Tag: Ezu River

  • How Ezu River 19 were killed, by Senate report

    How Ezu River 19 were killed, by Senate report

    The mystery surrounding the 19 floating bodies found in Ezu River in Anambra State has been uncovered.

    Senate Joint Committee on Police Affairs and National Security and Intelligence investigated the discovery of the “strange dead bodies” on the river.

    The committee has given a graphic picture of how the youths died.

    The committee, chaired by Senator Paulinus Igwe Nwagu and Senator Mohammed Magoro, presented shocking autopsy reports of the bodies.

    The investigative report of the Joint Committee sighted by our correspondents in Abuja revealed that instead of 30, the victims of the gory incident were 19.

    According the autopsy reports, 15 of the 19 bodies were seen.

    Six bodies had evidence of gun shots.

    The weapon used for all the shots is one type-long range rifle.

    Aimed areas of the body: Legs up to the knee cap and some up to the hips.

    All the victims dressed alike – boxers or pants.

    Suspected cause of death – Hemorrhage resulting from unattended gun shots.

    Though the committee submitted a detailed report, it could not establish who did the killings.

    The true identities of the victims were also not established by the committee. The Movement for the Actualisation of the Sovereign State of Biafra, (MASSOB) told the committee that the victims were its members who were in police custody. The police denied the claim.

    The Inspector General of Police told the Committee that on January 19, there was a report of 19 bodies floating on River Ezu, a boundary between Anambra and Enugu states, and that the Commissioners of Police in the states were informed through a phone call.

    He said the bodies were found to be clean-shaven, able-bodied young men but that they were already decomposed.

    Four of the decomposed bodies were displayed for eight days before they were taken for autopsy.

    Nobody or community has complained that they have lost anybody, the IG said, but assured that the police were working with other Security agencies to get to the root of the issue.

    The Director General (DG) of the State Security Service (SSS) told the committee that on January 19, 18 bodies were found floating on Ezu River.

    He said the Anambra State Governor, who was informed immediately, cut-short a foreign trip and returned home to order the bodies to be removed from the river.

    He said the strange development led to several conjectures, such as that they:

    •were dumped by security agencies;

    •were hired to fight in a war between Cross River and Ebonyi State where they were killed; but there were no signs of bullet wounds;

    •were cultists;

    •must have died from generator fumes in factories and were dumped there by private multinationals; and that

    •they were kidnappers who decided to kill others to carry the ransom.

    “All these were mere conjectures and that the result of the autopsy being awaited would expose the possible cause of deaths,” said the DG.

    The SSS said the bodies could not have been thrown into the river without the knowledge of the communities.

    On alleged complicity of the police, the DG told the committee that the service advocated an audit of suspects in police custody in Anambra and Enugu states.

    When asked by the committee whether they ever went on joint operation to Onitsha, the SSS chief said “they went and arrested about 17 persons who were charged to court, the following day and were granted bail.”

    The Commandant General, Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps, corroborated the account of the Director General, SSS.

    On the number of bodies found, “security chiefs were unanimous that they were only 19, not 30 as was being speculated”.

    On whether they actually wore identical clothes, boxer shorts and t-shirts, “they responded that they were actually not wearing identical clothes as some wore wrappersa and pants etc”.

    According to the report, “the Igwe of Amansea told the committee that the bodies were first seen in the morning of January 19, by some indigenes who went to the river to fetch water.

    “The person who actually saw the bodies first could not be identified, the committee said.

    The Committee was shown the two graves where some of the bodies were buried but later exhumed.

    The Deputy Governor, Mr. Sibeudu, who represented Governor Peter Obi, told the committee that as a result of the seriousness the governor attached to the issue, the government announced a cash reward of N5 million for information on the mystery, but that nobody came forward.

    The Committee visited the Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS) Enugu, where they inspected detention cells and facilities.

    The Committee noted that after interactive sessions with several stakeholders and thorough investigations into the issue, it found:

    •That Ezu River flows down from a town called Agbaogugu through Ogwuoba and Amansea communities and empties into the River Niger. It is a boundary between Aniansea community in Awka North Local Government Area, Anambra State and Ugwuoba community in Oji River Local Government Area, Enugu State.

    •that the river is the main source’ of drinking water for the two communities.

    •that on the 19th January 2013, 18 strange dead bodies were found floating on the river. One more body was found on the 23rd of January, bringing the total member of bodies found to 19.

    •that the bodies were already decomposed at the time they were found, suggesting that they must have died some days earlier before they were dumped.

    •that all the bodies were brought out of the river on the instructions of the Governor of Anambra State.

    •Some were taken for autopsy; others were buried along the river bank, but were later exhumed for autopsy.

    •That there is a police check-point just about 100 metres away from the river on Anambra State side and another one five kilometers on the Enugu State side, and that this check point had been in existence for the past three years.

    The Committee recommended “that further forensic analysis of the bullet still lodged in one of the bodies should be carried out so as to ascertain the exact type of gun that fired it and where it is commonly found.

    “That the Anambra State Government should also be encouraged to carry out a more thorough DNA test on the bodies as requested by the pathologists.”

  • Ezu River corpses may be victims of extra-judicial killings – NBA

    Ezu River corpses may be victims of extra-judicial killings – NBA

    The Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) suspects that the floating corpses found in Ezu River, Anambra State might be victims of extra-judicial killings by security agencies.

    The umbrella body of lawyers in Nigeria also lamented that over N16 trillion worth of crude oil was stolen between 2003 and 2008, and 2011 and 2012.

    The association said it has information that over 200,000 to 300,000 barrels of crude oil were also stolen per day in the year 2000.

    It promised to refer the matter to its anti-corruption commission for full investigation.

    The NBA President, Okey Wali (SAN) who addressed reporters in Abuja on the outcome of the National Executive Committee (NEC) meeting held in Makurdi said the Federal Government must set up judicial commission of inquiry to investigate the Ezu River matter.

    He explained that the investigation became necessary following the report of NBA adhoc committee.

    Wali said, “NEC resolved that in view of the seriousness of the allegations on the possibility of the corpses being victims of extra-judicial killings, that a judicial commission of inquiry should be set up to look into the matter.

    “NEC hereby calls on the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, His Excellency, Dr. Goodluck Ebele Jonathan, GCFR, to set up a high-powered Presidential Judicial Commission of Enquiry to investigate the causes of death, source and identity of the floating corpses with a view to bringing any culprit(s to book.

    “NEC, again, observed that security of lives and property of Nigerians should be of paramount importance to government and called upon the Federal Government of Nigeria to take the issue of security more seriously and to make every effort to address the menace of terrorism, kidnappings and assassinations.

    “NEC calls on the government and security agencies to act on the report of the NBA, Peace and Security Summit submitted to them by the Nigerian Bar Association.”

    The NEC condemned states that have refused to conduct Local Government elections.

     

  • Ezu River: Relatives recount ordeal

    Some relatives of nine missing members of the Movement for the Actualisation of the Sovereign State of Biafra (MASSOB) yesterday in Onitsha, Anambra State, relived their ordeal in the hands of operatives of the Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS).

    MASSOB had claimed that nine of its missing members, Basil Ogbu, Michael Ogba, Monday Omogo, Philip Nwamkpa, Ndubuisi Eze, Ebuka Eze, Joseph Udo, Sunday Offor and Obinna Offor, who were arrested on December 7 by a combined team of Army, Police and SSS and handed over to SARS at its state Headquarters, Awkuzu, were among the bodies found in Ezu River.

    But the state police command denied the allegation, saying that the names mentioned by MASSOB were not even among its list of suspects.

    Addressing reporters in Onitsha, yesterday, the relatives said they traced their loved ones from the Central Police Station (CPS) Onitsha to Onitsha Police Area Command Headquarters and finally to the SARS Headquarters, Awkuzu.

    They said the SARS operatives drove them away and refused to allow them see the victims.

    The relatives said after chasing them out of SARS headquarters, the operatives told them to go home and never bother to come look for them again.

    They appealed to President Goodluck Jonathan, Governor Peter Obi, the United Nations and human rights bodies to come to their aid.

  • Ezu River: We are no longer safe in Nigeria, says Akunyuli

    NIGERIANS are living precariously if security agencies fail to unravel the mystery behind the Ezu River incident in Anambra State, former Minister of Information and Communications, Prof. Dora Akunyili, declared yesterday.

    She spoke during a sympathetic visit to Amansea community following the discovery of bodies floating in the Ezu River at the border of Anambra and Enugu States.

    Akunyili, who gave out over 7,000 bags of sachet water, 1,000 bottled water and about four tankers of water to the community, described the incident as a shame and calamity to the country.

    In tears, she said: “If security agencies cannot tell us where the corpses came from, it means our security in this country is not safe.

    “Everybody will be interested to know who they are, who killed them? Were they drowned? There are many questions that need answers.

    She also expressed displeasure over the quick burial of the dead bodies, stating that “it is not right though they have been exhumed.”

    Akunyuli also blamed the Movement for the Actualisation of Sovereign State of Biafra (MASSOB) for not shouting out early over the mystery bodies.

    She said: “If MASSOB believes that their people are missing, why did they not go to identify them when the bodies were evacuated?

    “Why are they talking now? I am not holding brief for anybody but I am saying that our security agencies should be up and doing.”

  • Senate to probe dumping of corpses on Ezu River

    Senate to probe dumping of corpses on Ezu River

    The Senate on Thursday asked its joint committee on Police Affairs, Security and Intelligence to conduct in-depth investigation into the circumstances surrounding the dumping of dead bodies on the Ezu River in Anambra State.

    This followed the adoption of a motion entitled: “strange dead bodies found in Ezu River of Anambra State,” sponsored by Senator Andy Uba, (Anambra South)

    Senators expressed indignation over the incident and insisted that the identities of the victims must be established.

    Uba in his lead debate noted that in the early hours of Saturday, January 19, 2013, some villagers of Amansea community in Awka North Local Government Area of Anambra State witnessed one of the most horrifying sights in the history of the community when they found 30 dead bodies, mostly males floating on the Ezu River.

    He said that he was worried that between Wednesday, 23 January and Thursday, 24 January, four more dead bodies were discovered floating on the same Ezu River.

    Uba noted that he is concerned that “even as we speak, no explanation has been proffered as to the possible origin of the dead bodies.”

    The senator said that he is worried that the autopsy ordered by the government of Anambra and Enugu States has yielded no report.

    He said that he is also worried that the Ezu River being the only source of water for domestic and other uses for the people of the five communities of Anambra State, namely- Amansea, Ebenebe, Ugbenu, Ugbene and Oba-Ofemili as well as other communities in Enugu State has been polluted and has caused a lot of discomfort and hardship to the people.

    He urged the Senate to mandate its relevant committees to investigate the incident.

     

  • Ezu River: 11 bodies to be exhumed, reburied

    Police and government pathologists have exhumed four of the 15 bodies buried at the bank of Ezu River between Anambra and Enugu states’ boundary for autopsy.

    Eleven other bodies will be exhumed and reburied in the next one week by the team of pathologists, led by the police consultant pathologist from Abuja, simply identified as Dr Wilson.

    Anambra State Commissioner for Health, Dr Lawrence Ikeakor, gave the figures yesterday when he spoke with The Nation in Awka, the state capital.

    During the exhumation on Monday, the pathologists did not allow anybody to witness the exercise, citing health reasons.

    Ikeakor said: “Four bodies were exhumed on Monday and pathologists took samples for toxicological examination.

    “This is a test that takes some time for the result to come out. We should be patient for them to come up with their result.”

    The bodies were taken to Anambra State University Teaching Hospital, Amaku, Awka, for the autopsy.

    “If you want to do anything scientifically acceptable, it has to be thorough. An autopsy is a painstaking exercise, if we have to bring out an acceptable result.

    “For the remaining 11, they would be exhumed and taken to another place for reburial because that river is the source of water for the community. What we did before now was just an emergency thing.

    “We will exhume them and take them elsewhere for reburial to remove the psychological impact on the community in the use of the water for any activity. It will be done within the next one week when the pathologists are expected back.”

  • Ezu River: Three bodies for autopsy

    The police as well as the Anambra and Enugu state governments will today carry out an autopsy on the bodies found in the Ezu River at the boundary of the two states.

    Eighteen bodies were recovered by divers on Sunday.

    Anambra State Police Commissioner Bala Nassarawa announced this yesterday at the launch of the code of conduct for officers and men.

    He said: “Of the bodies evacuated, only three were selected for autopsy because the remaining had decomposed.

    “All the bodies evacuated were males. There were no women or children.

    “We have discovered that there were no gun injuries or matchet cuts on the bodies as being speculated.

    “The bodies were not up to 30 or 50 as rumoured.”

    He said the Commissioner of Police (Medicals), the Commissioner for Health and pathologists from the two states would be involved in the autopsy.

    Nassarawa said investigations were still on going.

    The commissioner said two persons were arrested on January 19 in connection with the kidnap and assassination of Lazarus Anyanwu, a protocol officer to the Imo State Deputy Governor.

    He said the police were still investigating the matter.

    In a related development, the member representing Awka North and South Federal Constituency, Emeka Nwogbo, praised Anambra State Governor Peter Obi for drilling a borehole for the people to prevent outbreak of epidemic from the contaminated River.

    Two days after the discovery of the bodies, the Enugu State Government is yet to visit the area for possible intervention.

    The Enugu State Commissioner for Information, Chuks Ugwoke, told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Enugu yesterday that he was yet to be briefed on the matter.

    “The truth is that I do not know what to tell you because I cannot start talking without being adequately informed about the matter.

    “I am not sure that Anambra has contacted us on what to do about the matter.

    “We will issue a statement when I am duly informed,” he said.

    The Commissioner for Water Resources, Charles Ajah, also told NAN that the issue of providing drinking water to the people required the approval of top government officials.

    “The provision of alternative source of water requires money and I have not been directed on that.

    “It is only the higher authority in the state that can make that happen.

    “The only temporary alternative source of water I think the state can give is the provision of water tankers to supply water to the people.

    “The government cannot provide another river for them.

    “As long as the river is flowing, it will purify itself. Sooner than later, the water will be safe for drinking,” Ajah said.