Tag: Murder

  • Condemnable murder

    •The law must punish the killers of Mrs. Eunice Elisha, the Christian preacher

    On July 7, Eunice Elisha, Christian neighbourhood evangelist and spouse of The Redeemed Christian Church of God pastor, Olawale Elisha, was hacked to death in her Old NEPA Road, Phase 4, Kubwa neighbourhood, ln Abuja. She was on her dawn round of her “morning cry” (evangelism), armed with her Bible and microphone.

    The police found and evacuated her hacked body. Pastor Elisha said his children, two of whom always go to play morning football in a neighbouring pitch, got wind that a female preacher had been killed somewhere in the neighbourhood. The pastor’s initial reaction was that it couldn’t have been their mother. But the worst was confirmed when poor Pastor Elisha, and two children, saw the mutilated remains of the wife and mother, in a police van, en route to the mortuary!

    This is a murder too gruesome and grisly; and the murderers must be quickly apprehended and brought to justice. It is good the police say they have made some preliminary arrests, first of eight persons. But as at the last check, six had been released and only two detained.

    That is a good start. But that start would count for nothing if the police didn’t, with thoroughness and despatch, bring the criminals to prosecution and conviction. That would not bring back Mrs. Elisha. But it should serve as justice to her bereaved family, and the jurisdiction the felons so cruelly violated.

    That is as far as crime and punishment go.

    Still, why would anyone want to kill a defenceless woman, whose only crime was evangelising  and winning souls for her faith? That a mosque was around the neighbourhood introduces some even more sinister angle to the tragedy. Did the death have anything to do with misguided adherents of rival faiths in the neighbourhood?

    First, whatever the motivation, crime is crime; and must be promptly punished to serve as deterrent to future putative felons. So, ordinarily, any religious connotation to the murder should be immaterial. To start with, every faith worth its tenet should not sanction the reckless spilling of blood.  Outside the religious plane too, the law frowns at, and severely punishes, murder. So, both on the secular and spiritual front, murder has no reward.

    Still, in view of recurrent cases of faith- triggered killings, it is not out of place to warn that such execrable conducts should not be tolerated. Nigeria is by law a secular country, which nevertheless recognises the multi-religious reality of its citizens. So, the practice of every faith is guaranteed under the law. If that were so, why should a set of adherents kill simply because of the message of the other? That even makes it more compelling for the criminals involved in Mrs. Elisha’s murder to be unmasked fast and prosecuted accordingly.

    But even at that, preachers on every side should imbibe a thing or two on sensitivity and mutual respect. Pope Francis, the Catholic pontiff, just made a deep if sensational declaration: that every faith is real to the extent that its adherents believe in it, concluding that all of us are children of God, even if our faiths differ.

    We urge everyone to imbibe that credo. We urge preachers to factor in mutual respect and sensitivity to other faiths, while projecting the tenets of their own faith, and trying to win over fresh adherents. If every preacher, Christian, Muslim and other faiths, factor in tolerance and respect, then their proselytising would be shared love.

    Nigeria collectively diminishes each time a national is reported killed for his or her faith. The only explanation for this madness is intolerance, which breeds bigotry. No one has gained by Mrs. Elisha’s gruesome mother. We have all lost — and that is a loss too many.

  • Six suspects held for Abuja preacher’s murder

    Six suspects held for Abuja preacher’s murder

    Six suspects have been arrested in the murder of an itinerant preacher, Mrs Eunice Olawale Elisha, in Abuja.

    Mrs. Elisha was killed early  Saturday at Pipeline, Kubwa, Abuja.

    The deceased was found dead, with her Bible, megaphone and cellphone by her body. She was a deaconess at the Divine Touch Parish of the Redeemed Christian Church of God, Old NEPA Road, Phase 4, Kubwa.

    The Deputy Commissioner of Police, Criminal Investigation and Intelligence Department (CIID), is leading the team probing the murder.

    The Commissioner of Police in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Alkali Usman, said he ordered the investigation.

    The police also said the six suspects are in custody undergoing interrogation.

    Usman assured other residents of the police’s commitment and determination  to fish out perpetrators of the crime and bring them to justice.

    He promised to make the outcome of the investigation public.

    A statement yesterday by police spokesman Anjuguri Manzah, said: “The commissioner of Police FCT has ordered the deputy commissioner of Police, Criminal Investigation and Intelligence Department, to lead discreet investigation into the murder of Mrs. Eunice Olawale Elisha, 40 years old, who was murdered by unknown persons in the early hours of Saturday at Gbazango Pipeline area of Kubwa.

    “Contrary to reports from some sections of the media that the deceased’s head and legs were chopped off, the command wants to state that apart from marks of injury inflicted on some parts of her body, all parts of the deceased body were intact and the Police have taken custody of her remains for preservation and examination.”

    Usman urged residents and the public to remain calm and cooperate with the Police in the investigation.

    Also yesterday, the Vice President’s wife, Mrs Dolapo Osinbajo, visited the family of the late Assistant Pastor of the Divine Touch Parish of the Redeemed Christian Church of God (RCCG) in Abuja.

    Mrs Osinbajo condoled with them on the murder of the mother of seven. She was received around 1:30 pm by the widower, Pastor Olawale Elisha; children; church members and loved ones.

    In her condolence message, Mrs Osinbajo wrote: “May her gentle soul rest in peace.”

     

     

  • Herbalist arrested over alleged murder of septuagenarian

    Herbalist arrested over alleged murder of septuagenarian

    A 51-year old herbalist, whose identity has not been revealed, has been arrested by men of the Edo State Police Command over the murder of a 75-year old woman, Mrs. Betsy Egbeobamwonyi.

    Betsy was gruesomely murdered at her apartment as she was severally stabbed and her throat sliced.

    She was lying on the bed beside her four years old grandson when she was killed.

    Acting Public Relations Officer for Edo State Police Command, SP Stephen Onwochei who confirmed the incident  said the police acted on intelligence reports.

    Onwochei appealed to the deceased immediate family and members of the public to provide useful information that could lead to the arrest of the perpetrators.

    It will be recalled that the incident occurred at Oseye Street, Off Okunwague Street, Off Upper Sokponba Road, Ikpoba-Okha local government.

  • Alleged murder: Appeal Court to hear Rivers ex-council boss’s bail application July 4

    Court of Appeal sitting in Port Harcourt, the Rivers State capital will on July 4 hear the bail application by the former council chairman of Asari-Toru Local Government Area, Ojukaye Flag Amachrii.

    Amaechrii, 40, was arrested by men of the State Criminal Investigative Department (SCID) on April 20 and charged for the murder of Smart Soberekon in Buguma.

    He was slammed with a two-count charge of conspiracy and murder.

    Efforts to secure his bail from the state Magistrates’ Court and High Court proved abortive. The Magistrates’ Court declined powers to either grant him bail or entertain his charges. The High Court said his reasons for seeking bail was not convincing enough, and then adjourned his case for accelerated hearing.

    Justice Margret Opara adjourned the case till June 21 and 22 for hearing and urged the prosecution to come with their witnesses.

    However, the court did not hear the case at the June 21 adjourned date. The accused person was reportedly ill and unable to come to court. This was contained in the medical report from the Port Harcourt Prisons where, the accused person is being detained. It was read out in the open court by the Judge.

    She later adjourned the matter till September 20 and 21 for hearing.

    The accused person, through his lawyer, Sabastin Hon, a Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN), yesterday approached the Court of Appeal to argue on the application. Three judges chaired by Hon. Justice Sidi Bage, came from Abuja to hear the application. Other members of the panel are Justice A.O. Lokulo Sodipe and Justice Adamu Jaurd.

    But the Rivers State government, represented by the prosecuting council, Godwin Obla told the court that he was informed of the motion two days ago and would need time to go through it and file his reply.

    The panel granted his request and adjourned till July 4 for definite hearing.

    Speaking to reporters after the sitting, Hon said: “We filled our application and filed at the office of the Attorney-General of the state, but the prosecution at the court today(yesterday), claimed that he became aware of the application only yesterday (Wednesday),  and would need time to study it and then reply.

    “We pleaded on the court that the matter be allowed to go on because we served them long ago, but the court reasoned that in the interest of justice, they should be granted an adjournment. The court therefore adjourned the matter for definite hearing; we are coming back on July 4, to argue on the application.”

    Obla admitted that the accused person had filed an application to canvass his bail before the Court of Appeal but claimed that he was just served at the court.

    “They brought an application for bail, pending appeal. I have just been served the process. I have applied to the court to grant me time off to file my response, and we are coming back next month to argue the application.”

  • Lover boy stabs girlfriend to death in Kano

    A yet to be identified man, believed to be the lover of a pub girl on Monday evening stabbed his lover girl to death.

    The incident happened in the girl’s room at Sugarcane hotel, located on Gold Coast road, Sabon Gari area of the Kano metropolis between 5:30 and 6 pm.

    According to sources, two men arrived the hotel premises at about 5:30 pm on a motorbike.

    As soon as they disembarked, one of the men, according to our source walked straight into the pub-girl’s room, said to have just returned to the country from Dubai, while his accomplice waited for him beside the motorbike within the premises of the hotel.

    Unknown to the men, workers within the vicinity were monitoring the suspicious movement of the motorbike man.

    Twenty minutes after, one of the motorbike men entered the pub girl’s room and failed to come out as expected, a development that aroused the suspicion of the workers within the premises.

    One of the suspicious workers’, it was learnt burst into the room, following the persistent outcry of the pub girl to ascertain why the pub girl was wailing.

    The source disclosed that as soon as one of the curious workers gained entrance into the room, he discovered that the pub girl was in a pool of her blood, having been stabbed by the motorbike man, who was also found in the room, beside the stabbed pub girl.

    On a closer look, our source said the worker discovered that the pub girl, who was struggling and writhing in pains, was stabbed on the stomach, forcing her intestines to gush out.

    Sensing danger, the assailant, according to our source attempted to escape but was promptly caught and brutalized, while his accomplice, whom he rode to the premises with fled the scene but the motorbike he left behind was however set ablaze.

    Moments after the gruesome murder, some police officers from the Nomansland Police station, according to our source, who arrived the scene saved the suspect from being lynched by the angry mob at  the hotel premises.

    The law enforcement agents, it was gathered swung into action promptly, dispersed the crowd, arrested the suspect and conveyed the remains of the pub girl to the Police station for further interrogation.

    As at the time of filing this report, the Hotel premises has not only been sealed up but deserted.

    Contacted, the Public Relations Officer of the Kano State Police Command, DSP Musa Magaji Majiya, said he is yet to receive such report, promising that as soon the report is made available to him, he would not hesitate to get in touch with this reporter.

     

  • Chief, 85, two others remanded for alleged murder

    n Igbosere Magistrates’ Court in Lagos yesterday remanded an 85-year-old man, Chief Ishau Ogunlana, in Ikoyi Prison till June 17, pending advice from the Lagos Directorate of Public Prosecution (DPP).

    Magistrate O. M. Ajayi remanded Ogunlana, Taofeek Omidina, 48, and Ahmed Onabanjo, 42, who were charged with murder by the police.

    The trio were alleged to have “unlawfully” killed Ogunniyi “by shooting him with firearms,” on April 23, at about 1:45pm at Agunfoye Idi-Orogbo, Igbogbo in Ikorodu, Lagos.

    The court also heard that the men “did unlawfully inflict several degrees wound on one Gbenga Ajadi by shooting him with a gun or guns.”

    The police also alleged that the trio “did unlawfully and illegally have in your possession live cartridge without a license or permit duly issued to you by the Inspector-General of Police.”

    According to the temporary charge with number N/34/26, the offences are punishable under Sections 220, 221, 231, 244, 328(d) and 409 of the Criminal Code Laws of Lagos State, 2011.

    Their pleas were not taken and the court made the remand order pursuant to an application by prosecuting Sergeant Innocent Odugbo.

    Relying on Section 264 of the Administration of Criminal Justice Law (ACJL) of Lagos State, 2011, Odugbo said there was a “probable cause” for the suspects to be detained.

    “They are reasonably suspected to have committed the offences of conspiracy, murder, wounding and unlawful possession of live cartridge, acts that led to the disturbance of public peace on April 23, 2016,” he added.

    The court found no merit in the application of defence counsel, Emmanuel Danye, who applied for Ogunlana to be remanded in police custody until the DPP’s advice is received.

    “He is an old man, your honour, and may die if he’s remanded in prison custody. The court can even see that he’s frail and shaking. He reported himself to the police yesterday (Wednesday) and was arrested and brought to court,” Danye said.

    But, after preliminary enquiry into the allegations against the suspects, the court upheld the prosecution’s application.

    Magistrate Ajayi said she had no power under the ACJL to remand a murder suspect in police custody.

    “This court has no discretion to do that. The defendant may apply to the high court for bail,” Magistrate Ajayi held.

    The case was adjourned till Friday.

  • Traditional ruler, son charged with murder

    Traditional ruler, son charged with murder

    The head (baale) of Temidire Community in Alagbado, Lagos, Alhaji Nojeem Abioye and his son, Wahab, were yesterday arraigned before an Ikeja High Court for alleged murder.

    They were brought before Justice Lateef Lawal-Akapo for allegedly killing Alhaji Rasaki Olaniyan Olatunji, popularly known as Tunji Alaso and Alhaji Gay.

    They are facing a two-count charge of “conspiracy to commit felony, to wit murder and murder”, based on the advice of the Directorate of Public Prosecution (DPP).

    According to the advice,  the offence is contrary to Sections 409 and 221 of the Criminal Law of Lagos State 2011.

    The defendants pleaded not guilty to the two-count charge preferred against them.

     Justice Lawal-Akapo ordered that they be remanded in Kirikiri Medium Prison custody.

    He fixed hearing on the bail applications for June 23.

    The DPP’s advice, signed by a Principal State Counsel, Mr. M. T. Adewoye, said 24 suspects were investigated by the Police for Olatunji’s death.

    The DPP said a prima facie case was established against the Baale and his son and recommended the others’ release.

    Olatunji, an hotelier, was reportedly killed during a riot last July 20 in Alagbado, which was allegedly organised by Abioye and the community.

    According to the police, “Immediately the deceased’s vehicle was sighted, some thugs led by the Baale and others attacked him and broke the glass of his jeep. After escaping the attack, the deceased left the scene to report at Alagbado Police Station. Thereafter, the deceased and some police officers went back to the scene and he was attacked again.”

    “It was the Baale who held him on the neck while Taofeek Olori and Idowu Terror, now at large, held his hands while the Baale’s son, Wahab Abioye hit the deceased with a shovel on his head and Taofeek Olori stabbed the deceased severally on his body”.

    Yesterday, the late Olatunji’s elder sister, Madam Ganiyat Olapeju Popoola, told reporters after the proceedings that his widow, Idowu, gave birth to a baby boy earlier in the day.

  • Murder of Ortom’s security aide unsettles Benue

    Murder of Ortom’s security aide unsettles Benue

    He was a crack detective attached to the Benue State Police Command of the Nigeria Police Force and was reputed for his exploits in smoking out men of the underworld. Criminals were said to shiver at the mention of his name. The late Segment Igbana Denen was a no-nonsense policeman who took his job very seriously.

    But his exploits came to an abrupt end penultimate Friday as he was shot dead at about 12.30 am by some gunmen said to have numbered more than 20 near his residence in Tionsha, a suburb of Makurdi, Benue State capital, as he was returning home from office.

    The gunmen, according to a community leader and tax collector, Thomas Ayakpam, laid an ambush for him on sighting his Nissan Hilux vehicle and rained bullets on both sides of the back seat, thinking that he sat there.

    But Igbana, who was said to be driving himself, jumped down from the vehicle and attempted to escape, but the gunmen shot him in the leg and he managed to get to the front of his house before he collapsed. The gun men closed up with him and shot him several times.

    He was rushed by concerned neighbours to the Benue State University Teaching Hospital, Makurdi, where he died.

    The question everybody, including Governor Samuel Ortom, has been asking since his closest security aide was felled by assassins’ bullets is who killed Denen Igbana and what is the motive?

    There was a twist to the brutal killing of Igbana during the condolence visit of Governor Ortom to the family and niegbourhood. A tax collector, Thomas Ayakp, while briefing the governor, said before Igbana died, he was shouting the name of a particular man. He said as Igbana was crying and shouting as he ran from his attacker, he was saying: “What have I done that you want to kill me?”

    After he resigned from the police force ahead of retirement, the late Igbana had vied for the position of the Chief Security Officer (CSO) of Benue State University (BSU), but lost out as a result of some forces against him. Since he could not go back to the police, he joined the Ortom-Abounu Campaign Organisation 2015 as the security officer. And when Ortom won the governorship election, he was appointed Senior Special Assistant (SSA) on Security to the governor and was placed in charge of the state’s amnesty programme in respect of criminals who gave up their arms.

    Governor Ortom, while addressing journalists to mark his one year in office, described his late security aide as a hard working man, saying that he was instrumental to the success of the entire amnesty where many dangerous weapons were retrieved from criminals.

    Ortom declared that even if it was his own biological son that killed Igbana, he should be arrested and made to face the law. He vowed that those who killed him would be fished out as he had given security agents the matching order to fish them out.

    The Nation investigation revealed that few days before he was killed, Igbana had complained to the governor that he was being trailed by some people and pleaded with the governor to help him build a fence around his house. The governor was said to have scheduled an appointment with him against the day he was killed.

    Even as SSA to the governor, Igbana was reputed for smoking out kidnappers without a single ransom paid. The governor himself confirmed this at various fora.

    Was he killed by a criminal whose case he once handled? Even if that was the case, it is difficult now for security agencies to find out because he is dead.

    Another angle security men are said to be exploring is whether any of the ex-bandits who returned their weapons could have felt cheated and took his pound of flesh, since the government has so far spent millions of naira on the amnesty programme through workshops and payment for returned weapons, among others.

    The fearless policeman that he was, Igbana was once said to have volunteered being locked in the booth of a car as a ransom to be picked up by kidnappers was being conveyed at a particular location. The kidnappers were shocked when they opened the booth of the car to pick their ransom only to be confronted by Igbana, who promptly arrested them and set the victim free.

    The foregoing speculations will remain mere conjectures and his death a mystery until a thorough investigation is conducted and the suspects are arrested.

  • Another man kills wife in Lagos

    Another man kills wife in Lagos

    Less than one month after Lekan Shonde reportedly killed his wife in Egbeda area of Lagos State, another man, Friday, allegedly murdered his wife at their no 8 Araromi area of the state.

    According to the sister in-in-law who simply identified herself as Vero, the suspect, James Kafaru Esougie, slashed his wife, Roseline’s throat while she was asleep.

    Unlike Lekan who ran away after he reportedly committed the crime, Vero said James didn’t run away but started manifesting strange characters when they became aware of the incident.

    Vero said: “We were sleeping when my sister’s husband came out to wake the first son to go and urinate. This was about 4am.  When the boy went in to wake the mother, he saw that she was not responding.  He shook her vigorously and got no response and quickly ran to call me. When I got there, I also shook her with the aim of waking her but got no response. Touching her legs, I observed that it was very cold. I shuddered and quickly removed that cloth on her face.

    ‘It was then that I saw that the husband had used a knife to slash her neck. He cut the vein that holds the neck and the head. She was in a pool of her own blood. Goose pimples overwhelmed me and the children. They were traumatized as they saw the lifeless body of the mother drenched with blood.

    “When we were doing all these, the husband sat on the floor vomiting black things and defecating right there. Thereafter, I raised the alarm and neighbours came to apprehend him.  The police was later invited to whisk him away.”

    Asked if the couple used to quarrel before the murder, Vero said:  “They used to quarrel a lot. The husband was always beating her. We severally told her to leave the house for him but she declined, preferring to endure for the sake of her children.  It was her resolve to endure that eventually caused her, her life. She gave birth to five children for him. They are both from Auchi, in Edo State. My sister was a petty trader but the husband doesn’t have any known job. As far as I know, he is jobless. It was my sister that was responsible for providing for the needs of the family. ”

    The rest of  deceased’s  siblings were in pensive mood obviously trying to fathom the fate that befell  their sister as Vero tearfully relived the account of how the sister was gruesomely murdered in  the building that houses several shops where clothing and other house hold items are sold.

    Seething anger glaringly stood on the face Philip, the deceased’s younger brother when The Nation sought his comment on the incident. He paced up and down in the apartment looking downcast.

    “My late sister’s husband married her when she was in the secondary school. He was initially working as a trailer driver before he lost his job. He has been jobless since then.  We have been asking her to park out all along but she refused. It is unfortunate that she ended up being sacrificed by the man she gave her all.”

    Shop owners in the building sat sorrowfully in groups at the entrance of the house bemoaning the fate that befell the deceased. Some of them who spoke with our correspondent said they saw the deceased when she returned from her business place around 8pm on Thursday. They said the husband became unusually aggressive earlier in the week as he quarreled with everybody that stood on his way.

    “The man was very aggressive all through Wednesday and good part of Thursday. He was smoking and feverishly puffing the smoke of the cigarette into the air. He kept   throwing away every chair and table that he saw on the way and also quarrelling with everybody that saw.  We never knew that he was preparing the ground for the dastardly act he wanted to carry out.

    “The wife sells frozen food at Ijora. We were outside when she returned from her business place Thursday.  She was looking very tired and sick. When we asked her what the matter was, she said she wasn’t feeling healthy. When we told her to take some days off and rest, she said it would not be possible immediately because she needed to hustle to get money to pay her children’s school fees. She said she would take time to rest after paying the school fees.  She had earlier paid the rent. Unfortunately, the rest will end up becoming an eternal one,” one of the traders said.

    Another trader said: “The deceased was a gentle person. She was always going out early and coming back late in the night. We are all aware that she was the breadwinner of the family because the husband was always idle. I have serious concern about the future of the children. Before they were taking away by the deceased’s family, they were seriously hungry.  They had to go and borrow matches to lit the stove to make something for them to eat.”

     

  • Man flees after allegedly killing brother in Lagos

    A man identified as Remi Adelaja has fled their Oshodi residence after he allegedly killed his elder brother, Mayowa Adelaja.

    The incident occurred at the wee hours of Sunday at 6, Adelaja Street, off Afariogun, Oshodi in Lagos.

    It was gathered that the tragedy forced other residents to flee the compound before the police got to the scene at about 2am.

    The Nation gathered that the brothers had a scuffle over torchlight, which resulted to a fight.

    According to a source, the deceased was looking for the torchlight and asked his younger brother but he claimed he knew nothing about it.

    “Their mother, Mrs. Adelaja is a bread seller. The suspect brought his five children to his father’s house after he lost his wife and since then, they have been staying together. Although, the deceased has been complaining about it.

    “But last night, the deceased was looking for torchlight and asked his younger brother who said he knew nothing about it. The issue later resulted to a quarrel because the two of them have been having problems.

    “The next thing they started fighting. The elder brother used iron rod to hit the younger one twice but the suspect ran inside, brought a knife and stabbed his older brother on the stomach.

    “That was how he fell down and died on the spot. Everyone ran only his mother was left. Then, Mayowa’s dogs surrounded him on the ground. The police came around 2am,” said the source.