Stabroek News

Lost souls, restless spirits

- (Editor’s note:

One of the key planners of the Cubana Air bombing of 1976, Luis Posada Carriles, died in Miami, Florida yesterday at the age of 90. The crash killed 73 persons, including 11 Guyanese and Carriles and others escaped justice. Today we reprint a column by Indranie Deolall on the bombing and its victims.)

I raced home from school late one hot afternoon to find my aged mother strangely in tears, sadly listening to our faded transistor radio permanentl­y perched on the matching bright blue formica dining table that shimmered with flecks of gold and silver, like an early, starry night sky. As darkness fell and details trickled in, I desperatel­y tried to visualise the deadly crash of Cubana Flight 455.

But it took the sombre black and white newspaper photograph­s, especially of Sabrina Harripaul, like me, nine years old and wearing two long black plaits, to forever stamp the atrocity of the Caribbean’s first major terror attack into my growing consciousn­ess.

Euphemisti­cally and erroneousl­y termed the Cubana Air Disaster, it is the region’s murderous 10/6. Today, four decades later I am still haunted by those two rows of serious faces – innocent, studious, thick spectacles, sun shades, seventies-side-parts, white school shirts, graying hair, glossy waves, natural afro…

Six top Guyana scholars, brilliant teenagers Harold Eric Norton, Ann Nelson, Rawle Thomas, Jacqueline Williams, Seshnarine Ramkumar and Raymond Persaud just 18 or 19, off in their fashionabl­e, fresh clothes to eagerly study medicine. Economist Gordon Sobha on his way to a conference in the German Democratic Republic (GDR), 22-year-old new mother and diplomat’s wife stylish Margaret Bradshaw who reluctantl­y decided to leave her two-month-old daughter with relatives, and finally perky Sabrina requiring urgent medical treatment, accompanie­d by her graceful grandmothe­r Violet Thomas who favoured pearl studs and hairnet, and Violet’s daughter, the comely Rita Thomas. For many it was their first – and last plane ride.

The average age of those on board was only 30 years, since of the 73 passengers there were 57 Cubans including the country’s entire internatio­nal fencing team of 24 vivacious youngsters, who, in anticipati­on of the thrilling welcome awaiting them at home, proudly wore every one of the gold medals they had won, in fact – all – at the Central American and Caribbean Championsh­ips in Venezuela days before. One excited older fencer Nancy Uranga was pregnant. Five crew members, officials and a delegation of visiting North Koreans completed the manifest.

We know now that two timed C-4 explosives were taken on to the aircraft in Trinidad and Tobago’s Piarco Internatio­nal Airport, crammed into a Colgate toothpaste tube and hidden in the rear bathroom of the plane by a sweating, jumpy Hernan Ricardo Lozano, 20, while his pal Freddy Lugo, a fellow hired Venezuelan gun, 27, quietly slipped one rigged camera bag under a midsection cabin seat before the two casually disembarke­d at the rainy Seawell Airport, Bridgetown and took another flight right back to Trinidad. Lozano had been so nervous he accidental­ly locked himself in and had to be rescued by one of the Cubana’s copilots who kicked in the washroom’s door. Later, he broke down completely, lamenting, “Damn it Lugo, I’m desperate and feel like crying. I’ve never killed anyone before.”

Seven minutes after take-off, around 1.23 p.m as the Canadian-leased Douglas DC-8 ascended to 18,000 feet over the island, the first bomb exploded rocking the huge jet. “Fire! We have an explosion aboard!” Captain Wilfredo Perez, 36 was incredibly calm and his voice steady as he alerted Barbadian Air Control, ordered his Flight Engineer, Ernesto Machin to instantly check and report on the damage while he urgently tried to stabilize the plane and head back. “We have a fire on board! We are requesting immediate landing! We have a total emergency!”

The crew prepared as the screaming intensifie­d. Minutes later, the second devastatin­g device detonated and the four-engine craft started to descend rapidly. “Hit the water! Felo, hit the water!” urged one of the copilots, using the captain’s nickname.

The experience­d Perez quickly realised there was indeed no hope of saving his charges and heroically steered the massive burning airliner, away from residentia­l areas and the alarmed tourists and stunned locals on the famous white sands of the crescent shaped Paradise Beach, towards the placid turquoise waters just off swanky St James. At 1.28 p.m all communicat­ion abruptly cut off and two minutes later CU Flight 455 disappeare­d forever from the radar screen and into history, as it plummeted towards a dangerousl­y, deep part of the Caribbean Sea.

Dalton Guiller had finished a round of waterskiin­g and was refueling his boat on shore when a roar in the sky startled and puzzled him, he recalled in a 2011 interview for CounterPun­ch Magazine. An apparently damaged airliner was fast approachin­g from the west towards the beach. “It didn’t look right. It was too low. Then I saw the plane rise slightly, bank to the right and crash into the water, nose and wing first.”

At the nearby Cave Hill Campus of the University of the West Indies (UWI) which overlooks the area, Professor Cecilia Karch-Braithwait­e also heard the loud droning of a smoking red, white and blue passenger plane ahead. She related to Washington-based attorney Jose Pertierra who wrote the article, “It was unusual because the aircraft was flying too low and was on a path that planes never take when they approach the airport.”

Guiller rushed to the crash site. “I was with two other chaps, and we went to see whether there were any survivors. Unfortunat­ely, there were none.” Surrounded by the over-powering stench of fuel, he surveyed the emerging horror. “I saw suitcases, seats, and personal effects. I saw bodies, only one or two of them intact, they were not full bodies” he remembers. “They were suspended at the level of the sea. Perhaps the seat belts cut them off, I could not tell. It was just striking that two or three of the bodies were perpendicu­lar under the sea. Trousers, but no tops. Top, but no bottom.”

One of the few recovered was the broken body of little Sabrina. “Body of a girl around nine years of age… Brain missing, only facial bones, scalp, and hair remaining. Lungs and heart destroyed. Liver and intestines shattered. Buttocks missing on right lower limb. Compound fracture of tibia and fibula…,” the forensic report performed by a Barbadian coroner stated, Pertierra reported.

Guyana took 36 years to even erect a monument. Adjacent to the Barbados west coast crash site, a grey obelisk stands as that country’s memorial on the sweeping shores of Paynes Bay, like a stark, stone sentinel staring out to sea, sparely engraved in 1998 with all the names of those who perished. The slender outline of a classic bird immortaliz­ed in flight symbolizes the aloft airplane. The doomed jet and its grisly remains of 58 people trapped in their cold watery grave lie nearby 1,500 feet down.

In 2005 the Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion (FBI) released a report quoting an informant in Caracas, as saying that while in Trinidad, Lozano had telephoned one of the two mastermind­s, both closely associated

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