Tag: Hoodlums

  • Hoodlums attack Oke’s convoy

    Hoodlums attack Oke’s convoy

    Hoodlums yesterday attacked the convoy of the governorship candidate of the Alliance for Democracy (AD), Olusola Oke.

     They were believed to be supporters of the Olusegun Mimiko faction of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    The convoy was ambushed at the Ademulegun/Ife Road Roundabout while returning from Oke-Igbo. Oke escaped unhurt.

    The miscreants, armed with weapons, such as cudgels, bottles and machetes, damaged seven vehicles.

    They were singing solidarity songs for Eyitayo Jegede, the PDP candidate.

    Oke called on his supporters to remain calm “in the face of persecution”.

    In a statement by the Chairman, Media and Publicity of the Olusola Oke Campaign Organisation, Bisi Kolawole, the AD candidate described the incident as an invitation for disaster.

    “We have in the last three weeks been strident in our cries of being under attacks by both the PDP and the All Progressives Congress (APC), which are become increasingly uncomfortable with  our rising popularity.

    “Isn’t it sad that a sitting governor could be after an innocent man for daring to exercise his right of contesting when he (Mimiko) isn’t running again?

    “We shall continue to toe the path of peace and not join issues with them.”

  • Oshodi mayhem: residents seek action against hoodlums

    Oshodi mayhem: residents seek action against hoodlums

    Residents of Brown Street in Oshodi yesterday urged the  Lagos State Government to draft more security operatives to Oshodi.

    This, they said, would scare away hoodlums who disturb the peace of the community.

    The residents denied that Tuesday and yesterday clashes that left many injured were between rival groups of the National Union of Road Transport Workers (NURTW).

    They said the hoodlums  chased away by the Lagos State Taskforce on Environmental and Special Offences have found an haven behind Moyosore Shopping Complex in Oshodi.

    A resident, Olawale Olaniyan, accused one Talo of harbouring the hoodlums.

    Olaniyan urged the task force to extend their operations to the complex.

    Narrating how the incident occurred, Olaniyan said: “The crisis had nothing to do with the union. It was the hoodlums being arrested lately by the task force who regrouped in the area that caused the crisis. They usually snatch people’s hand bags and pick pockets. When residents noticed their nefarious activities, they tried to beat some of the hoodlums but Bush, a resident, prevented them. He told the hoodlums not to return to the area again. The hoodlums regrouped and attacked Bush, injuring him on his head.”

    The Nation learnt that Bush was receiving treatment in the hospital.

    Another resident, Mrs Sherifat Oye, wondered why Talo decided to harbour the touts.

    “These are people who do not have houses in Oshodi but come from other states to torment people here. Since, the task force started chasing them from the main road, they have been coming into the inner streets to continue their crimes,” she said.

    Rasaq Wole said if not for police intervention, the residents were about going after Talo for harbouring the hoodlums who caused the mayhem.

    Wole urged the police to ensure the complex is free of the hoodlums.

  • Panic in Ibadan community over attack by hoodlums

    Hoodlums numbering about 20 on Saturday night stormed a sleepy Ibadan community, Bakatari, in Ido Local Government area of Oyo State and destroyed a Federal Government’s boundary post, causing panic in the community.

    The post is located between Ogun and Oyo states.

    The hoodlums , according to a witness, were armed with dangerous weapons such as axes , sledge-hammers and cutlasses, which were used to destroy the post.

    The post was erected by the National Boundary Commission when the two neighbouring states sealed agreement on the disputed boundary.

    A source close to a nearby police station said no arrest was made since the destruction.

    The residents of the two states within the boundary have since been engaging in violent fight over the ownership of the community until a Federal High delivered a landmark judgment in a litigation that lasted 10 years.

    The court ceded the disputed community to Ibadan, Oyo State.

    Surprisingly, four years after the judgment, the existing peace in the community was ruptured on Saturday when the hoodlums came and destroyed the post.

    The Baale (community head) of Bakatari town, Chief Yekini Ayodele, pleaded with the government to establish a police post at the boundary between the two states, particularly between Ibadan and Abeokuta with a view to forestalling the breakdown of law and order.

    He described the demolition of the post as very unfortunate, calling on law enforcement agents to thoroughly investigate the matter and bring the perpetrators to book.

    He was of the opinion that with a police post on the boundary community, trouble-makers would be prevented from setting the town ablaze as being threatened by some people who sponsored the hoodlums.

    There are two Baales in the town – one installed by the Olubadan of Ibadanland and the other was installed by the Osile of Oke-Ona, Oba Adedapo Adewale Tejuoso lately.

    Residents of the troubled community were as at yesterday living in fear following the attack.

  • Hounded by hoodlums

    Hounded by hoodlums

    Benue residents lament spate of murder, robbery, kidnapping as govt hunts for kingpin

    Amnesty programme was a carrot approach —Governor

    hoodlumBENUE, the Middle Belt state that hosts one of Africa’s biggest rivers, enjoys unrivaled reputation as the food basket of the nation. But the callous assassination of no fewer than 10 political bigwigs in different parts of the state and the gruesome murder of no fewer than 1000 Agatu men and women by killer herdsmen have combined with numerous cases of high profile robbery and kidnapping to threaten a change in its reputation from a food basket to a basket of trouble.

    Residents of the state who spoke with The Nation in different interviews were full of lamentations at the turn that crime has taken in spite of relentless efforts by the Samuel Ortom administration and the security agencies to stem the tide of crime in the state. It has been a case of one day, one trouble, one of them said as he lamented a trend he said has virtually led to the collapse of economic and social activities in some parts of the state.

    Some respondents, including a former Lagos State Commissioner of Police, Mr Abubakar Tsav, readily attributed the remote cause of the endless bloodshed to the proliferation of light arms allegedly distributed to thugs by politicians while they hinge the immediate cause of the crisis witnessed in recent times on the amnesty the government granted some notorious criminals in the state as one of the measures it adopted in the search for enduring peace.

    Some of them said they had feared that the measure could backfire particularly with the amnesty granted Terwase-Akwasa aka Ghana, an alleged dreaded hoodlum who is now at large and has since been declared wanted by the state government. They said their fears were rife when Gana, widely perceived as the kingpin of criminals in the state, was offered a juicy position in the implementation of the state government’s amnesty programme. This, in Tsav’s view, marked the beginning of fresh trouble in the beleaguered state.

    Speaking in a telephone chat with our correspondent, Tsav said: “The whole problem started after the governor gave amnesty to some hoodlums in the state. One notorious criminal, Gana, was given amnesty because he was needed for election.

    “The Gana guy was a kingpin who had large followership. Instead of sending him to the police to decriminalise him and put him under a police supervisee, he was given a contract as produce inspector. He was to be collecting revenue in the whole 23 local government areas from people who are transporting yams, oranges and other produce outside Benue State.

    “But the woman in charge of Benue internal revenue service said they would not allow him to operate except he registered as a company. Gana and his boys started collecting huge sums of money across the state while at the same time carrying out nefarious activities. They en gaged in kidnapping, robbery and other crimes. It was some of them that killed the special adviser to the governor on security.

    “Again, the guns that the hoodlums surrendered to the governor were not turned in to the police. We expected that, but that was not done. Gana, who has been declared wanted, has alleged that the guns were being resold to his boys. The issue is very complicated.

    “We have not heard of kidnapping in the last few days because they have formed a joint task force comprising the police, army, the SSS, and the navy. They are concentrated in Makurdi and arresting people. All the people that were granted amnesty have now been re-arrested and are now in police custody. We are expecting them to extend their activities to other places like Katsina Ala, Gboko, Otukpo and other hot spots. If they do this, the situation might be better.”

    Tsav, who expressed disappointment at the ugly developments in the once peaceful state, lamented that the menace of kidnapping was so terrible that people were being kidnapped for as low as N50, 000 ransom.

    He said: “There was a time somebody called me from Gboko. He said the situation had gone so bad because when they kidnap you, they would demand just about N50, 000. They are only out to make money.

    “There was a traditional ruler who is father to a House of Representatives member who was kidnapped for about 11 days. When he was released, I visited him in the hospital and he told me the horrors he went through in the hands of the kidnappers. He said that they blindfolded him so that he would not know where they took him to.”

    The embittered retired police commissioner advised Governor Ortom to “have an open mind towards giving security to everybody in the state. The joint task force invaded Gana’s house and mowed down his building. He is now at large. The amnesty programme was mainly organised for him, and he was the only one that was given a job after the amnesty programme. The other people that were given amnesty were not given a job, and that was why they went out to commit more deadly crimes.

    “I speak with the present Commisioner of Police because he served under me when I was the Commissioner of Police in Lagos State. I know his capability and he knows mine too.”

    A resident of the state who gave his name as Comrade Samuel Ogbole, believes that the release of Gana and his subsequent appointment by the government sent a wrong signal to the teeming unemployed youths in the state, because it gave the impression that all they needed to get government attention was to be involved in criminal activities.

    Ogbole, who works with a frontline non-governmental organisation in the state, feared that the future of the state would be in grave danger if conscious and sincere efforts were not put into solving the security problems in the state.

    He said: “The future of Benue will be obliterated if things continue this way. The state is predominantly an agrarian state. Most people are rural dwellers. The small urban areas and townships are being overrun by cultists and criminals.

    “People are afraid of putting up investments because they fear that it might be overrun by hoodlums. People are even afraid to come home when they have holidays. Parents are afraid of the future of their children growing up in this place.

    “It is also worthy of mention that with increasing wage bill and rising unemployment, a lot of young people are beginning to sympathise with this crime called kidnapping. I have had a cause to chat with a lot of young people in the state and they have all been filled with the fear of hired assassination.

    “For instance, the case of an Igbo woman who was killed and her body dumped at the roundabout was not just a case of kidnapping but also a case of murder. They kidnapped her and before the family could negotiate her ransom, they had killed her. There has been a lot of unease in the town.

    “There are also cases of complicity by security operatives. Some of the young boys that are into cultism, at times get arrested but are freed without being prosecuted.”

    He added: “The more the economic problems we have, the more the social problems will be. There is a serious division between families alleged of hiding their relations who have perpetrated some crimes and those whose relations were victims. There is increasing tension in the economic life of the state because people cannot go out once it is 7 pm. You can imagine where an entire state goes to sleep as early as 7 pm.

    “You can only go out if you have your car because security operatives don’t allow motorcycles to operate at night again. Incidentally, the motorcycle is the commonest and cheapest means of transport in the state, especially in Makurdi metropolis and Ortukpo.

    “It is a cold thing for people to be trapped in their homes. And once they are trapped outside their homes, they will be forced to sleep outside because nobody knows when the boys will strike.”

    Ogbole noted that “the remote cause of the problem is the proliferation of light arms. Politicians arm young people in the society with dangerous arms and ammunition and engage them during political campaigns. This is like training a mafia, and giving no job to them at the end of the day. When you do this, the mafia will find job for himself.

    “After arming these young people for election, once the election period is over and they have nobody to terrorise with the weapons again, they will begin to use it to terrorise the neigbourhood and innocent people in the society.

    “In the last few years, we have had cases of kidnap attempts and little children kidnapped for ritual purposes. The more recent case that has kept the state on its toes is that of the young man named Gana, who used to be a thug for the PDP back in the days. But he was one of the people that the state governor granted amnesty when he decided to do that for criminals who were ready to surrender their weapons.

    “The young man was granted amnesty when he decided to give up some of his arms, but most of us were worried because we suspected that the motive was not totally altruistic. We had fears because as soon as the guy was given amnesty, he was immediately given an important position above genuine young people in the state.

    “It doesn’t work like that because these people use those arms for stealing. You need to rehabilitate them first and put them through a normal life process. But that was not done. He probably was not used to doing things in a civil manner and thus started having problems with people in the government.

    “He was accused of assassinating the special adviser to the governor on security matters. The man in his dying words said in the local dialect, ‘Gana, you are the one killing me.’

    “People in the neighbourhood heard it and reported to the police. Police launched a manhunt for him but they have not found him. This has caused a lot of problems as he appeared to have brought in a lot of arms again and perhaps recruited new boys, making Benue to be under siege.

    “In Otupko where I am, we have had cases of four kidnaps. Two of the victims were set free after ransoms were paid while the other two died.”

    Though, Agatu, one of the communities that suffered massive loss of the members and their properties has not experienced the challenges of kidnapping and gruesome murder, the residents said that fear of what is happening in the urban areas of the state has always given them serious reasons to worry.

    One of them, who identified himself simply as Mustapha, said: “We have not been recording such here in Agatu. The menace is more pronounced in the cities. But in spite of this, we have been feeling very uncomfortable and always careful about where we go and and what time of the day we go out.

    “The strategy we have adopted now is to go out in groups. We don’t just walk about individually anymore. We also tie our children to our legs. By this I mean that we keep close watch over them. This is a trying period for us and we pray that the evil days will be over very soon.”

    In a telephone chat with our correspondent, the President of All Middle Belt Youth Forum, Comrade Moses Aluh, blamed the growing wickedness of man towards his fellow man as the root cause of the problem.

    He said: “I see the problem from the angle of moral decadence. We are in a situation where people have lost respect for the sanctity of human life. The case of the reverend father that was killed shows that the criminal activities are beyond penchant for pecuniary gains because after he was abducted, ransom was paid. If they were mere kidnappers, they would not have killed him.

    “Now, many people outside the state cannot travel home because they are filled with fears. This portends grave dangers for the economic and social development of the state because traders who come from neighbouring states to trade with our people will be scared to go there for fear of being kidnapped or killed by stray bullets when gunmen strike.

    “When this begins to happen, the farm produce that our people would want to sell will end up rotting and leaving them with no money to attend to the needs of their families. This would further increase the spate of social problems because the higher the number of hungry young people in the society, the higher the menace of social problems.

    “When social problems are endemic in any state, no investor will be encouraged to put his money there.  This is why we are saying that lip service should not be paid to the issue of security in the state, and on no account should it be politicised because the interest of the state and the people at large supersedes that of any politician.

    “All hands must be on the deck to sanitise the state and make it the great food basket of the nation it has also been known as.”

    Governor Ortom,however, debunked  the alleagation. Speaking through his Special Adviser, Media and ICT,  Mr Tahav Agerzua, the governor denied that the amnesty programme was designed to favour Ghana. According to him, the programme was not desined to favour any particular person or group.

    He said: “Close watchers of events in Benue State can testify that Governor Ortom neither armed nor used thugs or militia to prosecute his 2015 governorship campaign. The amnesty program did not focus on Mr. Akwaza. Its history indicates that he surrendered on the last day of the third month, and requested a one month extension to enable him persuade more members of his group to also turn in.

    “However, he surrendered close to 100 assorted weapons making him the greatest beneficiary of the program by virtue of the weapons and followership that he turned in.

    It was impossible to execute all aspects of the program like overseas training under one year.

    But Mr. Akwaza was made a revenue agent in order to provide an incentive for him and his group to have a financial base that would discourage them from returning to their old ways as an interim measure.

    “From the magnitude of the arms recovered, over 600 assorted weapons and ammunition, and the number of people involved,  one can say that the first part of the amnesty program, the carrot approach, was a huge success.“The peace that pervaded the state in the aftermath and the testimony of indigenes as well as many organizations within and outside Nigeria also reflect the success.

    Yet the program, right from the beginning, was designed to be in two parts with the second as the stick approach.”

  • ‘The hoodlums destroying Ekpeye land are our own children’

    ‘The hoodlums destroying Ekpeye land are our own children’

    Ekpeye land in Rivers State was relatively quiet, peaceful and of no news significance until the July 13, 2012 Okugbe fuel tanker disaster which claimed no fewer than 230 lives.

    Ekpeye Land is made up of two Local Government areas, Ahoada East and Ahoada West , both situated on the coast line of Orashi river close to Bayelsa State from the West and Ogba/Egbema/Ndoni Local Government Area on the East.

    The 2013 flood, which swept across Ekpeye land and submerged homes, farmlands, killing and sacking families and their members among others, also brought the area into media reckoning.

    The violence which characterised the last general elections saw Ekpeye at the receiving end.  The land has not rested from mourning and crying from the murder of their love ones, and family members by youths suspected to be cult boys.

    No fewer than 100 persons have been killed in the area since mid-2014. There has hardly been any month, week or even day that passes without news of murder of person or persons being heard. Some were killed and their heads taken away; others were killed and their heads left but their bodies taken away or thrown into the river, creeks.

    Cult groups, such as the Icelanders and the Greenlanders, De-gbam and De-well group or the most recently the Ekpeye Liberation Movement are believed to be behind the killings .

    Although the latest group has not been associated with any killing, and their enemies not yet defined, but they reportedly claimed responsibility of bombing one Akarolo pipeline in Ahoada East.

    One of the groups, months back, invaded and attacked the residence of their highly revered monarch, (Eze Ekpeye Logbo), Eze Robinson O. Robinson, at Ahoada East, destroying cars parked and other valuables.

    They also killed the son of the Anglican priest who led the first move to find peace. The attack on him devastated and forced him out as the chairman of “Peace, security and reconciliation committee” of the two Ahoada LGAs.

    However, the reconstituted  “Peace, security and reconciliation committee”, led by another cleric, Friday Anthony, fondly called F.O.C., recently organised a one-day fasting and prayer to seek God’s intervention on the situation. The programme, which held at the Headquarters of Ahoada East, was well attended.

    Eze Robinson said: “It is very unpalatable, disheartening shocking. Degrading, sacrilegious and unpatriotic for some youths in Ekpeye land to sporadically and ‘chameleonically’ disguised themselves to fight, kill, kidnap, assassinate, steal, rape, commit Arson, Armed Robbery and go into war with their own blessed communities in Ekpeye land.

    “All economic activities in Ekpeye land have shattered and crumbled. No Ekpeye man or woman goes to the farm again to grow crops for the future. Our children do not go to school again, traders don’t go to the markets again to sell their wares. Tenants have deserted Ahoada main town and all Ekpeye communities.

    “Strangers (none indigenes), have all ran away to Port Harcourt for safety, because of our children who have decided to be hoodlums/criminals, committing so many atrocities at our watch and detriment.

    “Let us mirror ourselves and watch the communities we now ran to for shelter and security. Are there no youths in the areas we have run to? Don’t the youths there have parents and relatives to kidnap, assassinate, steal from and rob with arms, burn their houses, rape their wives, mothers and sisters as our Ekpeye youths are doing here?”

    He accused parents of encouraging the criminality in the land, when he said: “The hoodlums destroying Ekpeye land are our own children. They bring all the loots to our houses while we watch them with enthusiasm. Are we not ashamed that our sons are among the criminals that are unleashing mayhem on our land?

    “How can a responsible indigene of Ekpeye choose to live in the forest like wild beast when there are houses and homes to comfortably live in and thank God for creating them human being? Are they blaming and asking God why He did not create them to be wild animals that are living in the forests? Let them note that no one that has ever challenged the authority of God that was not visited with doom, King Nebuchadnezzar and lot’s wife are classical examples.

    “Let me once again plead with all Ekpeye sons and daughters who have contributed in one way or the other, to disparage, disintegrate, annihilate the unity of Ekpeye land to have a second thought and stop sponsoring the hoodlums by providing them with arms, ammunitions.

    “I beseech all my children who have taking to the paths of militancy to return home and surrender their guns to the police for safety sake and reunification of Ekpeye land, and also ensure your names are subsequently profiled for amnesty program and reintegration.”

    The Care Taker Committee (CTC) chairman of Ahoada East, Britain Ewor, admitted grave security challenge of cultism, kidnaping and other criminalities.

    Ewor expressed the willingness of the government to ensure sustained safety across the area and noted that his administration’s operation “Know your neighbour” pet project should be encouraged.

    “It is obvious that security in the two LGAs in Ekpeye land (Ahoada West and Ahoada East) is at its lowest ebb. All of our communities have suffered one form of insecurity ort the other, ranging from loss of loved ones to outright destruction of property.

    “There are others that are wounded either physically or psychologically. As a government we are doing our best to the safety of all, but it is shocking when the people easily compromise security.

    “The hoodlums who daily maim and kill our people live among us but our people either for fear; fail to volunteer information that could assist the security agents; I am appalled by this.

    “In as much as it is not within my powers to pass judgement on the grievances that gave rise to the present security challenges, it remains our right to condemn acts that are not part of our known norms and values.

    “The various killings and wanton destruction of property are alien to us and must be condemned. Ekpeye land has been so much streamed with blood, this is unacceptable and I condemn the perpetrators of the callous, senseless and wicked acts.”

    Rev. Anthony said it would take only God to ensure lasting security in Ekpeye land.

    He said: “As responsible citizens of Nigeria, we have quickly realised that the security and peace of our land will be possible only by the infinite grace and boundless mercy of our Supreme God.

    “This is why we have set up three types of prayer for Ekpeye land between now and October: Mercy prayer (already been held), Prayer of Peace and restoration and Prayer of thanksgiving.”

    The committee members warned against further killing of the ‘bad boys’ by the vigilante members of the community.

    “The Vigilante people must not go after the aggrieved sons and daughters of Ekpeye land and vice versa. The role of the vigilante however from now henceforth is limited to fighting thieves and armed robbers   caught disturbing the peace of our people.

    “No robber caught will be set free. Let there be calmness everywhere, we restate at this point that peace must return and gunfire must cease from all quarters in the land.”

    In his keynote message, title: “The roll of the Church in times like this” Rev. Ben Avor of First Baptist Church regretted that there is no respite despite the efforts by members of the committee to appeal and several visits to the youths camps to make them see reason to stop further killing and maiming.

    “The activities of these boys have disarrayed, communities destroyed, families members have been killed, there are weeping, crying and mourning in families because of insecurity in the land,” he said.

     

  • Affliction will not rise again

    While we thought we had achieved relative peace as the Nigerian Army heavily battled the Boko Haram Insurgency and banished its embers feather by feather, wing by wing in the North East; Nigerians could now heave a sigh of relief of peace gradually returning to its dwelling as a nation popularly regarded to be the Haven of peace.

    While we had stopped for a moment to catch our exhausting breaths; another evil again arose in the east- they took to arms and brandished leaves: taking off exactly where the Niger Delta militants stopped- avenging their grievances by blowing oil pipelines into black fumes, further desecrating their land with more self- imposed oil spills.

    It is said that evil rebirths itself. One big evil though cleared will regenerate itself unless there is a great atonement.

    And so it happened that under our noses; the inevitable happened. Hoodlums migrated first to Ikroudu to showcase themselves as they ruthlessly inflicted terror on various residents, before we knew it; they had let themselves in through the inland water way at Iba and abducted the Oba: Not without putting his youngest wife in a state of coma, killing his night guard and making themselves scarce through the river where they once appeared.

    The story of Fatoki, in Egan town, near Igando; Alimosho, a fast developing suburb can only be told in hushed tones. When the one million boys- a professional armed robbery gang who, also termed to be gunmen migrants accessed the little town through the border at Odo where the inland water way leads to Ogun state are not left out of this terror filled unrest.

    Rumour has it that this notorious gang reportedly handed a letter to the Igando Local Government Area police promising to visit heavily armed and dangerous last Thursday after sporadically shooting innocent people in the street earlier on Tuesday the same week.

    Rumour also has it that while they are heavily fortified with diabolical voodoo; one that prevents them from being shot as some police men were rumoured to have absconded their duty posts last Tuesday when the reported hoodlums paid a fearful visit.

    Just like many lawful abiding citizens; it has been a wonder; a question why these uprisings have migrated from the North to the East and now the West. Who is left out or who is next? The South? We can only hope to God to keep us dear.

    The matter, very serious has thankfully alerted members of the Lagos State House of Assembly- a matter which the senators have condemned and deliberated fortification of the border towns.

    They only spoke about the abducted Iba Monarch and Ikroudu rampage. We can only hope the cries of the residents of the Egan community are heard.

    Have you stopped to ask yourself where is Mr President?

    Is it until these “little” cases involve a bomb blast that the Presidency will issue a press statement and condemn? How long will the lawmakers dwell on Dino Melaye’s recent word brawl or the CCT trial or Fani Kayode’s freedom at last. He should do a huge Thanksgiving now; and write a book on how much he has suffered.

    Well, back to trending matters.

    But I have wondered whether these simultaneous attacks are a by-product of an old proclaimed bill now being put to act- The banishment of itinerant hawkers.

    Sources say this bill has been signed far back as 2004 but was the Lagos State Governor too fast to stretch his hands?

    Giving the itinerant workers a timetable- a workable timeline would have done that job better. It is not every time the father scolds the child.

    But must we fold our hands and let this reign of terror ravage our lands?

    No, God forbid! Whatever it will take that affliction would not rise a second time must be done. Get the army, get the Navy but don’t let this words die.

    Affliction will not rise again.

     

  • Havens of hoodlums

    A mild drama played out in Festac Town area of Lagos State last week when a suspected Boko Haram member was smoked out of an abandoned 40-foot container in the premises of a church where he locked himself up in a bid to unleash terror on innocent worshippers. The abandoned container was obviously the last place one would expect that a terrorist would hide in order to carry out his godless act.

    The suspect identified as Adam and five others were reportedly arrested the same day at different locations by a team of Civilian Joint Task Force (CJTF), led by the Seriki Hausawa in Ijora part of Lagos, Alhaji Mustapha Mohammed.

    Narrating how Adam was picked up from the container, Mohammed said: “We got an intelligence report that Adam was hiding inside an abandoned 40-foot container on a church premises. It was the security man attached to the church that hid him inside the container. When we arrived at the church premises, we headed straight to where the container was kept. The security man attached to the church was not around then. The container was locked from the outside with a padlock. The pastor of the church was embarrassed to see us. But when we explained our mission to him, he and others stood aside to see. By the time we broke the padlock, Adam was hiding in the far corner of the container. As soon as the pastor sighted the suspect, he started singing praises.”

    Adam’s choice of hideout, findings showed, is one among the numerous others that have been created by criminal elements to carry out their ungodly activities. Latest developments showed that they have also included worship centres in their hideouts. That much was revealed when the police in Ogun State recently invaded the auditorium of a popular church in Lagos and arrested 236 suspects inside the auditorium.

    The state’s Police Public Relations Officer (PPRO), DSP Muyiwa Adejobi, said the exercise followed series of reports and intelligence gathering on how people with questionable character use the auditorium as refuge after committing crime. Adejobi said among the 236 arrested, 165 were males while 71 were females.

    He said: “Our men carried out the raid in the early hours of today after a series of report that criminals have taken the auditorium as hideout. As early as 2 am, they arrested 236 persons, 165 are males while 71 are females.”

    The PPRO said the suspects were being screened, adding that those who had genuine reasons to be at the church auditorium would be released, while those who could not identify themselves would be prosecuted.

    A pastor who simply identified himself as Sampson told The Nation that it is not out of place for security operatives to keep eagle eyes on religious centres, adding: “It is very important for security operatives to visit religious houses where a large number of people gather from time to time to flush out criminal elements who are fast using religious houses as hideouts.

    “Mind my word, I said visit, not raid. If they begin to raid, innocent people will begin to run away. But the truth is that criminals come to hide in religious houses because they have the belief that they are safe in them.

    “If you go to some mountains outside Lagos State, you will find certain people in those places from time to time. This gave birth to the joke that if you commit a crime in the city and run to those mountains to seek refuge among the children of God, nobody will ever trace you to the place.

    “There is nothing that men of God can do about this because they are not trained to identify and fish out criminals. But they can work with the police to make sure that criminals don’t turn religious houses into their haven.”

    While worship centres appear to be the new haven for crime-minded people, checks showed that slums have for decades remained a veritable breeding grounds for hoodlums. Checks across various slums in Lagos State showed that they are breeding grounds for hoodlums.

    In their ‘hood’, as they usually describe their dens, the hoodlums, who often look dingy, brazenly engage in consumption of all manner of hard drugs and gambling. They watch suspiciously and are quick to beat a retreat each time they see strange faces suspected to be security operatives.

    Residents of some of the slums told our correspondent that a number of the hoodlums work in conjunction with criminals in other places to carry out illicit acts.

    “Some of these guys work as spies for other criminals operating in different areas,” said a slum resident named Boyo. “They know about most robbery attacks within and outside the neighbourhood. There is always a kind of synergy between the hoodlums in the area that is attacked and the ones that are coming to attack.

    “If you don’t know, different gangs control the various waterways and they work together. At times, some of the hoodlums in the attacked environment survey the land and give information about financial institutions and privileged individuals in the community to their colleagues in other areas.

    “It is a big network that transcends Lagos State. The huge challenge is that many innocent children are quick to team up with these guys because they get cheap money and indulge in extravagant lifestyles. Most of the children in such neighbourhoods have little or no opportunity of learning good character because all they are exposed to is substance abuse, gambling and naked immorality.

    “Unfortunately, some people who were doing legitimate businesses have been forced to join them because of economic hardship. We are really in a big mess.”

    Benson, a resident of the Takwa Bay slum on Lagos Island, has this to say about the activities of hoodlums in the area: “They have opened brothels, drinking and smoking joints where the souls of innocent ones are sold to the devil. We are not comfortable with all that but nobody can challenge them. If you challenge them, they would come at night to pick you up and throw you into the lagoon to feed the fish.

    “I guess that the closure of the hot joints at Bar Beach compounded the woes of this area and its environs, as the criminal elements driven out of the place have found their ways into various communities, including ours.”

    Also serving as hideouts for criminals are motor parks. In various motor parks around the city, criminals who masquerade as transporters loiter around, waiting for opportunities to attack and dispossess unsuspecting commuters of their valuables.

    The practice is prevalent in Oshodi where underage children who pretend to be working as bus conductors are daily recruited, groomed and used to snatch handbags, phones and other valuables from passers-by. From one part of the rail line that runs through the area to the other, the miscreants often gather in groups, gambling, smoking and drinking heavily.

    A commercial driver who identified himself simply as Bashy said: “A number of these boys ran away from their parents as young as 10-year-olds because they wanted unlimited freedom. All they do is to help you call passengers and get N100 for their service. That is what they do in the day time. But when night falls, they stay at strategic corners to attack people. If you are receiving a call in a vehicle and you are not careful enough, they will snatch your phone from you. They also rape people when they have the opportunity to do so. In spite of the state government’s efforts at flushing them out of the area, their number has continued to increase. If care is not taken, they will return Oshodi to the old days where criminals held sway.”

    The Nation’s investigation also revealed that brothels, hotels and clubs serve as hideouts for different classes of criminals. The hotels, it was gathered, serve as hideouts for criminals of higher class and operations, while brothels serve as ‘homes’ for those of lower class.

    Findings showed that some of the hoodlums work with commercial sex workers who often help them to keep their arms and ammunition. In fact, a top member of hotel owners association at a recent security meeting attended by the Lagos State Commissioner of Police, Fatai Owoseni, complained about how policemen raided her hotel in search of suspected criminals without alerting the management.

    A socialite, who didn’t want his name in print, said: “Hotels are not meant for saints; it is a place where people of different characters visit. Aside from people who do legitimate deals, many criminals who do big time deal use big hotels as hideouts. They lodge in hotels and dress decently to deceive even the most intelligent security officer.

    “They may not keep their weapons with them to avoid giving themselves out. Some years ago, some big time robbers were apprehended at Ring Road area of Ibadan in a hotel where they lodged. It was the management that exposed them because they suspected their activities and movements.

    “But criminals’ use of hotels as hideouts is not a practice as common as the use of brothels for the same purpose. In fact, brothel is a synonym for criminals’ den. Majority of the guys who hang out at brothels don’t do legitimate business. They are robbers, pickpockets or drug peddlers.

    “Some armed robbers keep their weapons with the prostitutes in such brothels and in some cases use them as spies to attack their targets. Some of the commercial sex workers combine acting as informants for criminals with their primary business of sleeping with men to make money.

    “Clubs are not so much of hideouts because they often don’t operate for 24 hours. It is only those that harbour commercial sex workers that often serve as regular hideouts. What criminals use clubs to do is to stay there boozing till they would go out for operations.”

    Markets, which before now only acted as venues for buying and selling, our correspondent’s findings revealed, are another growing hideout for in hoodlums, particularly in Lagos State.

    Our correspondent who visited some of the markets reported that most major markets in the state are natural habitats for hoodlums. Like in other hideouts, they have their territories in the markets where they carry out their nefarious activities without being challenged by the traders.

    A trader at Ketu Market, who gave his name as Afis, said: “They are so many here in the market. They have several joints where they gather to smoke and do other dirty things. Some of them hang around some local cinemas from where they go out to attack people. Some of them stay in the brothels right here in the market.

    “We know them and always avoid meddling in their affairs. If they suspect that you are planning to give them out, you will go in for it. But if you leave them to their ways of life, they will not attack you. The security operatives are not unaware of their presence in this market. They know how to settle themselves.”

    The popular Alaba Rago Market along the Lagos/Badagry Expressway wears innocuous look on the outside, but its inside is a mindboggling den where miscreants enjoy free reign. A visitor to the market does not need to be told the kind of people that operate in the area. Dishevelled young men and women walk about with jumbo size wraps of Indian hemp and other hard drugs in their hands. Prostitutes, including teenage ones and others in the twilight of their anti-social profession, line the street waiting for customers.

    A youthful resident of the area said: “This is a no-man’s land. It is a place for hard guys. If you don’t belong, you have no business here. We run things here, things don’t run us. The traders have their zone and we have our zone, but we all operate in this same market. Whichever way you see it, na business all of us dey do.”

    Refuse dumps would hardly come to mind as possible hideouts for criminals, but it is one of the numerous places hoodlums now operate from to unleash terror on residents of Owodunni area, a community on LASU\Igando Expressway, Lagos. The area houses one of the biggest dumpsites in the state. Some residents of the area told our correspondent that they have been attacked many times by hoodlums who use the refuse dump as their hideout.

    “We are always attacked by armed robbers who hide in the dumpsite. They come from there to attack us. After robbing us, they immediately retreat into the dumpsite and we dare not venture into the place with them because we don’t know the calamity that could befall anyone who tries to,” said Babajide, a resident.

    The list of hideouts for criminals will be incomplete without a mention of uncompleted or abandoned buildings. They remain one of the oldest dens of criminals. The Executive Secretary of Victoria Island and Ikoyi Security and Environment Trust (VIISET) and Victoria Island and Ikoyi Residents Association (VIIRA), Alhaji Abdulateef Muse, spoke about the challenges posed by uncompleted buildings and canals to residents of the areas.

    He said: “People who stay in uncompleted buildings are not identifiable and their motives are always not good. They often launch attacks on people openly and covertly. We have compiled a list of all the uncompleted houses in the areas and forwarded them to the state government, the local government and the police for necessary action. It is left for the police to raid such places.

    “The government on its part can do well to identify the owners of such properties or, in the extreme, revoke their licences. Besides abandoned buildings, canals also constitute security threats. We have cases of people being attacked, especially when they want to pass the front of the canals. The canals can serve as places for stockpiling weapons because big trees and banana trees have occupied the whole place, making it possible for criminals to hide there.”

    He added: “Recently at Ojuolobun area, a hoodlum entered a compound and ransacked the whole place. The CCTV was able to record him. The footage has been given to the police with the hope that the culprit will be indentified and fished out. Hoodlums congregate in dirty environments a lot. That is why it is important to extend the cleaning of the highways to the inner streets too. When the inner streets are dirty, they tend to attract hoodlums.

    “We are not leaving any stone unturned in addressing security issues in the area. We have charged the residents to report suspicious movements, strangers, among others. Our instruction is that they should observe and report whatever security threat they see.”

    Proffering solution to the challenge of hideouts, the Executive Secretary of Nigeria Institute of Industrial Security, Wilson Esangbedo, said: By dark place, we mean places where security controls are very loose. Here in Lagos, places like Oshodi and Agege used to be notorious dark spots until the former governor of the state, Babatunde Fashola, dislodged hoodlums from those areas. Bridges also used to be dark spots until Governor Akinwumi Ambode started the light up Lagos project.

    “What is required to flush out hoodlums from dark spots is community policing. Community-based associations should rise up to the occasion and devise means of protecting their members. They should strive to identify dark spots and inform the police about this so that they can flush them out. The police also need to create awareness about this so that the people would work with them.”

    He added: “There is nothing the government can do about hoodlums using religious houses as hideouts because they are places that are open to everybody. It is only when there is information about such that the police can be tipped off to apprehend such criminals.

    “The police can also do nothing about flushing out criminals from motor parks except they work with the leaderships of the transport unions. The leaders of transport unions know their genuine members and those who are not. Working with the groups will help to rid the parks of criminals.

    Former Lagos State Commissioner of Police, Alhaji Abubarkar Tsav, however, disagreed that community policing is the solution to the use of various places as hideouts. He noted that the major solution is for the government to provide employment opportunities for the teeming jobless people.

    He said: “Hotels and isolated places are some of the areas that serve as hideouts for criminals. But the solution is not in community policing. There is abject poverty in the country. Many people are suffering and going through hardship. This explains why dark spots and criminal activities are on the rise.

    “The police force has been depleted. But the solution in the long run is for the government to provide employment opportunities for the large number of jobless citizens. If this is not done, even if you put policemen in every house, the problem will continue.”

  • Panic as land grabbers clash in Festac

    Panic as land grabbers clash in Festac

    There was pandemonium at Festac Town in Amuwo Odofin, Lagos, on Friday morning after some hoodlums engaged in gun duel.

    The hoodlums, suspected to be land grabbers were said to have clashed around Fifth Avenue, allegedly shooting sporadically.

    It was gathered that the sound of sporadic gunshots frightened residents who assumed that bank robbers have stormed Festac Town again.

    Rumour soon spread across the state that armed robbers had besieged the Fourth avenue branches of Diamond and First City Monument Banks (FCMB).

    Although the broadcast message claimed an innocent citizen was killed by stray bullet, security sources dismissed the story.

    “There was no bank robbery in Festac. Nothing of such happened.  The only thing that happened was that some land grabbers engaged in gun duel around Fifth Avenue. They were fighting among themselves and policemen were deployed to the area and calm restored,” said a policeman.

    A vigilante in the area said some policemen from the Rapid Response Squad (RRS) and the Festac Police Division were deployed when the rumour of bank robbery went viral, adding that when they got to the banks, businesses were going on smoothly.

  • Fishermen lament hoodlums’ attacks in Rivers 

    Fishermen, Wednesday, raised the alarm over incessant raids, robberies and attacks on their fishing settlements located along the Bonny waterways, Bonny, Rivers State.

    It was gathered that the fishing camps comprise mainly Ilaje and Ijaw settlers who hail from different states in the Niger Delta region.

    The camps are identified by their names as Forupaka (Ago-Eri), Mumakiri (Ajegunle/Bayelsa) and Iwokiri fishing communities.

    One of the fishermen from Bayelsa a state who spoke in confidence said attacks on people living in the camps had become a daily occurrence adding that their lives were in danger.

    He further identified the hoodlums as a gang of criminals involved in sea piracy and armed robbery camped close to Oyorokoto.

    He said: “They are a gang of gun-wielding criminals involved in sea piracy, armed robbery and killings camped near Oyorokoto from where they terrorize the communities in Bonny territories.

    “About a month ago they killed a young Ilaje fisherman in cold blood without provocation. It has become their daily routine to extort money from the mainly Ilaje and Ijaw settlers

    “Twice in less than two months they have sacked these communities forcing the people to flee to other fishing settlements in Akwa Ibom and Bayelsa states”.

    He said the gang was being led by one Felix, who said personally stormed the camps on June 8, ransacking the settlements and injuring fishermen.

    “When they came on June 8, they chased people upon down and many people abandoned their camps and ran into the forest. They almost killed one of the youths.

    “The government should quickly deploy the security to arrest this mad gang before they waste more lives,” he said.

  • Chaos as hoodlums vandalise 10 cars, destroy houses

    Chaos as hoodlums vandalise 10 cars, destroy houses

    No fewer than 10 cars were vandised by suspect cultists on Tuesday at Olafimihan, Mariamo Ajoke and Okunade Street, Ilasamaja-Mushin, Lagos.

    The incident occurred around 10:25pm, when one of the hoodlums approached a young girl for love and the girl refused his proposed.

    A resident, who declined to give her name, said: “We are all outside taking fresh breeze, when some boys stopped a young girl and start ‘toasting’ her and the girl snub them. One of the boys then come from behind and slap the girl.”

    The mother of the girl, who was watching the scenario, came angrily to grab the boys and the suspected cultist retaliated with blow on the woman face.

    In order to settle the fight, Dino, a trader, came to the scene to make peace was stabbed on the head by hoodlums.

    “I didn’t have any intention to fight the boys, I was born and raised here. All I wanted to do is to make peace reign. I didn’t know they are with bottle, they smashed it on my head and ran away,” he said.

    The Nation gathered the suspect cult gangs make a reprisal around 12:00am as they started threw bottles at houses and damaging windscreen of vehicles parked along the streets.

    When our reporter visited the battle area, broken bottles and burnt tyre are seen disperse the streets.

    A man with cutlass, suspected to be one of the securities in the area, said: “It was a sleepless night for me and my colleagues, some hoodlums, numbering about 14, armed with cutlasses and bottles invade the street, throwing bottles to houses and smashing windscreen of car parked.”

    The security man further said the cult gang left when and he mobilized some of his colleagues.

    “Parading the street to checked the damaged done, I notice they went other round to jump fence from Afa Nda Street to Olafimihan with the aim to rob Alhaji house.”

    The hoodlum took to their heels when police came and fire guns in the air.

    One of the residents, whose car was vandalised, said she did not know her car had been wrecked by the hoodlums until one of her neigbour come to woke her up from sleep.

    “Mama Kayode, came to woke up on Tuesday morning that my vehicle had vandalised. I was think maybe a car bash my vehicle, until they told me its hoodlums.”

    Another resident, who also had his car windscreens destroyed during the riot, said while he was parking last night, he notice a noise argument.

    “I got home last yesterday due to terrible traffic, as I was parking my vehicle. I heard a gunshot and noise. I thought it’s just a play, I woke up this morning and my car was terrible damage.”

    An aged-women, identify as Mama Shotayo, cry for help.

    “Please ooo, tell Police to leave my three children; they are not involved in the fight ooo. They want to settle the fight ni ooo”

    Residents called on the police to provide adequate protection to the residences.

    However, the case was said to have been reported by one of the resident at Olosan Police Station, Mushin.