Wakanda News Details

Elderly couple brutalised by bandits: ATTACK ON ‘D FOOD KING’ - Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

There was outrage and shock yesterday after prominent businessman Mohan Persad and his wife, Shirley Persad, both 78, were attacked at their house in New Grant before dawn on Tuesday.

Persad owns Persad's D' Food King supermarkets.

Armed intruders beat him and his wife, tied them up and robbed them of cash, jewellery, two registered guns with ammunition, and their firearm user's licence.

The intruders also stole two cell phones worth about $6,000 and a DVR.

A police report said the victims were awakened at around 3 am on Tuesday and saw six intruders inside the house at Sixth Company Road.

The intruders are believed to have got in by prying open a window and left through the front door.

The couple managed to untie themselves and alerted the police.

WPC Harripersad, PCs Harripersad and Harricharan, and other police went to the scene and gathered evidence.

PC Harripersad is leading investigations.

Newsday visited the community, but the injured couple were not at home.

A relative told Newsday they were seeking medical care at a private institution.

Several tents were pitched in the yard, and the relative said Persad was preparing to host Hindu prayers (Pitru Paksha) on Sunday to pay homage to his ancestors.

"It is to pray for those who have passed. We pray that their journeys are safe in the hands of Lord Krishna. He does not make jokes with his prayers. That is probably what has him alive to this day," a relative, who asked to remain unnamed, said.

"They were preparing for it in the past week, and now this has happened. The crime in this country is ridiculous. It is upsetting. This is the first time something like this has happened here. He is like a godfather to the community. He lives good with people. He helps a lot of people."

Persad's has eight locations, including two in Princes Town.

A resident added that by 6 am, when she learned about what happened, the couple had already been taken for medical treatment.

Because of that, she had not yet had a chance to speak to them about the ordeal.

President of the Supermarket Association (SATT) Rajiv Diptee said the association condemned the incident "in the strongest possible terms." He said Persad is a foundation member. He also criticised the crime surge, adding that home invasions have placed the business community on edge.

"We stand committed and ready to assist the family. We would like to see what the authorities are planning to do given the developments from the budget as well as call for serious consequences to accompany these crimes," Diptee told Newsday.

"There should be deep and dire consequences for these acts. These acts on the elderly are crimes of opportunity because these criminals would have to know the victims and their circumstances and maybe an idea or conception in their heads that there is x and y in the house."

He said such victims are nationwide and called for a holistic approach to crime.

Diptee added: "People are scared. Home is a sacred place. Invasions speak to a serious deterioration in the social

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