"This is not robbery; it is pure murder",
Moti Anganoo, the brother of deceased mother of two
Rajpattie Balgrim, told Stabroek News yesterday.
Balgrim, known as Leila, 47, of 193 Grove Squatting
Area, was stabbed some eight times in her face and had
her throat slit.
Her two children, Ravi, 17, and Devi, 11,
(above)
were not harmed although the lad was subdued and tied
up by one of the attackers.
Police have since begun investigating the
circumstances that led to the slaying of the Grove
East Bank Demerara shop-owner whose body was left
lying in her backyard.
According to reports, Balgrim went into the
backyard at around 9.40 pm to collect water from a
black tank to soak some sennapod. She was setting the
seeds when the men attacked her.
Stabroek News understands that her children heard a
scream, and her son was coming out of the house to
check on it when he was confronted by two men. He was
tied up with a rope and instructed to sit quietly by
one of the bandits, while the second man who was
wielding a knife, demanded money and jewellery from
his sister.
After initially claiming not to have any she then
reluctantly showed the men where the takings from the
day's sales could be found, and she also gave them
some jewellery.
Once the men had collected these items they ordered
the girl to sit quietly with her brother and await the
arrival of their mother whom they promised to release.
After waiting several minutes the children began to
get worried and decided to check outside only to
encounter her dead body.
Balgrim and her children had only a short while
earlier returned home from the mandir where they had
gone to observe pre-Phagwah festivities.
A neighbour said that the police arrived to take
statements some 40 minutes after he had called them.
They also held one woman and three men who were at the
scene and are believed to have been witnesses.
Relatives are of the view that the men planned the
attack at least a week ago, since dogs in the
neighbourhood, including one that belonged to the
victim, were mysteriously poisoned at that time.
Anganoo could not think of any enemies his sister
had, although he recalled she was involved in an
ongoing feud over a property. He went on to say that
the killers did not demand any more money than what
they were given, and they made no attempt to search
the two-storey home for anything else.
"They just polish off with that," the
victim's brother said.
This is the second tragedy to have befallen the
children as it was only about nine months ago on July
4 that they lost their father in a car accident at
Happy Acres.
(Oscar Clarke)