized that his father had become unconscious they ordered him to assist them to remove his father’s body from the area.

“Them beat de man bad and kick him in the face and bruk one of his ribs. Them done beat my father and them take my father and carry him in front a lady house and she start fight that them can’t put he there and them beat me fa heist my father and carry he another place”, Persaud said.

According to him, the attackers told him to take his father home but after they left he rushed to the Fort Wellington Police Station and returned with lawmen who carried his father to the Fort Wellington Public Hospital.

Evans, a father of 12,  died while receiving treatment at the hospital.

Bheim Evans