Today marks three months since taxi driver Vivikanand
Nandalall was kidnapped. His mother Priya
Nandalall is questioning whether
her son's kidnapping will remain an unsolved
mystery.
Nandalall, 20, of Non Pariel, East Coast
Demerara, was snatched on October 16, 2003,
after he was asked to pick up someone at
Bachelor's Adventure. His car, PGG 3846, was
later found abandoned on the railway embankment
at Annandale.
In a statement sent to this newspaper
yesterday, his mother, who along with his father
had retuned to Guyana for a while following
their son's abduction, questioned why her son
was kidnapped and why, even after relatives paid
a $1 million ransom he was not released.
The woman said her son, who attended the
Bladen Hall and Cove and John Secondary schools,
had a certificate in refrigeration and
air-conditioning from the Government Technical
Institute. He was expected to start a three-year
course at the same institution this year. The
woman said her son asked them to purchase a car,
which he would use to get to school and work as
a taxi part-time.
The woman questioned whether her son might
have known his kidnappers and if the entire
episode was a set-up. She also wanted to know
why the army
helicopter was not used during
the searches for her son.
"Why, when anybody is murdered the
President [Bharrat Jagdeo] go and offer help,
what wrong with my son? Didn't he have a
life?" the woman questioned. "I want
to know if any of the ministers' children get
kidnapped if it would run in the papers a couple
of days and be forgotten."
The woman also asked how the police were able
to have the US diplomat Steve Lesniak and
businessman Vic Singh safely returned from their
abductors, noting that ransom had been paid for
them.
"Nobody in the whole world knows how
hard this is. This is harder than death itself.
Only who face this know this. We as parents
going through the most (punishing) time one can
explain", the statement said.
The family said a reward is still being
offered for any information on the whereabouts
of the young man.
The $1 million ransom was paid on October 17,
2003 when, as instructed, a relative dropped off
the money on a road leading into Enterprise.
Following the kidnapping, the Anti-Kidnapping
Unit and reinforcements from Police Headquarters
and other Anti-Crime Units from Georgetown, were
dispatched and they searched the back dams of
Buxton and surrounding areas for the young man.
The police had also issued wanted bulletins
for several men in connection with the
kidnapping including the lone surviving prison
escapee, Troy Dick and several other wanted men.