 
   
         
 
 
 
|  | 'In
        less than three minutes it was all
        gone' --says Kero’s widow By Shawnel Cudjoe 
 A
        sombre atmosphere prevailed over the Persauds’ 259 Non Pariel, East
        Coast Demerara home yesterday when this newspaper visited as neighbours
        and friends gathered to lend support and encouragement to the widow. Less
        than 24 hours after the incident, a grief stricken Nazeema Persaud, 28,
        has already considered her options and decided that the only way to move
        forward would be to move out of the home she shared with her husband
        since January, 2001. It
        would not erase the pain, but it would make the days more bearable.
        “I am moving to Enmore, I can’t stay here. They ruined my
        life within three minutes. My husband is dead and so is the business,”
        she told this newspaper. On
        Saturday night, three armed bandits staged an attack on the family and
        robbed them of money – not a significant sum, according to Persaud-
        and three rings and a wrist watch, and left 34-year-old Chandrapaul
        Persaud, called ‘Ravin’ or ‘Kero man’ dead. Recalling
        the events that led up to the incident, Persaud said her husband came
        home around 16:50 h and left the gate open when he drove the car into
        the yard. She said she was on the veranda and he handed her a box of
        food and some DVDs which he had borrowed and called his nine year old
        son, Nicholas, to help him ‘pack up’ the canter. The
        couple has been operating the grocery and wholesale beverage business
        for the past 11 years. To bring in more income, her husband also sold
        kerosene house to house in many east coast villages, on a daily basis. According
        to Nazeema, she got up from the veranda and went into the kitchen to put
        down the food. Her daughters, Nikki 12 and Nicole 3, followed her. “As
        soon as I stepped into the kitchen, I heard my husband shouting for
        thief, the woman said. The
        woman said that as she turned to leave the kitchen, she came face to
        face with two heavily armed, masked bandits who immediately demanded
        money and jewellery. She said that the men wore net masks, their heads
        were tied and they wore dark coloured casual clothing. According
        to Persaud, she instantly began begging the gunmen to spare the life of
        her children and they promised not to hurt them. The woman said one of
        the bandits followed her into the bedroom while the other two remained
        with her children. All
        the money in her possession was handed over but the man was not
        satisfied and demanded jewellery. Her three wedding rings and a wrist
        watch which were lying on the bedroom ledge were then handed over. According
        to Nazeema, during this time, she heard bottles being broken outside and
        instantly knew that her husband was battling his attackers.
        “Shoot de damn man” one of the gunmen shouted. Nazeema said
        she placed her hand in a prayer –like gesture and begged the gunman in
        her bedroom with his back to her, to spare the life of the man she had
        spent the last thirteen years of her life with. She
        said the man walked out of the room without as much as a backward glance
        and about four gunshots rang out. She
        said the three men then jumped into her husband brand new car AT 192 PJJ
        1892 and began revving it to drive out of the yard. Nazeema said she
        walked over to the MMC security buzzer by her front door, which was
        installed when the bandits attacked last December, and pressed it. All
        this time, she had not seen her husband and she ran in front of the car
        and began asking the gunmen not to take him away. “I was not
        seeing him and I thought they had him in the car,” she told this
        newspaper. The
        car finally drove off and Nazeema saw her husband lying on the road in a
        pool of blood. “I saw my husband on the ground and he was not
        breathing, I lay down on him and I was screaming for help.” Neighbours
        were scared to come to her rescue at once, she said. Police
        said that the car was recovered in Paradise, also on the East Coast
        around 21:00h on Saturday night. The
        woman believes her husband was killed because he fought back. “He was
        a guy who represented his family and he wanted to come in and see what
        was happening to us,” she said. Nazeema
        described her husband as brave, quiet and hardworking. 𠇎very
        year, he worked to achieve something new in life, and within three
        minutes everything was destroyed for me.” She said the incident seemed like a nightmare but the solemn family faces around her and especially the pain in her heart, remind her of the reality of the situation. 
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