A young woman was last night dramatically rescued
by policemen after she was abducted from outside the
Critchlow Labour College (CLC). Her captors escaped
following a bullet-riddled car chase though one
might have been injured in the exchange of gunfire.
Narissa Persaud, 18, of Pike Street, Kitty
was kidnapped last evening by three armed men just
as she exited the CLC compound. An hour later
determined police officer intercepted the abductors'
car in North Ruimveldt and rescued the young woman
who was blindfolded and gagged with duct tape.
Persaud, the daughter of the proprietor of Amatuk
Trading Company Ltd, Jhaman Persaud had just
completed her evening classes around 6:45 pm and was
heading out of the compound when a grey carina with
licence plate number PGG 6428 pulled up in front of
the college's gate.
She told Stabroek News late last night that she
had just reached the college gate when the car
pulled up and three armed men bundled her into the
back seat.
Persaud told Stabroek that once she was in the
car the men duct-taped her hands, and mouth and
blindfolded her.
"Then they said don't move! don't say a
word! we are not going to hurt you."
The young woman who is a second year student of
the Association of Business Executives course said
she did not know anything after her eyes were
blindfolded and it wasn't until she was rescued from
the car in North Ruimveldt she realised where she
was.
An eyewitness who is also a student told this
newspaper that the abductors seemed to have had good
information on Narissa's movements.
"I can't say who they really were. But what
I know is that they said they are not going to hurt
me and they did not", Narissa said last night.
Eyewitness recalled seeing the men who were all
masked in the area shortly before Narrisa was
snatched.
According to reports when the car pulled up two
men came out and bundled the young woman in the back
seat. They fired two shots; one in the direction of
the college's security guard and raced off in an
easterly direction on Woolford Avenue.
Stabroek News was told that a very senior police
officer who is attached to the college was in the
compound at the time. The officer informed police
ranks as to the direction the car was headed and
also gave them its licence number.
Quick reaction by the ranks resulted in them
intercepting the car on a street in North Ruimveldt.
Giving an account of the highspeed chase, one
officer stationed at Eve Leary told this newspaper
that he was convinced that one of the abductors was
injured during an exchange of gunfire. The rank
reported that when they received the news a
contingent armed themselves and proceeded to the
college and when told where the car had headed took
off after it. According to the ranks all along the
streets they kept looking at the number plates of
suspicious cars.
He said simultaneously another squad was summoned
and they used a different route in the search. The
car was finally spotted in North Ruimveldt.
"We saw a suspicious looking car, but when
we check it was not the number we were looking for
so we drove further up and then we saw the (real)
car."
The police rank related that on seeing the police
vehicle behind them the abductors made an attempt to
reverse but when they realised that they were being
pursued they continued to drive, firing shots at the
police vehicle.
He believed that it was due to the condition of
the road and the fact that the car was very low that
caused the men to be trapped on the street. The
officer was also of the opinion that the abductors
might have been heading to Sophia.
Stabroek News was told that the chase lasted less
than a minute and when the abductors realised that
they could not outrun the police who were using a
pickup, they stopped the car and jumped out leaving
the victim in the vehicle.
One of the abductors took off his clothes as he
galloped through the street which was partially
flooded by the rains yesterday, while the others
fired shots at the police who continued to chase
after them.
"When them men see us one a dem fire a shot
at me luckily my 'squaddie' assisted me in taking
evasive action," the policeman related.
He said they returned fire but most of the shots
were released in the air as a precautionary measure.
"You see we didn't want to injure the girl
and the street had a few people so we couldn't shoot
wild," the rank reported.
The abductors eventually disappeared.
The policeman lamented that the vehicle they were
using last night was not suitable for such a chase.
The man said the vehicle needed repairs, adding that
it was bouncing too much last night.
Narissa was rescued from the car around 7:30 pm
and transported to the Alberttown Police Station
where she gave a statement to the police.
Classes at the college were suspended after the
incident as some students abandoned their classes
and went home. Among those on the scene were Chief
Education Officer, Ed Caesar who is also a lecturer
at the college and a number of other top officials
of the institution.