Tag: guns

  • Police to retrieve guns from alcohol, drug abusers

    Police to retrieve guns from alcohol, drug abusers

    As part of measures to curb killing of citizens by policemen, guns will no longer be handed to personnel who abuse alcohol and drugs.

    The Assistant Inspector-General of Police (AIG) in charge of Zone two, Bala Hassan stated this Thursday at the Police College, Ikeja, during the launch of medical kits for urine drug test, as well as mass screening for hypertension and diabetes in the force.

    He stated that aside retrieving weapons from the affected officers, the police have set motion in place to ensure they are rehabilitated and rid of the vice before entrusting them with the important duty of saving lives and properties.

    “These officers and men need to be very healthy, fit and safe in order to be able to carry out these statutory duties.

    “It is in realisation of this that the Inspector-General of Police  (IGP) Solomon Arase has placed health care packages in the hands of all policemen, through the National Health Insurance Scheme, collaborating stakeholders, and now mass screening for hypertension and diabetes in police officers.

    “The urine drug test for alcohol and drug abuse us aimed at ensuring the safety of lives and property of Nigerians from accidental discharges by police officers who carry firearms.

    “Hopefully, only policemen that test negative to alcohol and other substance abuse that will be allowed to carry firearms,” he said.

    Urging policemen to live healthy lifestyles and stay safe while performing their duties, Bala noted that the health insurance scheme inaugurated by the IGP has 100 percent coverage on all officers and their immediate families.

    In her remark, the Commissioner of Police (CP) in charge of Medical, Dr. Modupe Obembe said every police officer was expected to be physically, mentally and socially fit, as well as emotionally stable.

    She highlighted the tips for healthy living, urging officers to be mindful of the things they eat and drink.

    Obembe also warned policemen to avoid self medication; to be faithful to their partners and avoid unprotected sex; have regular exercise, among others.

  • From guns to books

    From guns to books

    •IYC rebrands Ijaw struggle

    They were known for militancy, brigandage, thuggery and violence. Their sight used to evoke foreboding and uncertainty. But, now Ijaw youths want to be known as peacemakers, nation-builders and patriotic Nigerians.

    The youths of the oil-rich Niger Delta are learning a new approach to their struggles for true federalism, self-determination and resource control. Instead of firing guns, they are exploring intellectualism as a new paradigm for their agitation.

    In fact, the disposition of the current umbrella body of the youths, the Ijaw Youth Council (IYC), Worldwide,  has contributed immensely to the paradigm shift. The IYC led by a vibrant and vocal engineer, Mr.  Udens Eradiri, has introduced intellectual pursuit as the best approach to prepare the youths for a better rule of engagement with the rest of the country.

    So, Eradiri and his team including the council’s Spokesman, Comrade Eric Omare, who is also a lawyer, are setting up facilities, engaging in programmes and signing agreements to encourage learning among the youths.

    Recently, Eradiri’s IYC surprisingly built and inaugurated a library and Information Communication Technology (ICT) Centre and named it after the late icon of Ijaw struggle, Oronto Douglas. The late Douglas was famously known for intellectually placing the Ijaw agitation in the global map. He criss-crossed the world, writing books, holding discussions and speaking in various conferences to promote the cause of the Ijaw.

    The library is domiciled at the headquarters of the IYC located in the Ijaw House, Yenagoa, Bayelsa State. The brief ceremony to open the library for public use was attended by the Governor of the state, Mr. Seriake Dickson, an aide to the governor, Mr. Kennedy West,  IYC executive members and other youth leaders.

    Eradiri extolled the virtues of prominent persons who were products of the IYC such as Douglas, the former NIMASA Director-General,  Patrick Akpobulokemi, and Dr. Felix Tuodolor, who represented Dickson in the event.

    He said: “ IYC is an institution that builds men that have actually make things happen in the country. And so if we have such an instituition and today we are at the helms of leadership then  we must also contribute our quota to ensuring that it becomes a breeding ground for leadership. And how do you breed leaders?

    “First of all, they must be educated because all these leaders that I have mentioned have education. And so the least we can do is to create an environment to develop young people.  And that is why we thought that a library and an ICT centre will go a long way to change the perception of our young people”.

    He said the library and ICT Centre were built to provide costless means of studying and quality research through internet-linked laptops and computers. He described the facilities as the best way to evolve future leaders adding that IYC should be rated based on its ability to add values to the society.

    He said his leadership recently launched an educational endowment and appealed to everyone doing business in the Niger Delta region to contribute to the endowment funds. “If the IYC today is standing as an instituition to protect our people, our people must be responsible enough to support it”,  he said.

     

  • Guns were fired at Bayelsa APC primary, says Oshiomhole

    Guns were fired at Bayelsa APC primary, says Oshiomhole

    Edo State Governor Adams Oshiomhole has said the Bayelsa State All Progressives Congress (APC) governorship primary was marred by violence, as guns were fired at the Samson Siasia Stadium venue.

    Oshiomhole addressed reporters yesterday in Abuja after submitting the report of his committee to the party’s National Working Committee (NWC).

    The governor said some people used AK-47 and pump action rifles with live ammunition during the primary.

    On what happened during the primary, he said: “I was only a steward of the party. Seven of us were empanelled by the party to conduct the primary. We have reported back and we have signed a report by five of us. I have presented that report formally to the party, detailing all the issues as we know them. That is how far I can go.

    “But the decision on what the party will do with the report belongs to the party. It is not for me, as a steward, to tell the master what to do with the report. But we have reported, giving them a signed document, which was signed by members of the committee.”

    On his experience during the primary, Oshiomhole said: “I really don’t want to go back to those issues because these were not issues that transpired in the bedroom. I do think that one day we will get to the point where even the media must defend our democratic space. This thing happened in a stadium. I have been anxious to see an independent report. Gunshots were fired; AK-47 rifles were recovered with pump action guns and live ammunition. These were not actions that transpired in a bedroom. “I am not the issue and I don’t want to be the issue. There are issues that are important to me. I didn’t go there as a governor but as a party member who had been given a national assignment by the party. For me, that is a great honour. I have done that job along with my colleagues to the best of my ability. I have reported with the fear of God the truth as I know it. This has been signed by other members of the committee and I have forwarded the report. That is what is important at this stage. As far as I am concerned, this is still an internal affair of the APC.”

    On the comment by former Governor Timipre Sylva, the Edo State governor said: “That is democracy. Are you surprised that my views are disputed by one aspirant? It should not surprise you.”

    On the allegation that former Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) Managing Director Timi Alaibe facilitated his transportation to Yenagoa on the day of the primary, Oshiomhole said: “Part of the challenge of leadership is that you have to have some capacity to accommodate all kinds of things. But I leave that to you. If you think that I am so helpless that I needed the help of someone…

    “Again, talking about the media, there are things that a vigorous media can deal with. If they had said Comrade Adams is a he-goat and you come to ask me: ‘Comrade, they said you are a he goat.’

    “Incidentally, we have gone through some tension in the last few years. You know that there was a time that I was going to Ekiti State and my chopper was stopped at the Benin Airport; I was denied the right to fly because the powers that be at that time did not want me to go to Ekiti. So, if you find from your research that this was the first time I had to use a chopper, then you can draw your conclusion. But as  an Igbo proverb says: ‘If you are bathing in a local bathroom and a mad man collects your cloth and starts running, you get out of the bathroom naked and start running after him; people would call both of you mad men.’

    “If there is one mad man already running, don’t insist that I join him. If they say that I am so wretched that I need an applicant aspirant, that someone who wants to be a governor is the one who has to support a sitting governor, I leave that to their judgment. I think there are more national issues for us to engage in… But don’t forget: even at this point, Sylva is my brother and will remain my brother…”

     

     

  • Fleeing ‘robbers’ drop nine guns, 42 cartridges

    Fleeing ‘robbers’ drop nine guns, 42 cartridges

    The police operatives yesterday recovered nine pump action guns and 42 live ammunition from two fleeing suspected robbers in Amuwo Odofin, Lagos.

    The weapons were recovered by men of the Area E command led by Assistant Commissioner of Police (APC) Frank Mba.

    It was learnt that the weapons were found in a bag abandoned by a fleeing motorcyclist and his passenger, around Seventh Avenue in Festac, during a chase by a patrol team.

    The Nation gathered that patrols have been intensified around the neighbourhood to curb crime.

    A source said the incident occurred about 12midnight.

    The patrol team, he said, sighted the motorcycle, which was unregistered and pursued it.

    [ad id=”403656″]According to him, the police were suspicious because the passenger carried a sack.

    “We moved forward in pursuit of the bike and as soon as they sighted us, they ran away, abandoning the motorcycle and the sack. We could not shoot because we did not know what was in the sack. But when the sack was searched, we found nine pump action guns and 42 live cartridges,” he said.

    The state command’s spokesman, Joe Offor, a Deputy Superintendent of Police (DSP), said the cartridges were 42.

    He said: “At about 11:15pm on Sunday, Anti-Robbery policemen in Festac found a bag abandoned by suspected robbers at Seventh Avenue, which contained nine pump actions and eight live cartridges.

    “The fleeing suspects also abandoned an unregistered motorcycle. Investigations are ongoing to fish out the culprits.”

  • PDP chief gave us guns, says robbery suspect

    PDP chief gave us guns, says robbery suspect

    An armed robbery suspect, Adebayo Dipo, yesterday said his gang got its weapons from a  Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) chieftain in Lagos during the last elections.

    Dipo, 30, alongside  Alade Ogbulu  30 and Kofi Olumede (Ghanian), 21, were paraded by the police over the series of attacks and killings on Lagos Island.

    They said they were hired and paid N200,000 by politicians to foment trouble during the elections.

    One pump action rifle, a single barrel rifle and four rounds of ammunition were said to have been recovered from them. The suspects said the arms and a FEDECO bus were given to them by the PDP chieftain.

    The suspects, who belong to different cult groups, also reportedly had two cutlasses and an axe in their possession.

    They told reporters that they were involved in many cult wars in Ajah, Tafawa Balewa Square and other areas in the state.

    But Dipo, popularly known as SARS denied that his gang killed five persons after at a particular rally on Island.

    He said: “It was only Ashake that we killed. The others died during a fight with our gang. Nobody shot at them. We also lost some of our members during the clashes. I am a member of Black Axe Confraternity and I dropped out of the university due to lack of finance.

    “We were usually given N200,000 after each rally, which we shared among ourselves, no matter how large the crowd is.

    “The PDP chieftain (names withheld), gave us guns and FEDECO bus during campaign. I am a site agent. My nickname is SARS. We killed one Ashake on Saturday but four others died on Sunday, making five.”

    Kofi said about six persons were killed by the Abija Confraternity,  which he belongs to.

    “I belong to the Abija Group. About six persons have been killed in separate clashes. I am a political thug to the PDP.

    “On the day when the PDP held its rally at the TBS, my group shot dead one person. That was also the day Jonathan came to Lagos.

    “After the rally, some of our boys killed Otun who brought his boys to engage us in a fight. It was one Layi, our gang member, who shot him. The following day, the APC faction came to Enuowa area to engage us in a reprisal attack; we also killed four of their members. It was the APC thugs that launched the first attack

    “We are loyal to Abija, he was our leader and he brought all these guns (pointing to the recovered weapons). Abija had so many boys- too many to count. I was a meat pie seller before I joined the group in Lagos Island,” he said.

    Police Commissioner Kayode Aderanti said the suspects were arrested following raid of all dark spots in the state, because of the incessant skirmishes on the Island and its environs.

     

  • Before guns boom again in Niger Delta

    Before guns boom again in Niger Delta

    The creeks are calm now. Chirping of birds could be heard from the mangroves of the Niger Delta. No more reckless booming of guns. The warriors are out of their notorious camps where they commanded guerrilla fighters.

    From the trenches, they have become millionaires. The ex-militant commanders own mansions, drive exotic cars and have damsels at their beck and call. They appear to have forgotten resource control, development, equity and fairness which they claimed were the reasons they took up arms against the Federal Government.

    But it is not yet uhuru in the Niger Delta. Apart from widespread and intractable menace of economic sabotage such as pipeline vandalism and crude oil theft, violence looms. The amnesty granted the creek warriors by former President Umaru Yar’Adua has only succeeded in making a few millionaires to the detriment of the region.

     

    he region has remained largely underdeveloped. There is rising frustration among the teeming population of unemployed youths. Their anger is like a keg of gunpowder waiting to explode. Their unhappiness is worsened by their inability to derive tangible benefits from the Presidency which is occupied by their kinsman, President Goodluck Jonathan.

    In 2011, Jonathan and chieftains of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) traversed their poverty-stricken communities and promised them development, job opportunities and empowerment. They spoke of modular refineries, coastal roads, East-West roads, training programmes and other juicy dividends of democracy.

    The Association of Non-Violence in Niger Delta (ANVND) implored the government to address all issues of empowerment and development of the region before 2015. The Coordinator of the Non-Governmental Organisation (NGO), Mr. Kennedy Tonyo-West observed high level of unemployment in the system.

    He noted that many factories and industries had gone moribund in the region and asked the government to intensify efforts in reviving them. He asked both state and federal governments to look for and recover underutilized opportunities.

    For a violent-free 2015 general elections, he asked the PDP-led government to explore all sectors in the Niger Delta region so as to create needed opportunities for the youths.

    Specifically, he called on interventionist agencies in the region, such as the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC), the Ministry of the Niger Delta Affairs and the SURE-P Programme to build 100 sports centres in 100 communities in the region.

    Describing the youths in the region as skillful and talented, Tonyo-West said it was regrettable that facilities were not in the region to enable the youths hone their skills. He said Olympians and award winners in sports would emerge from the region if facilities to develop such skills were built.

    “The skills are dormant because the facilities are not there. If Samuel Peter had remained in the Niger Delta region, he wouldn’t have been a good boxer. But he found himself in an environment with facilities he needed to become an excellent boxer”, he said.

    Apart from sports facilities, he called for commencement of work on the Bonny and Brass Liquified Natural Gas (LNG) projects. If completed he said the projects would offer many job opportunities to the unemployed especially ex-militants who had undergone technical training. He said the two projects, when completed, would serve as a “positive distraction” for the youths of the Niger Delta.

    Tonyo-West insisted that the government must muster required political will to assist the youths. For instance, he said the federal government should turn the technical school in Bonny to an oil and gas university. This, he said, would provide needed empowerment for the youths to become employable in the oil and gas sector.

    He said: “We also want the Federal Government to urgently rehabilitate Bonny Technical College in Rivers State and upgrade it to Oil and Gas University.

    “The facilities the students can learn from are already there. We are pleading with President Goodluck Jonathan to upgrade the BTC as a matter of urgency.”

    Besides, he called the attention of the Bayelsa State Government to the moribund Hyndai project which was initially conceived by the past administration of Governor Timipre Sylva to attract investors and create over 2000 jobs.

    “This project is designed to mop up unemployment. The government should look into the matter and address the issues. He implored the Senate to immediately pass the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) into law.

    He said the Niger Delta region would base its voting decision in 2015 on the passage of the PIB.

    He said the the bill was essential for the growth and development of the country’s petroleum sector.

    He said: “We call on the Senate President to make a firm decision on PIB still lying in the Senate without being passed. We do not want to believe that members of the upper legislative chamber have been induced to withhold passage of the bill into law.

    MAY we, therefore, call on the Senate to give express passage of the PIB into law for the benefit of the country and the citizens. We are against all the delays that have characterized the passage of the PIB.”

    Tonjo-West also called on Jonathan and the National Assembly to pass the Nigeria Merchant Navy Security and Safety Corps (NMNSSC). He said NMNSSC would no doubt contribute to the reduction of pipeline vandalism in the Niger Delta.

    “The Nigeria Merchant Navy Security and Safety Corps will create safety on our waterways. Besides, it will be a good outlet for employment creation as well as securing lives of seafarers,” he said.

    He commended the establishment of Youth Development Centre (YDC) in Bayelsa State. He, however, appealed to Governor Seriake Dickson, to appropriate funds needed for the centre to take off.

    The NGO was not happy that most of the programmes and projects formulated in the past to benefit the youths were abandoned on the way by the government. For instance, he observed that two expensive trawlers acquired for commercial fishing in Bayelsa State had been abandoned to rot at Ogbia waterside.

    The trawlers, MV Patience Jonathan and MV Margret Alameiseigha, were acquired under the agricultural programme of Sylva. They only went fishing in the sea once. Since then they were anchored and forgotten at the Ogbia waterside. But Tonyo-West appealed to the government to revive and put them to use.panies like Okomu and others.

  • Stick to your guns

    THE PUNCH headline goof of December 6 welcomes us this week: “FG blames principals over (for) poor performance at unity schools”

    Next on focus is also The PUNCH of December 3 which committed the following offences: “Lecturers dare FG, shun return to work order” News: return-to-work order

    “As the strike action lingered beyond this point….” Thinking with you: delete ‘action’!

    “…which castigated the institutions that opened their doors for lecturers for one serious business or the other (or another) during the strike.”

    SUNDAY SUN Back Page of December 1 fumbled on ASUU: “…the union sticks to its gun (guns)….”

    THISDAY, THE SATURDAY NEWSPAPER, of November 30 goofed copiously: “For a secured (secure) nation…”

    “US, EU congratulate Nigeria over (on/upon) Orhii”

    “Harnessing potentials of Calabar carnival” Travel & Leisure: ‘potential’ is non-count

    “A honour well deserve” (A full-page congratulatory advertisement for Hon. Kingsley Kuku by friends and brothers) A rewrite: An honour well deserved

    Still on THISDAY under review: “Government College, Ughelli Old Boy’s (Boys’) Association, Lagos Branch…Annual End of Year Luncheon Party” (Full-page advertisement) Keep the ship sailing: End-of-Year Luncheon

    The last three offences in The Saturday Newspaper under examination are from a full-page congratulatory advertisement for His Excellency, Mallam (Dr.) Isa Yuguda (Matawallen Bauchi), Governor of Bauchi State, by Senator Bala Abdulkadir Mohammed CON, FABS (Kauran Bauchi) Hon. Minister, FCT: “Another feather to (in) Matawallen Bauchi’s cap”

    “…the entire people of Bauchi State on occasion (on the occasion) of his installation as the….”

    “This honour is indeed an attestation of (to) your outstanding achievements….” Yet, the FCT Minister has SSA (Media), Chief Press Secretary and others in the superfluous communications team!

    Overheard: “I saw him frowning his face….” What else would he have frowned?

    National Mirror of November 28 terrorized the English language on a few occasions: “Ozekhome’s kidnappers to be charged for (with) murder, terrorism”

    “Aliyu’s last minute (last-minute) retreat, mark of insincerity—Vatsa”

    Out of the four headlines on the Politics Page of National Mirror of the edition under review, three contained ‘says’! That was sheer laziness on the part of the page planner as there were other verbs that could have been used to avoid monotony.

    Next is the views page with two improprieties: “The acquiescence of President Goodluck Jonathan’s administration for (in) a constitutional conference remains a bold decision.”

    “…Professor Ben Nwabueze has (had) recently canvassed in a well publicised (well-publicised) article that….”

    “Cases of sexual harassment, under-aged (underage) girls offering their bodies to teachers for marks and other favours….” (Editorial)Why not simply ‘prostituting for marks…’?

    Still on National Mirror: “Brazil 2014: NFF re-assures on Keshi’s future” Sport: who did NFF reassure (no hyphenation!)?

    “Police threaten to arrest monarchs over Plateau attacks” News: either arrest for attacks or arrest in connection with attacks (not ‘arrest…over’)

    The following three goofs are from NATIONAL MIRROR Back Page of the above edition: “…the recanting of voluntarily given evidences by witnesses….” The prince of Nigeria paradigm: voluntarily-given evidence—which is non-count.

    “We must start addressing the pervading (pervasive) injustice that has….”

    “…despite all manners (manner) of intimidation….” (DStv NEWS, November 27)

    National Mirror Politics Page of November21 localized the English language thrice: “CNPP publicity secretary…in a statement yesterday said it is (was) alarmed over (by/at) Obi’s penchant for ethnic card….”

    “Okoye, who one of the governorship aspirants under (on) the platform of the PDP….”

    THE NATION ON SUNDAY of November 24 comes next with some school-boy howlers: “…Jega said the commission is (was) working assiduously to deliver a credible general elections in 2015.” Delete ‘a’!

    “Govt flags off (inaugurates) construction of Zaria water supply expansion, sanitation projects”

    “The impression will be allowed to fester that Amaechi is only vocal because of his alleged personal grudges with (against) the president and his party.”

    “Export Council sensitizes stakeholders on (to) ECOWAS scheme”

    “I do a lot of jotting (jottings).”

    “…CBAAC organised series (a series) of dance-dramas and art exhibitions for children.”

    “Yorubas (Yoruba) to endow education legacy”

    From The PUNCH Front Page of November 25 comes this: “Ill health: Jonathan postpones meeting with rebel governors” Newspaper of the Year: Ill-health

    “Police arrest six over (for) inter-communal clash in Bayelsa”

    Still on National Mirror of August 22: “Imoke drums (drums up) support for Super Eagles”

    Finally from NATIONAL MIRROR Back Page of August 22: “With more than 400 reportedly killed in Cairo last week Wednesday….” All the Facts, All the Sides: last Wednesday or Wednesday, last week

    “Already, we are suffering from his double standards (standard) with regard to the war….!

    “Now that the administration appears to be at its wits (wits’) end, perhaps Mr. Jonathan may consider convening a national stakeholder’s (stakeholders’) summit….

    “…which we signed sometimes (sometime) in July.”

    “…in view of the increasing hazards that is (are) being….” (A goodwill message at Asaba 2013)

    “I want to congratulate our Guild for (on/upon) rising to the challenges….”

    Still from the editors’ conference: “…Nigerian media is freer than any other media in (on) the continent….”

    “For enquires (sic) call….” (NTA Channel 35) Showing the light: For enquiries, call….

    Instead of ‘flash’, use ‘bleep’ or ‘beep’ to let someone know you want them to telephone you. (From Kola Danisa/07068074257)

    From the Front Page of THE NATION of August 20 comes this entry: “N699b went to banks as interest on borrowed loans in 2012 alone.” Is there any loan that is not borrowed? (Contributed by Stanley Nduagu/08062925996)

  • We operated with master keys and fake guns

    THE Lagos State Police Command has smashed a suspected robbery gang made up of panel beaters, drivers, car dealers, native doctors, private security men, auto mechanics, landlords, fake pastors and businessmen without fixed business addresses.

    Suspected members of the gang arrested by the police include Seyi Oyewale, Saheed Adebayo, Isa Adegbenro, Kayode Quadri, Afeez Ibrahim and Femi Ashiru. Others, including one Kazeem a.k.a. Naira and Alaba, were said to be at large.

    Narrating his role in the series of robbery operations they allegedly carried out before their arrest, one of the suspects, Afeez Ibrahim a.k.a. Sharpman, a 35-year-old indigene of Odogbolu town, Ogun State, said: “I am a panel beater. I was doing well in my job before I met Femi Ashiru (one of the suspects in police net).

    “I made so much money that I built a house of my own. I was contented with the money I made on a daily basis. I worked seven days in a week. The moment Femi came into my life, my character changed. I started lying to my customers. At times, I deliberately destroyed a part of a car and collected money from the owner to buy a tokunbo (fairly used) part to replace it.

    “At times, some customers would give me their cars to work on but Femi would advise me to sell it. He later started supplying me cars and jeeps snatched by his gang to sell. I became a receiver of stolen vehicles.

    “Unfortunately, the new business I found myself doing dragged me into a lot of police cases. This affected my job as a panel beater. Hence, I abandoned the job and sold my house and other belongings in order to survive. When life became too difficult for me, I joined the gang and started going to robbery operations with them.”

    Asked how many vehicles he received from Femi before joining the gang, he said: “It was the devil who made me an armed robber and receiver of stolen cars. Somebody in our village made the charm against me to become a criminal. What happened to me was not ordinary. I was doing well but suddenly, I became a liar, cheating my customers. I became a receiver of stolen goods and eventually joined the gang.

    “In fact, I joined two gangs. The vehicles I received included Toyota Camry, which I sold for N200,000, and Toyota Muscle, which I sold for N600,000. I also received a 4-Runner Jeep from Kazeem and resold it for N450,000. My gain here was N50,000. Kazeem, known also as Baba Ope or Naira, is still at large.

    “I also sold a Toyota Highlander for N500,000 and gave the money to Kazeem, but till date, he did not give me a dime. He promised to give me the balance when I brought another car. I later brought a Hyundai and he gave me N30,000 only. I gave him a Rav4 which was sold for N350,000, but I was given only N20,000.

    Asked how he was arrested, he said: “Femi was first arrested by operatives of the Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS) of the Lagos State Police Command. He led them to my house and they saw me and arrested me.”

    The second suspect, Seye Oyewale a.k.a. Sheyi Campus (27), who hails from Osogbo, Osun State, said: “I am happily married with a set of twins. I was a member of the National Union of Road Transport Workers (NURTW) before I became an armed robber. But we don’t use real guns. We operated with fake guns and master keys.”

    Explaining how he joined a robbery gang, he said: “I was called by one guy called Alaba to follow him to Ifako Ijaiye area (Lagos) to rob in November last year. We were three in number, namely myself, Isa Adegbenro from Ogun State and Alaba. I reside at No. 5, Adara Martin Street, Agbelekale area, Oke-Odo.

    “When we reached Ifako at about 9 pm, we collected a Toyota Camry car parked by the road side. When the owner saw us and came to stop us, I used the fake gun to scare him away and zoomed off with his car. The man was forced out of the car and Isa drove it. We took the car to Afeez Ibrahim and he paid N150,000. I was given only N30,000 when the money was shared.

    “The second operation occurred at Oko-Oba Road. We snatched a Toyota Muscle car. The owner left the key at the ignition and went to buy something nearby. We took it to Afeez and collected N400,000, but I was not given a dime for my efforts. Isa gave the whole N400,000 to Afeez.

    “When I confronted Isa, he told me that Alaba collected my money for me. Alaba is still at large. Alaba is the gang leader and we operate at the Oko-Oba axis in Lagos.

    “I was the one who sold a Samsung handset to Sunday for N3,000. He was our regular handset buyer and receiver, but he did not follow us to operations. We heard that he had been charged to court because he was using the handset he bought from me and SARS operatives tracked him down.”

    The third suspect, Kayode Quadri (37), an indigene of Ilorin, Kwara State and resident of Oke Otaona, Ikorodu, said he was a driver at a secondary school in Otaona on a monthly salary of N25,000 before he joined the robbery gang.

    He said: “I joined the robbery gang because my salary was too poor. How can I manage N25,000? If I were a commercial bus driver or trailer driver, I would be getting more than N50,000 every month. If you see the insult I receive from teachers as a school driver, you would pity me.

    “When I joined the gang, my role was to drive them to points of operation and bring them back. I still go to school to drive, depending on the time we fixed our robbery operation.”

    On how he joined the suspects, he said: “I know Saidi, Naira and Sharpman. We used to smoke Indian hemp at the same joint. One Sunday, I followed Sharpman and Naira to do one job (armed robbery) at Adama side, Ikorodu. I was their driver.

    “After robbing some people we had met on the road, we saw one man in a Toyota Highlander and stopped him, dragged him out and zoomed off with his car. I was not paid a dime until I was arrested by operatives of SARS. That happened this January.

    “We drove a Honda Civic car to the robbery scene and snatched the Highlander. Afeez was both the receiver and one of the strikers. I was not given a dime because they told me that the Highlander jeep had not been sold. I was told that they were going to snatch a vehicle before I joined them. So, I was not forced to become a part of the action.”

    The fourth suspect, Isa Adegbenro a (27) from Abeokuta, Ogun State, who resides at 25, Musiliu Street, Agege, said he was an auto mechanic and driver. He said: “I am happily married with two children. I live in Oko Oba. SARS operatives arrested Seye and they used him to arrest me. I don’t know these people. They belong to another gang entirely. I belong to Alaba’s gang, though the police has not arrested Alaba. He is still our great gang leader.

    “Other members of our gang are Seye and Isa. We are a three-man gang and we operate around the Oko-Oba axis. There was a time we snatched a Toyota Camry and sold it for N150,000 to Afeez. I got only N35,000. We also snatched an Orobo Toyota Camry, the one they call Toyota Muscle, and sold it for N400,000. I got N100,000.

    “I had my workshop at Pleasure Bus stop area, very close to Ile-Epo market before the owners of the land demolished our workshop and built a residential building and shops there. When I was chased away from there, I had no alternative but to join this gang in order to survive.

    “I vow that I will never operate with real gun because I had no intention of killing my victims. We used to use master keys and fake guns. Alaba is the gang leader and he does not use a gun. He uses master keys.”

    The fifth suspect, 27-year-old Saidi Adebayo, who hails from Itamaga village, Ikorodu Lagos State, is married with a nine-month old baby. He said: “I am a plumber. I also dig borehole. I was on a playground in Itamaga area one evening when Kazeem came to meet me. He asked why I had decided to suffer like my father who did security work, because I was doing a security job at Mowonla.

    “It was there that I knew Kazeem, Afeez and Quadri, a wonderful native doctor. They asked me to follow them to do one job. I asked them what job but they said they would tell me the next day. They only said it was a job that would give me quick and big money. The next day, he told me that the job was about collecting vehicles from people. I left in anger. He later called me on the phone but I refused to pick his call.

    “He came later and asked why I refused to pick his calls and I told him that he said I should join them to collect people’s cars and I could not do such a thing as a security man who was well known in the area. The Police later arrested me and I told them that I had resigned from armed robbery but I could still lead them to those who were still doing the job.

    “I met Kazeem, Alfa, Sharpman and Afeez about one and a half years ago. I had once followed them to snatch a car, but the car had an accident, which led to their arrest. They were charged to court and sent to Ikoyi Prison. I ran to Ugheli in Delta State and stayed with a tailor friend named Tony for some time. I came back when my wife gave birth to a baby boy. I resigned from armed robbery job and faced private security work at Mowanla land.

    “So, tell them that I am innocent because I did not participate in this case. The Police declared me wanted when they charged my colleagues then. How can I be arrested because I was once an armed robber? I have repented. Let them release me.”

    The sixth suspect, Femi Ashiru (36), said he was a car dealer with his stand, FM Motors, in Ikorodu, Lagos State.

    He said: “I have an auto stand at Ikorodu. It is called FM Motors. I reside at Igbogbo Bayoku Road, Ikorodu.”

    Asked how he got his supplies, he said: “I do go to Cotonou to buy vehicles and resell in Nigeria. My sister, Mrs Dupe Fakua, who is based in France, also sends cars to me to sell.”

    On when he started patronising car snatchers and armed robbers, he said: “I met Sharpman, Afeez and Ibrahim through a guy called Wale Polo, who is in detention right now for selling and receiving stolen cars from Sharpman. I knew Sharpman as a panel beater also.

    One day, he told me that a customer for whom he normally repaired cars used to bring cars for sale and they were very cheap. I told him that if it was the kind I liked, I would buy. He later brought one RAV4 jeep and I looked at the vehicle, tested it and found it okay. I paid him N450,000.

    “There were documents in the vehicle. The particulars were pasted on the windscreen. The insurance and road worthiness papers were all originals while other documents were in photocopies. He promised to bring the original copies of those ones later.

    “He also brought a 4Runner and I paid him N700,000, though it had no registration number or vehicle particulars. But he said it was not snatched. Another one he brought was a Toyota Camry car and I paid him N450,000. He later brought a Hyundai Santate jeep and I paid him N650,000.

    “He also brought a Toyota Camry 2010 model and I paid him N950,000. Although that one had no particulars, he assured me that it was genuine. He later confessed to me that the Camry 2010 model was snatched. Therefore, when he brought a Highlander Jeep, I refused to buy it. I told him to take it away, but instead of taking it away, he went and parked it at my house and said he would remove it later. He covered it with tarpaulin.

    “When policemen arrested me in my office, I told them on our way to the police station that there was one jeep that was parked in my house, which I had told them to come and take away but they refused, and I could not report them to the police because they are dangerous with guns.”

    He said he later took the police to Sharpman, the supplier of the vehicles’ house and he was arrested in his house at Agufoye area, a new site in Ikorodu. He was the only member of the gang he claimed to know.

     

  • We operated with master keys and fake guns —Suspected robbery gang members

    We operated with master keys and fake guns —Suspected robbery gang members

    THE Lagos State Police Command has smashed a suspected robbery gang made up of panel beaters, drivers, car dealers, native doctors, private security men, auto mechanics, landlords, fake pastors and businessmen without fixed business addresses.

    Suspected members of the gang arrested by the police include Seyi Oyewale, Saheed Adebayo, Isa Adegbenro, Kayode Quadri, Afeez Ibrahim and Femi Ashiru. Others, including one Kazeem a.k.a. Naira and Alaba were said to be at large.

    Narrating his role in the series of robbery operations they allegedly carried out before their arrest, one of the suspects, Afeez Ibrahim a.k.a. Sharpman, a 35-year-old indigene of Odogbolu town, Ogun State said: “I am a panel beater. I was doing well in my job before I met Femi Ashiru (one of the suspects in police net).

    “I made so much money that I built a house of my own. I was contented with the money I made on a daily basis. I worked seven days in a week. The moment Femi came into my life, my character changed. I started lying to my customers. At times, I deliberately destroyed a part of a car and collected money from the owner to buy a tokunbo (fairly used) part to replace it.

    “At times, some customers would give me their cars to work on but Femi would advise me to sell it. He later started supplying me cars and jeeps snatched by his gang to sell. I became a receiver of stolen or vehicles.

    “Unfortunately, the new business I found myself doing dragged me into a lot of police cases. This affected my job as a panel beater. Hence, I abandoned the job and sold my house and other belongings in order to survive. When life became too difficult for me, I joined the gang and started going to robbery operations with them.”

    Asked how many vehicles he received from Femi before joining the gang, he said: “It was the devil that made me an armed robber and receiver of stolen cars. Somebody in our village made the charm against me to become a criminal. What happened to me was not ordinary. I was doing well but suddenly, I became a liar, cheating my customers. I became a receiver of stolen goods and eventually joined the gang.

    “In fact, I joined two gangs. The vehicles I received included Toyota Camry, which I sold for N200,000, and Toyota Muscle, which I sold for N600,000. I also received a 4-Runner Jeep from Kazeem and resold it for N450,000. My gain here was N50,000. Kazeem, known also as Baba Ope or Naira, is still at large.

    “I also sold a Toyota Highlander for N500,000 and gave the money to Kazeem, but till date, he did not give me a dime. He promised to give me the balance when I brought another car. I later brought a Hyundai and he gave me N30,000 only. I gave him a Rav4 which was sold for N350,000, but I was given only N20,000.

    Asked how he was arrested, he said: “Femi was first arrested by operatives of the Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS) of the Lagos State Police Command. He led them to my house and they saw me and arrested me.”

    The second suspect, Seye Oyewale a.k.a. Sheyi Campus (27), who hails from Osogbo, Osun State, said: “I am happily married with a set of twins. I was a member of the National Union of Road Transport Workers (NURTW) before I became an armed robber. But we don’t use real guns. We operated with fake guns and master keys.”

    Explaining how he joined a robbery gang, he said: “I was called by one guy called Alaba to follow him to Ifako Ijaiye area (Lagos) to rob in November last year. We were three in number, namely myself, Isa Adegbenro from Ogun State and Alaba. I reside at No. 5, Adara Martin Street, Agbelekale area, Oke-Odo.

    “When we reached Ifako at about 9 pm, we collected a Toyota Camry car parked by the road side. When the owner saw us and came to stop us, I used the fake gun to scare him away and zoomed off with his car. The man was forced out of the car and Isa drove it. We took the car to Afeez Ibrahim and he paid N150,000. I was given only N30,000 when the money was shared.

    “The second operation occurred at Oko-Oba Road. We snatched a Toyota Muscle car. The owner left the key at the ignition and went to buy something nearby. We took it to Afeez and collected N400,000, but I was not given a dime for my efforts. Isa gave the whole N400,000 to Afeez.

    “When I confronted Isa, he told me that Alaba collected my money for me. Alaba is still at large. Alaba is the gang leader and we operate at the Oko-Oba axis in Lagos.

    “I was the one who sold a Samsung handset to Sunday for N3,000. He was our regular handset buyer and receiver, but he did not follow us to operations. We heard that he had been charged to court because he was using the handset he bought from me and SARS operatives tracked him down.”

    The third suspect, Kayode Quadri (37), an indigene of Ilorin, Kwara State and resident of Oke Otauna, Ikorodu, said he was a driver at a secondary school in Otauna on a monthly salary of N25,000 before he joined the robbery gang.

    He said: “I joined the robbery gang because my salary was too poor. How can I manage N25,000? if I were a commercial bus driver or trailer driver, I would be getting more than N50,000 every month. If you see the insult I receive from teachers as school driver, you would pity me.

    “When I joined the gang, my role was to drive them to points of operation and bring them back. I still go to school to drive, depending on the time we fixed our robbery operation.”

    On how he joined the suspects, he said: “I know Saidi, Naira and Sharpman. We used to smoke Indian hemp at the same joint. One Sunday, I followed Sharpman and Naira to do one job (armed robbery) at Adama side, Ikorodu. I was their driver.

    “After robbing some people we had met on the road, we saw one man in a Toyota Highlander and stopped him, drove him away and zoomed off with his car. I was not paid a dime until I was arrested by operatives of SARS. That happened this January.

    “We drove a Honda Civic car to the robbery scene and snatched the Highlander. Afeez was both the receiver and one of the strikers. I was not given a dime because they told me that the Highlander jeep had not been sold. I was told that they were going to snatch a vehicle before I joined them. So, I was not forced to become a part of the action.”

    The fourth suspect, Isa Adegbenro a (27) from Abeokuta, Ogun State, who resides at 25, Musiliu Street, Agege, said he was an auto mechanic and driver. He said: “I am happily married with two children. I live in Oko Oba. SARS operatives arrested Seye and they used him to arrest me. I don’t know these people. They belong to another gang entirely. I belong to Alaba’s gang, though the police has not arrested Alaba. He is still our great gang leader.

    “Other members of our gang are Seye and Isa. We are a three-man gang and we operate around the Oko-Oba axis. There was a time we snatched a Toyota Camry and sold it for N150,000 to Afeez. I got only N35,000. We also snatched an ‘Orobo’ Toyota Camry, the one they call Toyota Muscle, and sold it for N400,000. I got N100,000.

    “I had my workshop at Pleasure Bus stop area, very close to Ile-Epo market before the owners of the land demolished our workshop and built a residential building and shops there. When I was chased away from there, I had no alternative but to join this gang in order to survive.

    “I vow that I will never operate with real gun because I had no intention of killing my victims. We used to use master keys and fake guns. Alaba is the gang leader and he does not use a gun. He uses master keys.

    The fifth suspect, 27-year-old Saidi Adebayo, who hails from Itamaga village, Ikorodu Lagos State, is married with a nine-month old baby. He said: “I am a plumber. I also dig borehole. I was on a playground in Itamaga area one evening when Kazeem came to meet me. He asked why I had decided to suffer like my father who did security work, because I was doing a security job at Mowonla.

    “It was there that I knew Kazeem, Afeez and Quadri, a wonderful native doctor. They asked me to follow them to go and do one work. I asked them what work but they said they would tell me the next day. They only said it was a job that would give me quick big money. The next day, he told me that the job was about collecting vehicles from people. I left in anger. He later called me on the phone but I refused to pick his call.

    “He came later and asked why I refused to pick his calls and I told him that he said I should join them to collect people’s cars and I could not do such a thing as a security man who was well known in the area. The Police later arrested me and I told them that I had resigned from armed robbery but I could still lead them to those who were still doing the job.

    “I met Kazeem, Alfa, Sharpman and Afeez about one and a half years ago. I had once followed them to snatch a car, but the car had an accident, which led to their arrest. They were charged to court and sent to Ikoyi Prison. I ran to Ugheli in Delta State and stayed with a tailor friend named Tony for some time. I came back when my wife gave birth to a baby boy. I resigned from armed robbery job and faced private security work at Mowanla land.

    “So, tell them that I am innocent because I did not participate in this case. The police declared me wanted when they charged my colleagues then. How can I be arrested because I was once an armed robber? I have repented. Let them release me.”

    The sixth suspect, Femi Ashiru (36), said he was a car dealer with his stand, FM Motors, in Ikorodu, Lagos State.

    He said: “I have an auto stand at Ikorodu. It is called FM Motors. I reside at Igbogbo Bayoku Road, Ikorodu.”

    Asked how he got his supplies, he said: “I do go to Cotonou to buy vehicles and resell in Nigeria. My sister, Mrs Dupe Fakua, who based in France, also sends cars to me to sell.”

    On when he started patronising car snatchers and armed robbers, he said: “I met Sharpman, Afeez and Ibrahim through a guy called Wale Polo, who is in detention right now for selling and receiving stolen cars from Sharpman. I knew Sharpman as a panel beater also.

    One day, he told me that a customer for whom he normally repaired cars used to bring cars for sale and they were very cheap. I told him that if it was the kind I liked, I would buy. He later brought one RAV4 jeep and I looked at the vehicle, tested it and found it okay. I paid him N450,000.

    “There were documents in the vehicle. The particulars were pasted on the windscreen. The insurance and road worthiness papers were all originals while other documents were in photocopies. He promised to bring the original copies of those ones later.

    “He also brought a 4Runner and I paid him N700,000, though it had no registration number or vehicle particulars. But he said it was not snatched. Another one he brought was a Toyota Camry car and I paid him N450,000. He later brought a Hyundai Santate jeep and I paid him N650,000.

    “He also brought a Toyota Camry 2010 model and I paid him N950,000. Although that one had no particulars, he assured me that it was genuine. He later confessed to me that the Camry 2010 model was snatched. Therefore, when he brought a Highlander Jeep, I refused to buy it. I told him to take it away, but instead of taking it away, he went and parked it at my house and said he would remove it later. He covered it with tarpaulin.

    “When policemen arrested me in my office, I told them on our way to the police station that there was one jeep that was parked in my house, which I had told them to come and take away but they refused, and I could not report them to the police because they are dangerous with guns.”

    He said he later took the police to Sharpman, the supplier of the vehicles’ house and he was arrested in his house at Agufoye area, a new site in Ikorodu. He was the only member of the gang he claimed to know.