Tag: Militants

  • Two policemen feared dead in battle with militants

    Two policemen feared dead in battle with militants

    •DPO, others injured 

    •Militants’ leader’s house,       Ijaw shrine destroyed

    Gunfires echoed in Igando, Lagos, yesterday as policemen battled militants on the waterway.

    Two policemen were feared killed and scores of persons, including the Igando Divisional Police Officer (DPO), and four of his men wounded.

    The militants were said to have fled with their injured colleagues when they came under heavy fire.

    The over 15 militants invaded Ewedogbon community in Igando through the river leading to Totowu, harassing residents and boat passengers.

    On being confronted by police, they were said to have returned to reinforce.

    They returned hours later and were again confronted by the police.

    The Nation learnt that the DPO and his injured men have been hospitalised.

    Some residents told our reporter on phone that sporadic gunshots still rang out about 1.30pm in Moshe and Totowu waterside communities.

    The streets were deserted; many remained indoors as the police and soldiers moved in to restore calm.

    A resident, who works with the state government, lamented that the militants’ action is forcing many to relocate from their homes.

    He said: “As I was dressing up to leave for work this morning, I got a call from a junior colleague that I should change my route because there was a gun battle between the police and militants and one policeman was killed in the process. Now I have to pay N2000 to get to work instead of N100”.

    He said the that trouble started few months ago when militants began attacking residents on the waterway.

    “They rob us on the boat daily and constantly harass our women. But the situation grew from bad to worse on Friday when they attacked Moshe village and killed a guard, who was a member of Oodua People’s Congress (OPC).

    “All through the weekend, we lived in fear because those that left their homes came back with sad tales of how the militants attacked nine boats on the waterway.”

    He praised the government, noting that though the communities affected are in Ogun, only the Lagos government has been supporting them through their ordeal.

    Earlier, a resident of Ewedogbon community sent a Save Our Soul (SOS) via social media to the police and the government to quickly act as the militants were on the rampage.

    “Please help us call emergency lines right now, Ewedogbon area of Igando, LASU Road is on war. Niger Delta militants are killing people right now. No one can call or go out. I am an eyewitness, please, help us spread the information,” the resident  said in an urgent WhatsApp message sent around 8am.

    According to him, the policemen who came to the area have run away as the militants had occupied everywhere.

    “The police that came have run back, the militants have occupied everywhere right now in Ewedogbon. They just broke our house’s main gate right now,” he said.

    A top police officer said the police were aware of the invasion, saying that policemen have been drafted to the area to secure lives and properties.

    The Nation learnt that Rapid Response Squad (RRS) operatives stormed the community with four Armoured Personnel Carriers (APCs) and six patrol vans.

    A policeman attached to RRS told The Nation that the operatives chased the militants away.

    “We (RRS operatives) arrived on the scene around 6:30am and chased them away. They have escaped with their boats, but some of them escaped with bullets’ wounds. They were many, they are close to twenty. We don’t know where they came from,” he said.

    RRS, it was learnt, deployed drone to trace the militants’ movement as they ran through the waterway which leads to some communities including Totowu, Agbara and Kuto among others.

    RRS operatives, in their bullet proof vans, bullet proof jackets and weapons, later drove into the small community leading to the river to see if they could get any of the militants.

    Also, helicopters were seen hovering over the community.

    The militants were said to have macheted a man on Monday night prior to the invasion.

    A police source said angry residents burnt a three-bedroom flat built by some militants in the community after the police chased them away.

    “They (militants) have been there since Monday due to the fact that some of them live in that community. They have buildings there,” he said.

    He added that two RRS APCs have been stationed in the area for protection.

    Police spokesperson Dolapo Badmos, a Superintendent (SP), said the police were aware of the invasion and that everything was under control as policemen had been drafted to the area.

    She said the officers foiled an attempt by unknown gunmen to attack Igando Community.

    “Some group of people invaded the Igando area in the early hours of today (Tuesday). Our operatives positioned in strategic places in the community, were alerted and they swiftly moved in and foiled the attack. Right now, normalcy has returned to the community,” Badmos said.

    Two suspected militants, who attempted to attack the community on July 3, were arrested; three guns and ammunition were recovered from them.

    An eyewitness said the militants, who identified themselves as Ijaw, were singing as they attacked the community.

    According to him, the fracas followed a disagreement between a commercial motorcyclist Okada rider and one of the armed men. The militants were said to have refused to pay Okada man, a ride. An argument ensued, and the Okada man reportedly stoned them.

    A policeman told people were seen fleeing the community last night.

    A man said he was warned by a militants not to start the generator for The Call prayer yesterday morning.

    “It was around 5am in the morning when I wanted to put on the generator to call for morning prayer. I just saw one very young boy warning me not to start the generator if I like my life. Even though he was small, I respected myself because what he was carrying is older than my father. I didn’t initially know because he wore a big sweater reaching his kneels.”

    The Chairman of Canoe Operators Association at Isuti waterside Alhaji Nurudeen Olorunjemi said the militants have been terrorising the community for months. He said they usually intercepted canoes, robbed people and threw them into the water.

    He said: “We stopped operating since they killed a Mopol (Mobile Policeman) here on June 8 because we are not secured. Many canoe operators have died. The people living by the water have fled since then. Business is no longer as usual. Before, old women from Ogun State bring farm produce to sell. In the whole of this area nobody sleeps here. So we beg the government to help deploy men here for our safety.”

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  • Army threatens to use force if militants reject dialogue

    Army threatens to use force if militants reject dialogue

    Chief of Army Staff Lt.-Gen. Tukur Buratai yesterday warned that the Army will use force if the Niger Delta Avengers (NDA) and other militant groups reject dialogue with the Federal Government.

    Besides, Gen. Buratai said, the army will support civil authority during the elections in eight local governments, should there be a request for help.

    The office of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) in Bori-Ogoni, the headquarters of Khana Local Government Area of Rivers State, was last Friday set on fire – barely one week to the inconclusive rerun polls.

    Gen. Buratai, who was represented by the General Officer Commanding (GOC) 82 Division, Enugu, Maj.-Gen. Ibrahim Attahiru, spoke yesterday after inaugurating the two-storey administrative headquarters complex, Olympic-size swimming pool and two other projects at the 2 Brigade of the Army.

    He also inaugurated four projects at the Military Hospital on Aba Road, Port Harcourt, the Rivers State capital.

    The inauguration was attended by Rivers Governor Nyesom Wike, who was represented by Secretary to the State Government (SSG), Chief Kenneth Kobani, and the immediate past Commander of 2 Brigade, Brig.-Gen. Stevenson Olabanji, now the Commander of 3 Brigade, Kano. He initiated the inaugurated projects during his 11-month stay.

    The befitting administrative headquarters at 2 Brigade and other projects were started in January, with the foundations laid by Gen. Buratai, and completed within six months.

    The swimming pool was constructed for intensive training of army officers and men and to put an end to losing soldiers while operating in the creeks or coastal communities.

    The army chief said: “Government is still committed to dialogue (with Niger Delta militants). Whereby this cannot go on, then there could be resort to other means. The non-kinetic means has always been the source first, before government can recourse to the kinetic means (dropping bombs and using bullets, using lethal force/full military action/war or killing people).

    “So, there is the need for the Niger Delta Avengers to see reason and dialogue with government.

    “Each time the army goes out to work, it works in support of the civil authority and we will continue to do that. If there is a need for the military authority to support the civil authority (during Rivers July 30 rerun), based on need from the police, we will continue to do just that.”

    Attahiru declared that the army expected that the projects would translate to greater performance of soldiers, stressing that attention should be devoted to maintenance of the projects.

    The commander of 3 Brigade, Kano, described projects as highpoint events of his 11-month stay as commander of 2 Brigade, Port Harcourt.

    Gen. Olabanji said some soldiers of the 2 Brigade were lost, in view of their inability to swim, which necessitated the construction of the Olympic-size swimming pool – in line with the vision of the Chief of Army Staff. The projects, he said would enhance the capacity and capability of soldiers.

    The commander of 3 Brigade revealed that Gen. Buratai chose the site of the headquarters building of 2 Brigade and followed the progress of work till completion. He urged the army personnel in 2 Brigade to support the new commander, as they supported him.

  • Ikorodu residents flee homes over fear of militants

    Scores of residents of Ishawo and Igbo-Olomu in Agric area of Ikorodu, a Lagos suburb, have fled their homes following reports of invasion of the area by suspected militants.

    Eye witnesses told The Nation yesterday that pandemonium broke out in the area on Monday night when news filtered out that the militants planned to visit the area to kidnap people from their homes in the night.

    A resident Mr Kola Adesina, told The Nation that his wife moved his children to his sister’s place in Somolu since Monday and called him on his way home not to bother going to Ikorodu as the place is no longer safe.

    Adesina said Ishawo, Igbo-Olomu and their environs have since been taken over by soldiers and naval officers.

    He said their presence has not deterred residents from evacuating their families for safety.

    Igbo-Olomu, Ishawo and their environs in Ikorodu have in the last four weeks been under the attack of gunmen.

    A resident who pleaded anonymity, disagreed with the notion that the area was under the invasion of militants but attributed the development to illegal oil bunkers carrying out reprisal attack among themselves.

    Some of the bunkers were reportedly killed and wounded during exchange of fire.

    One of those who escaped to London last month, said a source, returned to the country about two weeks ago to get married.

    The marriage which was fixed for two Saturdays ago failed to hold as the groom was shot in a reprisal attack by a rival group.

    It was gathered that it was this development that accounted for the invasion of many homes by the rival group.

    Commissioner of Police Fatai Owoseni said a massive manhunt had been launched against the suspected militants.

  • Another pipeline attacked by militants in Warri

    Another pipeline attacked by militants in Warri

    Another crude oil facility, belonging to Shell Petroleum Development Company (SPDC), was attacked by suspected insurgents early yesterday around Batan in Warri Southwest Local Government Area of Delta State.

    The attack, which reportedly created a massive impact on a trunkline around Camp 3 in Batan oil field, was said to have happened at about 12:05am. The Nation gathered that crude was still gushing into the surrounding aquatic environment as at the time this report was filed last night, all efforts of experts to curtail the spill notwithstanding.

    Neither the Niger Delta Avengers (NDA), which claimed responsibility for most of the attacks in the region, nor any other group had owned up to yesterday’s development as at the time this report was filed.

    Batan community Chairman Dickson Ogugu, confirmed the incident. He urged the militants to halt further hostilities on oil installations especially within Batan.

    The spokesman of the newly constituted military Joint Task Force (JTF), Lt.-Col. Olaolu Daudu, said he was going to check and get back with information.

    Another military source in Warri confirmed that there was an explosion around Batan, adding “efforts were put in to arrest the perpetrators, but they escaped”.

  • Presidency won’t shut door on dialogue with militants

    Presidency won’t shut door on dialogue with militants

    The Presidency said last night that dialogue with Niger Delta militants is not foreclosed.

    Attacks on oil facilities have affected production and the country’s earnings. This year’s budget has taken some bashing — no thanks to the activities of the Niger Delta Avengers (NDA), a group of militants.

    Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity Femi Adesina spoke on the slow pace of the budget implementation and the dialogue option in a Channels Television phone-in programme.

    According to him, the dwindling revenue from sale of crude oil, among other factors, is hindering smooth implementation of the budget.

    He noted that President Muhammadu Buhari had never been opposed to dialogue with the militants.

    He said that it would be in the militants’ interest and other Nigerians’ for them to exercise some restraint by halting their nefarious activities.

    Adesina said: “Yes, the budget has been passed. The intention is to implement that budget as best as possible. But then the circumstances are making it difficult because projections are not being met as a result of what is happening in the Niger Delta and other parts of the economy.

    “But as much as possible the government would still adhere to that project as much as revenue will permit and allow.

    “Every option is on the table, there was never a time anything was ruled out, all the options were on the table, you will recall that when some South South leaders visited the President led by King Alfred Diete-Spiff, he also disclosed that he had encouraged the security agencies to dialogue with the militant and the leadership of that region.

    “So there was never a time that anything was ruled out, since the insurgency began there had always been dialogue,”Adesina stated

  • APC chieftain urges militants to embrace peace in Cross River

    A Chieftain of the All Progressive Congress (APC) in Cross River State, Mr. Odey Ochicha, has appealed to militants in the state to sheath their swords and embrace peace and development.

    In a statement issued in Calabar, Ochicha argued that there were better and civilized ways of placing their demands before the government rather than engaging in forms of criminality.

    “Peace is priceless, violence is senseless,” Ochia said.

    The APC chieftain pointed out that development cannot take place in a hostile environment, saying all hands should be on the deck to ensure the current security situation does not get out of control.

    The statement reads: “The resumed militancy in the Niger Delta region is a very disturbing development to every patriotic Nigerian who mean well for this country.

    “In Cross River State, the Bakassi Strike Force is currently occupying two local government areas as reported by the media. This is not healthy for a state which prides itself as the most peaceful and tourist destination in Nigeria.

    “I want to appeal to the militants not to take laws into their hands. They should engage government in dialogue and not violence. Development cannot thrive in a hostile environment.”

    Ochia tasked government to engage all stakeholders in the state across party lines to ensure that normalcy is restored.

    “Security is everybody’s business, but the government must take the lead. We need a policy direction from the government on how to tackle the current security challenges confronting the state.

    “It’s high time the governor faced good governance. No investor will dare to invest in a state where kidnapping and broad day-robbery have become the order of the day.

    “All stakeholders, involving political leaders, traditional rulers, heads of faith-based organizations and heads of tertiary institutions amongst others should be engaged in combating this heinous crime.

    “Where the government continue to exercise incompetence in protecting lives and properties, which is the cardinal responsibility of any government at all levels, Cross Riverians may be forced to demand the immediate resignation of the governor because the state House of Assembly may not consider impeaching him, as it has made itself a rubber stamp to the Executive organ,” the statement read.

  • BLOODY VOYAGE -How 70-yr-old kidnapped Ikorodu Pastor met tragic end in militants’ den

    Life for Toba Osuloye and his father, Adebola, had revolved around ministering the word of God to the congregation at New Life Gospel Mission founded by the father in 1976. They craved no earthly possession nor desired quick riches. However, life took a downturn to hell when suspected militants invaded their Ikorodu residence and abducted father and son. Assistant Editor, SEUN AKIOYE narrates the tragic story of abduction and death.

    JUNE 7th 2016 was a day I didn’t understand at all. I didn’t go out because I had some church work to do; there was a strange feeling all through that day,” Toba Osuloye, pastor and businessman, began the long tale which changed his family forever.

    He was sitting in a safe house in Ibadan, Oyo State capital, where for the past two weeks he had been hiding after he was released by suspected militants after he was kidnapped alongside his 70-year-old father and held for 10 days in a dingy hut built on the sea in the middle of nowhere.

    Osuloye’s present abode and condition is a far cry from what he was used to, his life and that of his family preluding the tragedy revolved around the church founded by his father, Rev. Dr. Zacheus  Adebola Osuloye in 1976.  Before then, the elder Osuloye had held various top positions at Leventis Stores before answering the call to serve God. The result of the call was the New Life Gospel Mission in Lagos.

    The younger Osuloye-being the only son- followed his father into the vineyard and became one of the church administrators. Aside doing the work of God, he also runs his own business as a printer. The Osuloyes were not poor, yet they are not rich.

    In 2007, the father secured a piece of land in the waterlogged area of Maba near Oke-Oko in Ikorodu; the house he built was a modest one house and two years ago, his son completed a small apartment beside his father’s and moved in with his family.

    For some months, the family had been planning the 70th birthday celebration for their father, Adebola Zaccheus.  The birthday was scheduled for June 25, 2016 and organising the landmark celebration fell on his son, Toba. However, that was not to be.

    The journey to the nightmare for the Osuloyes began around 8:00pm. According to Toba, his father had devoted himself to fasting the whole day and had put on the generating set in his house. Toba joined him in order to complete the church assignment he was doing on his computer. His wife had just returned from work and his mother left for a night vigil about 10 minutes earlier.

    “Suddenly, my wife screamed, Jesu a ma rogo!” (Jesus we are in trouble!). The cause of the trouble was the uninvited entry of about six men, clad in dark robes; a few covered their faces while others were not so cautious. Some had on army camouflage trousers; they were armed with machetes, axes and guns.

    “They shouted that we should lie down, which we did. Then, they took my father out and asked for my money, my wife’s jewelries. I gave them all that I had in the house, my wife had no jewelry, they asked for my ATM card which I gave, only one of the accounts had money. It was about N5,000; they said to me, it’s okay just come with us,” Toba narrated.

    The invaders led the couple through their backyard to the stream where he pleaded that his wife be released. A small canoe was waiting, he was bundled into it and they rowed a few meters to the sea where a larger canoe was waiting. Inside, he saw his father who was already blind-folded.

    “When I saw my father, I became cold, they told us that we must cough out money as ransom. I told them that we are just pastors,” Toba said. A shout cut the conversation short. “You stop there!” A shout bellowed into the dark waters. What followed could best be described as a scene from an action packed movie.

    “Suddenly, there was shooting. The militants jumped into the water and started to shoot back. I laid flat inside the canoe and pulled my father down too; the shooting lasted for about four minutes; then there was silence.”

    The militants came back into the boat boasting: “Do you think your army can save you? They can’t kill us. We have wiped them out,” they shouted. But something had gone wrong during the shootout; the father was hit by a bullet. “My father said he couldn’t feel his legs again; there was blood all over. one of them checked and said the army had shot my dad in the leg.”

    A ransom and death

    Because of the interference of the army, the militants took a detour, a labyrinth, then it began to rain and one of them gave the father his jacket. The detour eventually led to a large camp, several houses built on the water, powerful floodlights blinding Toba and his father who was still bleeding. He said:  “When they removed the blindfold, I saw a big camp on the water, it was like a village. Then they moved us to another canoe and we got to a tent, a small distance from the village. I was stripped naked as I was covered in blood. I was then pushed into a hut. When we arrived there, I heard on the radio that the time was 3: am, we were captured at 8:30pm.”

    Both captives were separated. The father began to plead for his life and his son; “I am not a politician, I am only a servant of God, why are you doing this?” He reportedly yelled. His captors would have none of the “nonsense”, they corked their guns and threatened to “delete” him and son.

    They put the cost on their lives at N10 million. It was a thunderbolt to the men of God. A call was placed to one of the church administrators using Toba’s wife’s phone which had been stolen the night before. Other phones had dropped into the river.

    The father bleeding was unabated; the captors called a nurse. She examined him, declared he had lost a lot of blood, then sedated him. One of the captors suggested they administer Andrews Liver Salt, but that suggestion was rejected by another. Early in the morning, the father began to talk. “Daddy called me and said I should hold on, to tell the church that they must do everything to make heaven because he was going to heaven. He prophesied that the church would not scatter after his demise. Then I heard a loud sigh and all was quiet,” Toba said.

    In the morning, the militants began to make frantic phone calls. Then the body of the father was dragged out of the hut. They told the son that they were taking him to the hospital. They warned him that the ransom should be paid quickly.

    In the afternoon, a new set of guards arrived and Toba’s interrogation began. They asked him about his life, if he really was a man of God; if he had a girlfriend; if he had ever committed a sin; committed an abortion. They asked for the pin to his ATM card. As he answered truthfully to each question, they beat him the more, a slap here and a kick there; the butt of the gun became busy on his head.

    The report on the ATM came back. “You, a whole pastor has only N5,000 in your account. Don’t you collect offerings and tithes and you have a jeep in your house?” They yelled and beat him the more.

    Toba said the jeep belonged to his father and it has been abandoned for many months due to its unserviceable nature.  A boss of the militants came to the hut and said their stories had been checked out. “Your father is a good man, we have confirmed your story. We will need the N10 million because we have spent N200,000 treating your father,” he said.

    They began negotiating with one of the church pastors. Two days later, the sum of N200,000 was raised. When this news was communicated to the abductors, they became enraged. “Do you think we are beggars? Are we running at a loss or making profit? Do you know how much we have spent on your dad?” They yelled and beat him unabated.

    Two days later, the financial situation had not changed. Toba’s situation was becoming precarious. The militants became impatient; he had been there for four days now, much longer than anticipated. They told his family: “We will waste them, we kill people here every day; we have killed pastors before, it is nothing.”

    A city on the water

    Sunday June 12: “I woke up and began to cry. I knew prayers were being said for us every day but I was losing hope. Then, God told me that my salvation was in my mouth and that I should speak. I didn’t know what to tell the guards, so I asked if we could pray together, they agreed; they even thanked me,” Toba said.

    The camp where he was taken was like a city on the water. There, life went on as normal and people go to work and return, hawkers ply their wares on canoes.  There was a seller of pepper soup, pure water; pharmacists visit frequently and one could get to buy anything there.

    The ‘village’ was also well lit; there were powerful generators that supplied electricity 24 hours a day. One of the militants boasted that they lived better lives there than in the so- called Nigeria.  The guards were changed at 1:00pm daily. There was one they call “Pastor” who announces his arrival with a cry of “In the name of God, the Father, the Son and the Holy Ghost.” But he also delighted in inflicting injuries on a fellow ‘pastor’.

    Toba was subjected to psychological pain. “They didn’t allow me to rest; if I doze, they would shake the walls of the hut and screamed.  Then they will shoot into the water. One time they threw a bomb and the whole place shook; it was like an earthquake. I was lying on the ground with my face to the wall. When they come in I have to cover my face,” Toba said.

    Every day, at least five times a helicopter would fly over the camp, it would fly very low and Toba would hope that a rescue was at hand. The chopper would move away taking his hopes with it. Then the militants would fantasy about shooting down one of the choppers.

    The militants showed total disdain for their captive. “You are an animal, you are a monkey, you are nothing to us. When we see you, we only see money. You better yield money or we will delete you,” they yelled. It was a constant threat, designed to break his will.

    By Monday June 13, despite the best efforts of the family, they still hadn’t raised N300,000. This got the captors angry. “Pastor, you are making me angry, why are your people doing this?” One of them said and commenced shooting indiscriminately into the water. The bullets hit the water in torrents sending panic into the frightened captive.

    Suddenly as if in answer to Toba’s earnest prayers, one of the guards, on hearing that the captive had prayed for the guards, promised to help him. “This one no go die,” he told his colleagues. “Let them know that not all of us here is bad.” And for two days, the ‘angel’ kept his words, ensuring there was no change of guards; this action also kept Toba alive. By Monday evening, the ransom fee had climbed to N500,000 and the family was excited to report this feat.

    “You must be an imbecile, what do you take us for? We are going to delete them. We don’t want to hear thousands, we want to hear millions. You don’t like your people, we will delete them,” one yelled and disconnected the call.

    A plan to escape

    By Tuesday, everyone who came to the hut was surprised that Toba was still in captivity and they began to question why he had not been killed. Then they began to suggest other options. “What about Baba’s friends, what about your neighbours?”

    Toba was becoming too weak to cooperate, so they forced some dry bread into his mouth and he gulped it down with the river water which they called tea. When he asked about his dad, he was beaten severely. “Tomorrow will be your last day,” one of them said.

    Toba’s angel began to plan an escape for him. He told the others he planned to release him, he asked one of the guards how much he got when Amnesty money was brought to the camp. The fellow replied “N15,000.” The faceless angel said: “Let’s take this money, if we share it we shall get thousands, let us release this pastor,” he said.

    On Wednesday, the faceless angel asked Toba to lock the door from inside. Then a boat arrived and one man shouted, “NEPA!” He brought a large sack with him and attempted to break down the door. “But my angel withstood him; he said I should not be killed. He spoke to the other one who was very adamant and in the end prevailed against his killing me that day,” Toba said. He had been saved for another day.

    But there were hindrances to the plan of escape; the militants disagreed about the sharing formulae of the ransom fee. A lady came and insisted that once free, the ransom won’t be paid but in the end they agreed to smuggle him out.

    The lady went to the camp and reported the plan. The big boss came and changed the guards, when the new guard arrived they mocked him ceaselessly. “We hear you have been praying, that you have been chopping their liver, well we are here now,” they said.  Now that the plan had been busted, his life was hanging in the balance; will the captors descend on him in anger, hack him to death and simply throw his body into the river?

    Toba said he knew the end was nigh. In the night, another big boss arrived. He had been to Abuja for a week and was angry to find Toba still a captive. “I went to Abuja and I still meet you here. I am angry, pastor, I am angry, you are wasting our time. People are guarding you without payment,” he said. In anger he began to shoot into the river, he hit the wall violently.

    “I couldn’t sleep again, all hope was lost; they had already decided to kill me,” Toba said.

    On Thursday June 16th, the new guards asked Toba to pray for them. They still hadn’t told him his father was dead.  Then his faceless angel returned. As soon as the boat docked, he began to scream “Pastor I am back o, I am staying with you now.”

    More good news followed that day. A call came that the ransom had increased to N1million. The militants quickly agreed to take it and arrangements began for his release. But one of the young militants came and suggested they kill him. “We would say he tried to escape, or that he was giving us trouble,” he said. The angel countered him, the plan was dismissed.

    Not all of the militants are rebels without a cause.  They spoke bitterly about the destruction of Niger Delta. They were very bitter against the government, according to Toba. Many of them exhibited a high level of intellect and their grasp of world affairs cannot be faulted.

    Many of them are graduates who are unemployed; many had tales of woe to tell about their families. One man said his parents were roasted in a fire which began from a ruptured oil pipe; his family has never received any compensation. “So you want me to pity the father and mother of other people when the government killed my own parents?” He asked. The boys said they were on a revenge mission against Nigeria.

    Friday June 17:  “Pastor stand up,” a militant commanded and proceeded to tie Toba’s face from behind. It would be the day of his dramatic release after 10 days of terror, pain and uncertainty. He had been to the doorsteps of death and returned. It was unlikely they kill him now, not with the promise of a ransom.  “I am giving you my fine jean,” one of them said. Another gave him a “smelly and dirty” shirt, while one sacrificed his “brand new bathroom slippers.” He was taken into a boat and after some minutes, he perceived lights. It was the camp.

    “They welcomed me to the camp while still blindfolded, gave me my properties, phones and computer and N2,000 for my transportation,” Toba revealed.  To receive the items, he was asked to put out his hands while they were dropped into his palms.

    The chief gave him instructions on what to do after he must have regained his freedom. He was to walk a couple of meters, then he would find okada riders who will take him to Oke-Oko. He was not to ask questions or talk to anybody.

    Up till then, the militants still maintained his father was alive. They told the negotiator that the two captives would be released on Friday. They told Toba that his father would follow behind him as he had been picked up from the hospital. But in the boat, he heard a militant inform another: “He was a good man and a pastor too, so we buried him.”

    That was the first inkling he had to what happened to his father’s body. All through his ordeal, he had pretended not to know about his father’s demise, but nobody was kind enough to alert him that his dear father was gone and to compound the issue, the family had no body to bury. For a man who dedicated his life to others, there will be no tomb for him where his children can point:  “here lies our father.”

    They put him in a boat, his ‘angel’ insisted on following him to the drop point. Blindfolded and weak, they set out around 9:00pm. The captors’ rowed, eerie silence prevailed. “The way they rowed, you will know that these are professionals, there was no sound of paddling; in fact, they didn’t speak, it was like they were avoiding something.”

    After about 30 minutes, the journey ended. Being too weak, they helped him on his feet and gave the final instructions: “We are going to remove your blindfold. Walk straight on, do not look back.” There was no need for a repetition, he had seen the gang in their sheer brutality. He walked on and into freedom.

    But providence might have saved Toba from further calamity, for the night he was released coincided with the killing of one of the militants, which led to the massacre and deaths of several persons in many Ikorodu communities.

    Toba’s mother is still trying to come to terms with the death of her husband whom she described as a “perfect gentleman” and an epitome of humility. “We were praying when they were there. We contacted many men of God to pray. It was a traumatic time for us,” she told The Nation.

    But the family will not close this horrid chapter in their lives without a befitting funeral for their hero. “The funeral will be preceded by a service of songs on July 22nd and other events will occur on 23 and 24th of July, we want to celebrate our father and the life he lived,” Toba said.

  • Forum to militants: enough

    Forum to militants: enough

    The Southwest will no longer fold its arms while suspected Niger Delta militants  kill and disrupt economic activities in the region, a socio-cultural group, the Yoruba Unity Forum has said.

    The group also called on the Federal Government to probe motive behind the attack by suspected militants on several Ikorodu communities in Lagos.

    “The Southwest will not tolerate nationalities to turn our land to a theatre to prosecute their agitations, we shall certainly not fold our arms and watch criminals kill our people and disrupt economic activities,” the group said in a statement by its Chairman Rev. Emmanuel Gbonigi and Secretary, Senator Anthony Adefuye.

     The group noted that the Southwest people are peaceful and accommodating as exemplified by the absence of border disputes with their neighbouring communities. It said the Niger Delta militants have taken their agitations too far by unprovoked attacks on Yoruba communities which led to the death of about 100 deaths.

    “Furthermore, not done with the attacks on defenceless citizens of Ikorodu, they proceeded to attack the convoy of the Ogun State Deputy Governor who was on her way to visit the communities. While we hold no grudge against any nationality pursuing their agitations, we take very serious exceptions to nationalities exporting criminality and violence to achieve their objectives.

    “ The attack on the Deputy Governor of Ogun State  and her entourage is provocative and daring, we call on the Federal Government to immediately deploy soldiers in these areas to protect the people as the police alone cannot contain the criminal activities of the militants,” the group said.

    The group also questioned the role of the security agencies which it described as questionable and asked to government to arrest and prosecute all persons involved in the attacks including the sponsors.

  • Suspected militants on rampage at Ikorodu

    Suspected militants on rampage at Ikorodu

     Rampaging militants yesterday stormed Igbolomu in Ikorodu, a Lagos suburb, kidnapping and killing residents.

    It was gathered that the latest attack on Ikorodu allegedly began on Wednesday, with the hoodlums shooting everything on sight.

    They were said to have shot a man who was driving home, injuring him on the shoulder and damaging his vehicle.

    It was learnt that the resumed attack on Ikorodu was sequel to a raid carried out by police operatives on Monday and Tuesday following last Sunday’s alleged kidnappings and killings.

    The Nation gathered that the hooded gunmen had stormed a primary school in the area at about 3pm yesterday, where they were sighted changing into black costumes.

    According to a source who pleaded anonymity, the militants were sighted by some primary school children who informed their teachers.

    “They came to that school around 3pm and they wore masks. They were changing into black costumes when some school children saw them and notified their teachers.

    “That was how they fled and people in the area started running. About five patrol vehicles of Rapid response Squad (RRS) later came there and there was heavy gunshot in the area.

    “I heard people were killed and some were kidnapped but I am not sure. I also fled the area yesterday to Lagos Island. I have no plans of returning to Ikorodu for now because it has turned into war zone.

    “If militants do not attack, cultists will or there will be an explosion. For now, I do not intend going back,” he said.

    A security source who hinted on the attack men police mean from the Special Anti-Robbery Sqaud  (SARS), RRS and counter-terrorism units have been engaged in show of force in Ikorodu.

    “We do not have casualty details yet. Our men have been sent there and they have not come back. They are on a show of force in the area. Also, policemen have been sent alongside soldiers to patrol Imushe, around Igando so that the hoodlums do not flee Ikorodu and strike Igando,” he said.

    Efforts to get official response from the police command failed at the time of filing this report.

  • Amnesty office urges militants to drop arms

    Amnesty office urges militants to drop arms

    • 72 ex-militants graduate in fishery

    Special Adviser to the President on Niger Delta and Coordinator, Amnesty Programme, Brigadier General Paul Boroh (rtd) Wednesday called on militants in the Niger Delta to drop arms and embrace peace.

    Speaking at the Institute of Oceanography in the University of Calabar, during the graduation ceremony of 72 ex-militants who were trained in fishery, Boroh said blowing up pipelines was counter-productive and would only hurt the people of the region.

    He debunked rumours about the stopping of the amnesty programme, saying it was still on course and successful.

    He said so far 13, 031 delegates have been trained successfully in various fields of endeavor.

    His words, “You can agitate through various means but not through violence. Blowing up pipelines in the Niger Delta only affects us, our children, our environment and the economy of our country. You can protest peacefully and you will be listened to. We must develop as a country. Nigeria is the only country we have. Any other country you go to you will always be a second-class citizen.

    “A strategic thinker never uses his home as a battleground. You have to make sure your resources are preserved. If you damage your place, where will your children stay? What future will we have? Let us not damage our territory. The Niger Delta must develop and we are the only ones that can do it. We must think forward and positively.

    “We are happy to see you graduate in agriculture. Agriculture is the mainstay and focus of the present administration. The skills you have learnt here are critical. You should all go out there and practice what you have learnt. We will start arranging your empowerment immediately. Make a difference as you go back. Educate others too to tune their minds towards agriculture. Agriculture should be your mantra. With agriculture we can never go wrong. It is what can transform this country economically.

    “The amnesty is on course and successful. You people are a success story. Any government that has interest in developing your capacity has your interest at heart. Continue to keep in touch with us, as you are still part of the office.”

    Chairman House of Representatives Committee on Niger Delta, Mr Essien Ayi, called the graduands for embracing peace and agreeing to lay down arms.

    “We are glad and urge you to talk to your brothers to also drop arms and embrace peace. We will make sure you are properly reintegrated into the society. We will not allow you to roam on your own. We want peace in the Niger Delta region and I want to use this medium to call on others to lay down arms. Peace will return to the Niger Delta,” he said.

    Vice Chancellor, University of Calabar, Prof Zana Akpagu said it was a rare privilege to train them in the amnesty programme.

    “We are proud to have you here and be part of the amnesty programme. It is a rare privilege. Congratulations to all that have participated in the programme. It is hoped that the skills learnt here will be put to use to help you be more productive. You are equipped not to be job seekers but employers of labour. You should be big entrepreneurs and train others on what you have learnt on fish farming. We are always available for you if you need further consultations,” Akpagu said.

    Director Institute of Oceanography, University of Calabar, Prof Paul Udoh said, “We are glad to have trained the amnesty delegates. We have been opportune to give them the best we have here in terms of aquaculture. We urge that as they go, they put all they have learnt to practice. You are always welcome to come back anytime you require further assistance. We spent six months here teaching them all aspects of fish farming. We are proud to be part of the amnesty training. More should be sent for training. We have enough facilities to accommodate more,” he said.

    Commissioner for Agriculture in Cross River State, Prof Anthony Eneji, said, “We thank the amnesty office and the University for Programme. We also have a women and youth empowerment programme in the ministry. We would be pleased to work with the University on this programme as it will translate to us empowering more youths.”

    Speaking on behalf of the beneficiaries of the programme, Mr Surubor Amadikeme, expressed gratitude to President Muhamadu Buhari for his commitment to the amnesty programme.

    His words, “We are grateful for the programme. We appreciate the effort of the president to this programme. In spite of the economic situation and insecurity, we thank the president for last month stipend. Initially I thought the amnesty programme was not sincere but now I have seen that President Buhari is very sincere about the amnesty. We would continue to support him. We advise our brothers who are still out there to embrace peace. This government is our government. We also ask the Federal Government to facilitate our empowerment after this programme because an idle mind is the devil’s workshop. We believe the government will not forget us.”