Tag: Murder

  • Court remands pastor, doctor for alleged murder

    A Makurdi Chief Magistrate’s Court on Monday remanded a pastor, Matthew Ekele, and a doctor, Paul Okpeh, for alleged murder.

    The two accused persons, resident of Ai-Odu village in Ogbadibo Local Government of Benue, allegedly killed one Matthew Abah.

    Prosecutor Gabriel Ebonyi told the court that the case was transferred from the Divisional Police Headquarters, Ogbadibo to state CID via a letter.

    According to the letter, one Joseph Onyeke, reported at Otukpa Police Station that the pastor conspired with one Indian Igwe, and beat up the deceased.

    The complainant reported that after the fight, Ekele took the deceased to St. Peters Clinic owned and managed by the second accused person (Okpeh) who was not a certified medical doctor.

    He further said that the pastor asked Okpe to perform a surgical operation on the deceased and as a result, he died after the operation.

    The prosecutor said the accused persons were arrested during police investigation while Igwe was still at large.

    He said the offence contravened Section 97 and 222 of the Penal Code.

    No plea was taken.

    The Chief Magistrate, Mr Dan Ogoh, adjourned the matter to June 26, for mention

  • My father’s murder was political, says Aregbesola’s aide

    My father’s murder was political, says Aregbesola’s aide

    For eight years Kareem Fola Olajoku, Senior Special Assistant to Osun State Governor Rauf Aregbesola on General Matters, has remained in agony. Reason: the murder of his beloved father, Alhaji Sulaimon Hassan-Olajoku, a major supporter of Aregbesola’s governorship ambition on May 15, 2005.

    The slain Hassan-Olajoku, whom the governor once described as “a major financier of my campaign and left no one in doubt as to his support for and loyalty to our cause,” was gruesomely assassinated at Gbongan Junction in the presence of his teenage daughters and wife. It was a day after he organised a ceremony in Ifon-Osun to market the governor the people.

    “But eight years should be long enough to forget such an experience,” this reporter said. Kareem’s voice quaked in emotion in response: “How can I forget someone who was more that a father to me and our entire family? He was a man we could count on for anything. He was taken away from us at a period my siblings and I needed him most because we were very young at that time. He was a perfect gentle man; a strong grassroots politician, tax consultant, and a loving father. Words cannot explain how I feel. Sometimes, I wished it was just a dream that would soon fade away. Who on earth would shoot a man 24 times or more? That was pure assassination! They wanted him dead.”

    The governor’s aide seethed with indignation when he wondered why the police were yet to give his family any clue about those who killed his father and their motive, but was profuse in praises for Aregbesola who remained a dependable pillar of support for the bereaved family. “I appreciate our governor’s efforts to ensure that my siblings and I do not suffer as a result of this horrible experience. He has been our pillar of support; we can’t thank him enough. I also commend him for immortalising my father by building a mega park, named Hassan Olajoku Park, at the Gbongan Junction, where my father was brutally murdered. Ogbeni Aregbesola is a great and humane man who is rare to find on this earth. He has been there for us,” Olajoku said.

    He declared that his father was murdered by the anti-progressive elements in the state, adding: “We all know the truth. My father was killed when the political scene in Osun State was tense; and we all know it was a political killing. Some people’s thirst for power shows they are myopic. But in the end, the same power which they thought was their birth right was taken away from them by God and the judiciary. Where are they today? They didn’t want the then opposition party to redeem the mandate they stole.”

    When reminded that Osun State would soon hold local council elections he replied: “ACN in Osun State has shown the world that we are working. Have you not heard of the Opon-Imo, Ipad look-alike tablets that are being distributed to secondary school pupils in the state and which contain all their syllabuses and subjects? The computer system is even solar- powered. Osun State is moving and I can tell you that in any election, our great party will win all the available seats. The forthcoming council election will be another litmus test for us as a government, but we are fully prepared to win all the seats as we had done in past elections. This is because the governor has touched the lives of all Osun people positively, and they are happy for it.”

    He spoke further: “Aregbesola’s government is the best administration Osun State had had since its creation in 1996. Before the coming on board of the administration in 2010, flood destroyed lives and property in the state so much that people lost their means of livelihood and their loved ones, but now, the story is different. Before now, roads in the state were in dilapidated conditions, but now, the governor has been roundly commended for his good works, so much that he has even been nick-named “Oba baba ona”, meaning, “king of the roads repairs.” Is it the Oyes (Osun Youth Empowerment Scheme), which employed over 20,000 youths, thereby drastically reducing unemployment in the state? Or, is it the agricultural sector he revitalised by providing arable lands and funds to farmers to ease their age-long burden of lack of government’s support? The governor has redefined governance in the state.”

     

  • Ekiti ACN chairman, four others arraigned for alleged murder

    The Chairman of the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) in Ekiti State, Mr. Jide Awe, and four others were yesterday arraigned before an Ado-Ekiti Magistrate’s Court for alleged murder.

    The others are Faboro John, Aniramu Basiru, Falayi Busuyi and Owonifari Sefiu.

    They were accused of murdering Mr. Ayo Jeje on March 30 in Erijiyan-Ekiti.

    Jeje was killed while preparing to defect from the ACN to the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    They were also accused of attempting to murder Mr. Gbenga Adewumi on the same day and at the same place.

    The defence counsel, Mr. Adetunji Oso, urged the court to allow the accused to continue to enjoy the bail that was granted them by the police, pending the legal advice of the Department of Public Prosecution (DPP).

    The prosecuting counsel, Mr. Femi Falade, opposed the bail application.

    Chief Magistrate Richard Adeboye ruled that the accused should continue to enjoy the bail and adjourned till May 25.

    The police arrested two associates of the late Jeje, Segun Adewumi and Adigun Adesanmi, for taking Awe’s pictures in court. It was learnt that they were taken to the command’s headquarters.

  • Oshiomhole, Adoke exchange hot words over Olaitan’s murder

    Oshiomhole, Adoke exchange hot words over Olaitan’s murder

    THERE was tension yesterday at the State House, Abuja, prior to the beginning of the National Council of State (NCS) meeting.

    Two Council members – Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Mohammed Adoke and Edo State Governor Adams Oshiomhole were locked in verbal war.

    It was on the investigation and prosecution of those held in connection with the murder of Oshiomhole’s Principal Private Secretary, Mr. Olaitan Oyerinde.

    Oshiomhole got angry when Adoke asked questions on the matter. It took the intervention of his colleagues to calm him down before President Goodluck Jonathan arrived at the Executive Council Chamber for the meeting.

    Fielding questions from reporters shortly after the meeting on what informed his reaction, Oshiomhole said that it was an issue that he would not want to talk about.

    But he accused the Attorney-General of trivialising the murder case of his former aide and insisted that Adoke ought to know where to direct his questions, particularly to the Deputy Inspector-General of Police in Edo State, who, he said, referred the case that ought to be handled in the state to Abuja.

    He said: “I don’t think it is an issue I want to talk about. This issue is that he was saying my Attorney General should have known what to do, that he has nothing to do with the matter and I simply asked him who referred the matter to him. Was it my Attorney General?”

    “The matter was referred to him by the Deputy Inspector-General of Police and I asked him who should know better? If the Deputy Inspector-General of Police referred a matter that he ought to have referred to the state, to the Federal Attorney-General, who is the one dragging him into the matter, who is the one politicising the matter.”

    He said the Deputy Inspector-General (DIG) who knew that the murder was committed in Edo State should also have known that the issue ought to be handled by the State Attorney-General for prosecution.

    The Governor stressed that even if someone does not like his person, his office should be respected as an elected governor of Edo State.

    He went on: “Should we assume that the DIG did not know that murder is a state offence? And if he knows it’s a state offence, why did he refer it to the federal Attorney-General, so, if there are complains, he should be to the DIG who referred the case to him. The rest you witness.

    “The point is that, I am an elected governor, he has to respect my office even if he doesn’t respect my person. In any event, we are dealing with factual issues. If a case was wrongfully referred to the federal Attorney General by the Police, who is to blame? We also complained that this matter ought to have been referred to the Edo State Director of Public Prosecution (DPP) not the federal’s, because it is a state offence committed in Edo state.

    “It is like the case of a he goat. When the family is happy, its members sacrifice the he goat to celebrate, when the child is sick, the native doctor says sacrifice the he goat so that the child will be well; so head or tail, the he goat is in trouble.”

    Oshiomhole said he was disturbed that a senior official was trivialising the murder of his private secretary when the essence of governance should be to protect peoples’ lives and properties.

    He said: “My private secretary was killed and nobody seems to bother, I am doing my best to raise the issue because that is the least I owe to someone who gave his life; and someone else who does not think life is important, it is a matter to trivalise and joke about.

    “When it comes to life and death, I don’t joke. You don’t joke with life and death. The essence of governance is to protect life and property. That is fundamental. Even in poverty, people need to feel safe and secured. Nobody has a right under our constitution to take the life of another, except if it has been confirmed by a court of competent jurisdiction.

    “I was surprised that for the Attorney-General, it is something he can afford to joke with, telling me that my Attorney-General didn’t know what to do.

    On the way forward, he said: “I always tell the people that all of us are in power today, none of us will be in power tomorrow. If we leave Nigeria worse off, we will wallow in a hopeless situation. If you build it and make it safe, we will walk in freedom. But let us all know that all of us today, your next position is ex this and ex that.

    “I am always conscious of that. And therefore, let that guide our conscience and actions. Left for me, the issue of the death of any Nigerian and in particular, someone who has worked with me is not something I can compromise. Those who think they can compromise it, we leave them in the hands of God.”

    But when confronted yesterday, Adoke said: “I will not disregard his office, he is my personal friend: I have the highest respect for him, he is a governor of a state in this country but I will not join issues with him.

    “I did not trivialise his office and I have no reason to trivialise his office. He is at liberty as a governor to say whatever he wants to say but I will accord his office the highest respect and I will not join issues with him.”

    The NCS comprise the President, all former Heads of State, all former Chief Justices , President of the Senate, Speaker of the House of Representatives, all governors and the Attorney-General of the federation.

    The body advises the President on the prerogative of mercy, awards of national honours, appointment of members of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), the National Judicial Council (NJC), the National Population Commission (NPC) and the National Population Census (NPC) issues.

    Although the issues discussed at yesterday’s meeting were not disclosed, they must have ranged from state security, Police and the killing of the seven foreigners held hostage by Islamic fundamentalist group- Ansaru,, Boko Haram , among others.

    In attendance were Governors Godswill Akpabio (Akwa Ibom); Peter Obi (Anambra); Emmanuel Uduaghan(Delta); Murtala Nyako (Adamawa); Alhaji Ibrahim Dankwambo (Gombe); Comrade Adams Oshimhole(Edo); Liyel Imoke (Cross River) and Rotimi Amaechi (Rivers).

    Former Heads of States including Alhaji Shehu Shagari, Gen. Yakubu Gowon and Chief Ernest Shonekan also attended. Senate President David Mark and House of Representatives Speaker Aminu Tambuwal were also at the meeting.

     

  • Murder, most foul and vicious

    Murder, most foul and vicious

    Believing that what personally touches one must come last, this column does not always encourage any emotional incontinence from even its creator. It was a great author who admonished that we must always separate the man who suffers from the artist that creates. But there are moments when the profoundly private cannot be separated from the powerfully public, when what we have all made of Nigeria returns like a monster to stare us in the face, and when an injured man must return to the community for solace and succour.

    This morning, snooper evacuates the cerebral fireworks and the din of agonistic contention from this column to mourn our late and beloved aburo who perished in the hands of hideous hoodlums on the notorious Ife-Ibadan road in the early evening of January 26th. He was returning to Ibadan after a funeral reception in the ancestral town of Gbongan. But he never made it back to the warm embrace of his beloved wife at their Iyaganku GRA residence.

    A chartered auditor, Godwin Kolawole Adedeji was a scion of the notable Adedeji family of Gbongan and the famed Ojo family of Ibadan. He was a director in the Federal Ministry of Mines and Power. Before then, he had served his country meritoriously in NAPEP and the Petroleum Trust Fund. He had also worked at the UAC as an auditor before transferring his services to the public sector.

    All those who met and interacted with him in the places he had worked spoke of a quiet and reticent fellow, devoted to duty and hard work and given to stoic fortitude and Christianly forbearance. He was also a man of immense personal generosity, lavishing kindness and affection on all who came his way without any ethnic or religious bias. He was a model Nigerian. Had he been allowed to live, Kola would have turned fifty eight in March.

    By all accounts, it was a life of humility, piety and studied self-effacement. He did not push himself or push anybody around. He was courteous and polite in the extreme. Even in our old age, Kola still greeted snooper with the Yoruba deferential gesture of half-prostration, despite the fact that he was already a grandfather several times over.

    But he was not a softie by any stretch of the imagination. On both sides of the family, he was descended of illustrious warriors, and he could tackle like a compact tank. As a youth, he was known as the “admiral” and till the end there was still something of a martial gait to his quiet bearing.

    His loss is Nigeria’s loss because it was said by those who know of these things that he was in close contention for the post of Auditor General of Nigeria. Now the audit is on the grim statistics of elite haemorrhage in Nigeria. Once again, we mourn for a country which like a deranged old hen must suck life out of its most precious eggs in order to prolong its miserable existence.

    How does it feel writing the obituary of your own younger sibling? It is a stark reversal of the evolutionary process. This is too close to call even when one is a compulsive glutton for punishment. How does a traumatised wife explain to the children who have all partaken of a mire humane and civilised existence in Canada that she found their father’s lifeless body with the skull openly split by a crude axe right there on the Ife-Ibadan road near the quarry at Wasinmi? What a savagely ironic mockery of that village’s name!

    The grim reaper has been at work, scything down anything and anybody at sight like one of those dreaded and iconic Egunguns of Yoruba folklore. Once, we were many youths roaming the wild, enjoying the bounteous fruits of nature and eating from the communal pot of their father, S.A, the notable teacher and community leader.

    Now like a Homeric battlefield, men and women are falling on all sides in a crushing pile. The great future that we dreamt about is almost behind. It was a life of schooling, but may be we missed something about the school of life. We went to school as we were told only to succumb to those who didn’t.

    We have been taught a hard lesson by them. You cannot create a personal paradise in an environment of consuming hell. They will come for you, and as they say in America, just because you are paranoid doesn’t mean they are not going to get you. Once your number comes up in the irrational lottery of a dysfunctional society, there is nothing anybody can do about that.

    In a traumatised society, metaphysical self belief is often a talisman for physical self disbelief. Last Thursday evening, snooper departed Kola’s residence in Ibadan after a service of songs in company of a childhood friend who had recently retired as a Permanent Secretary in Lagos state. We were heading for Gbongan to be with the family in preparation for the burial the following day.

    It was getting late and a hideous and fearful pall of darkness suddenly descended on the notorious Ife-Ibadan road. Having cautioned his friend about the dangerous folly of travelling on that road at night, yours sincerely was full of premonition and dark foreboding. But like all people who believe they are metaphysically fortified, our friend would have none of snooper’s words of cautionary wisdom.

    As darkness enveloped everywhere and driving becomes a function of autopilot, our friend growled at snooper. “ I never knew you are this security conscious. Listen, you are travelling with the anointed”. Snooper took a look at him and quipped. “When the armed robber chaps get hold of your bulky frame, you tell them you are anointed. They will ask you, oga wetin you say before ramming your skull.” By that time, the anointed will need ointment if not some immediate life-saving surgery.

    Unknown to our friend, snooper was actually thinking that his (our friend’s) older brother, Segun, had perished in a terrible early evening accident on the same road a decade and a half earlier. Decades before this, their father had also succumbed in a different theatre of road carnage. But even then it is getting impossible to even leave your room these days without being reinforced by some mystical faith in your destiny if not destination.

    As if to confirm snooper’s premonitory hunch, and by an almost preternatural development, there on the road and at a very sharp bend after Ikire very close to where Kola was murdered was an articulated lorry lying completely athwart the road. But for the prompt and timely intervention of the police who opened a bypass for motorists, the carnage would have been unimaginable. Snooper at this point could hear some fearful rumbling from the anointed. But it was a mere vigorous shaking of the lottery can. Our numbers were not up, not yet. At 8.23 am the following morning, the vehicle was still lying across the road.

    How did we get to this point in this country where you leave your loved ones in the morning and you are not sure whether you will be returned to them in a body bag? Or whether it is your spouse that will happen upon your corpse in the middle of the road? Kola’s murder has all the dark hints of a modern whodunit and the satanic ingenuity of a professional execution.

    At first, it was given out that he had jumped from a moving car and smashed his head against the road. But the autopsy has revealed something darker and more sinister. His head injuries were from an axe which suddenly struck. Frozen for posterity were the looks of quizzical horror and tormented bewilderment. What have I done to deserve this, he seems to be asking his sadistic executors.

    That question must now be answered by the men of Osun State police command. This is one vicious murder that must not be swept under the carpet under the guise of permanent investigation. The bald and bare facts are there. Kola did not kill himself. Somebody somewhere must be responsible for this heinous crime against humanity.

    By all corroborated accounts, Kola left the funeral reception around six in the early evening to get to Ibadan. He never did. At the bumps just outside Wasinmi and before Ikire, some armed hoodlums intercepted the car and abducted him. He was taken to a nearby bush where it is believed a stormy confrontation took place.

    Thereafter, he was struck twice at the back of the head with a crude instrument. His body was taken back to the point where he was abducted and deposited near the road. To remove all evidence, the abductors burnt the car they operated with. They were also hoping that by the following morning the body would have been smashed up by traffic with vultures completing the rest. But this was not to be. The body was discovered in the early hours of the morning by his wife who had set out from Ibadan to find out what was going on.

    This is obviously not the work of some amateur killers. This is professional elimination by hard and hardened criminals. The police must find out what is behind this callous execution. All leads must be followed to their logical conclusion, and the criminals brought to justice. There are indications that the highest echelons of government apparatus in Osun State have already swung into action. This is as it should be. This will not bring Kola back to his family but it will effect a much needed closure. May his gentle and noble soul find perfect repose.

  • Youths protest murder of medical doctor in Imo

    The murder of a medical doctor, Chinonye Nwishi, by gunmen in Nguru, Aboh Mbaise Council Area of Imo State has set off a serious protest, with scores of youths in the community taking to the streets.

    According to an eye witness account, the deceased was returning from his clinic located in the area about 9pm when he was accosted by his assailants who first requested for the key of his Toyota Camry car.

    The source further informed that the late Nwishi was said to have been trailed by her assailants who operated on a motor-cycle from Ahiara Junction where his clinic is situated and on getting to Nkwogwu junction to divert to his home, he was accosted by the gunmen.

    The deceased was said to have quickly thrown his car key into a nearby bush as soon as he saw the gangsters, an action that angered the assailants who reportedly pumped bullets into his body and left him dead.

    When the corpse was later discovered by the youths of the community, they went on rampage destroying everything that stood in their way. The protesters who carried placards with various inscriptions demanded from the government that the killers be fished out, wondering why their illustrious son was murdered in a less dignifying manner.

    The Police Public Relations Officer (PPRO) in the state, Vitalis Onugu, a Deputy Superintendent of Police, said he was not aware of the incident, but promised to investigate the case.

  • Murder of vigilantes tears community apart

    Murder of vigilantes tears community apart

    The murder of three men within two days by unknown persons has thrown the Abule Oke community, Iyana-Ilogbo in Ogun State into panic. Taiwo Abiodun recently visited the community and reports

    Two days after Abiodun Adebesin Omoola, 52, a carpenter, died in a controversial circumstance, two private security guards Jimoh Adegbite, 51, and Lukmon Alapomu, 49, were shot dead by unknown gunmen in the dead of night. The three deaths have thrown fear into their neighbourhood.

    Samsudeen Azeez and Kazeem Omotoso who both claimed to have narrowly escaped being murdered. According to the duo, who spoke to The Nation from their hideouts, they are counting their days on earth and living everyday as a bonus because they believed those who killed their friends would do same to them. They have therefore vowed not to return to their places until they are sure of their safety.

    “Since January 4, there has been tension within Abule- Oke in Iyana Ilogbo, Cele and Ilepa/ Ilupeju communities in Ifo Local Government, Area of Ogun State. The tension has led to fear, making people go to bed as early as 7pm to avoid being molested by some suspected land speculators who are suspected to be behind the killings.

    When The Nation visited the community and the scene of the murder, some areas had been deserted and the silence of a graveyard ruled. Many had fled to avoid arrest by law- enforcement officers, while some spoke in hushed tones. Members of the community now sleep with one eye open and have decided to keep sealed lips to avoid being quoted over the fear that the suspected assassins could descend and snuff life out of them as they did to the two vigilante men whom they believed were tricked and killed to avoid exposing them.

    Whodunit?

    Now, the question on everybody’s lips is: Who killed the duo? Adegbite and Alapomu’s bodies were riddled with bullets and deep cuts when their corpses were discovered in the early morning of January 6th. It was alleged that some people raised alarm that the community was being attacked by robbers, and when Adegbite and Alapomu came out to face the bandits, the two of them were mowed down. It is believed that the alarm was raised to lure the two to their death. So, who raised the false alarm and called the members of the Vigilante Group in Ifo Local Government ? Who could have masterminded their killings? What connection did the killings have with the late carpenter, Omoola, who was killed two days earlier? These are some of the questions the Iyana Ilogbo and Ilepa Communities are begging the Inspector General of Police in Abuja to unravel for the past few weeks.

    According to some of the community members , justice cannot be done unless the case is transferred from Ogun State Command to Abuja. The residents expressed lack of confidence in the police, accusing the authorities of trying to cover up those who perpetrated this evil act, adding, “the police is trying to sweep the case under the carpet.”

    Genesis of the killings

    According to Samsudeen Azeez, a driver by profession, he has been living in his one- room apartment at No 25, Oloungbebe Street, Iyana Celestial, Ilupeju-Ilepa (Abule Oke), Ifo Local Government since 1995 but his intention to take another room on January 1 was aborted. On that fateful day, suspected land speculators turned his house into a war zone. They unleashed terror and gruesomely murdered the carpenter, Omoola , whom he contracted the job for, along with his colleagues Kazeem Omotoso who was wounded but escaped and Joseph Ogbonna who was wounded and taken away by the land speculators and has not been seen till date.

    Narrating his ordeal, Azeez in tears, said: “I am a driver and have been living in a one -room with my family since 1995, and on January 1 , this year I wanted to cover another room with iron roofing sheets . As the work started some of the land speculators (Omo onile) came in batches on their okada and demanded ratification fee over the land while I pleaded with them that I would attend to them later. However, the boys who had already been under the influence of alcohol and drugs and over 30 in number, instead of listening to me ,they descended on the workers and beat the hell out of them, while Omotoso escaped , Ogbonna was wounded, Omoola was not lucky as he was beaten mercilessly.”

    The land speculators, however, returned to Azeez’s residence. This time, they were fully armed , Azeez narrated further:“On the 4th of January the land speculators resurfaced and hell was let loose, They came with a Jeep, about 20 okada motorcycles with over 40 of them. They kidnapped three of the workers. Omotoso, Omoola and Ogbonna. Later I heard that the three were dragged along the road to their leader, the Baale of Abule Oke, Chief Adebayo Adekunle where they were tortured, which eventually led to the death of Omoola while Ogbonna was seriously wounded and had not been seen till today. I am hiding in the bush now because the Baale and his boys are after my life.”

    Torture chamber

    Omotoso who has gone into hiding told The Nation that his life is not safe from the suspected assailants who have vowed to kill him. He said that he cannot easily forget how he escaped from being killed. According to him, “the land speculators kidnapped the three of us and after severe beatings, they took us to the palace of Baale Abule -Oke where we were chained. We were treated like common criminals; they used all kinds of weapons to beat us. It was painful, horrible and dehumanising. I was in agony for hours.They beat Omoola to the extent that he could not walk again. In the process of beating him, they hit him in the eye and blood gushed out. Omoola later became blind. When they found that we had no strength again, the Baale said they should quickly take us to Sango Police Station so that we would not die in his domain. They then quickly rushed us in his Jeep and drove us to Sango Police Station but the policeman we met refused to let us in and said one of us was dying. We were already naked as they had removed our clothes. The police officer bluntly refused to detain us and scolded our captors and asked why they should put law into their hands. We cried that we were dying. Ogbonna was already bleeding while Omoola could not walk again. On our way back to the palace, Omoola could not breathe or talk again until he slumped and gave up the ghost in the Jeep .When I saw this I jumped down from the vehicle and ran away without clothes on, for they had seized everything and they believed we would not have the effrontery to run away naked. I left Ogbonna with them because he was already weak and bleeding. When I escaped, I was still naked .When I saw a commercial Kombi bus I begged the conductor to give me a ride but he thought I was a mad man since I was naked. He did not allow me to enter his vehicle but gave me N100 instead.”

    He continued: “It is painful we don’t know the whereabouts of Ogbonna. Later, I learnt that the suspected land speculators were after my life because I could give evidence against them,” Omotoso removed his clothes to show the bruises he received from his attackers.

    Omoola’s corpse unsafe in mortuary

    Saheed Abesin, who is the older brother to the late Omoola, said the suspected assailants had been making frantic efforts to remove his brother’s corpse from Ifo General Hospital mortuary. He said that “we were told that some unknown people have been coming to the mortuary trying to claim the corpse. The late Omoola still has an aged father while his wife and children are at home waiting for what the court would say. He was the head of the family and their bread winner. His corpse should not be released without autopsy and should be handed over to the family but not just anybody.” He accused a commissioner in the police force of trying to tamper with the course of justice.

    How Vigilantes were killed

    However, Omotoso revealed that in the dead of the night, the alleged assailants took the corpse of Omoola, whom they had allegedly killed and wanted to dump it in the house where he was working when they were accosted by one of the vigilante members , the late Adegbite. He challenged them and asked to see what they were conveying in the car they were driving. The suspects pleaded with him and even cajoled him to cooperate with them but he refused. This led to arguments, which awoke a police officer who lives within the vicinity. The officer came out to inquire from them what was happening. Again, they made effort to woo him to their side. He also refused and the case was eventually reported at the Ifo Police Station.

    According to Azeez, the owner of the house which the late Omoola was roofing, “When we were informed that the land speculators were coming to attack us in the night we ran into the bush to hide. Around 2 am, about 30 land speculators came to my house with Omoola’s corpse, intending to dump it or to bury it in the uncompleted building, but unfortunately for them, they were sighted by the two vigilante men who quickly alerted me. It was because they saw them trying to dump Omoola’s corpse in my house that they later tricked them and killed them too. Now. I cannot sleep in Abule Oke again, I am in hiding because I am not safe. They may want to kill me too.”

    According to one of the wives of the slain vigilante, Mrs Bose Adegbite, on January 8, at 12 :30 am, a distress call was sent to her husband by some unknown people, informing him on phone that some armed robbers were at the Iyana Ilogbo Junction, and that he should come to their rescue. Adegbite who was employed by the community to be safeguarding their transformers, woke up, told his wife and children that he was going to arrest the robbers. He called his partner Alapomu and they went to the junction to see things for themselves.

    Investigation revealed that when the assailants saw both men they pretended to be armed robbers and then rained bullets on them. However, unknown to them two other security guards saw them, killing the two vigilantes. One of the security guards, who saw them killing the vigilantes was shot in the leg. On the second day, the community were alerted by the security men that two of the vigilantes had been killed and the police later came to take the corpses away.

    “We now live in fear, for we know the suspected assassins are the land speculators who have godfathers and have money to spend anywhere. When it comes to land speculators they have the money to spend and they have been killing and getting away with what they do,” said the man who begged for anonymity for fear of being killed.

    When The Nation got to one of the family members of the vigilante killed, Mrs. Awawu Alapomu, she described the incident as a shock. “We were already sleeping on the January 6 when my husband’s phone rang and he told me that he was being called to come and rescue the villagers from armed robbers that had come to terrorise them. I bade him goodbye not knowing that was the last time I would see him. Around 7am in the morning they came to tell us that he had been killed along with his partner. I was shocked to my bone marrow. I was later told that they had taken the corpse to the Ifo General Hospital. I was not allowed to see the corpse but I was told by my children how the body was riddled with bullets.”

    She continued, “I have six children for him, the eldest is 20years and the youngest is a three year old girl. Who will help me to take care of the children?, she lamented.

    Mrs .Bose Adegbite, wife of the second vigilante also confirmed that her husband was called on phone by his partner, Alapomu, to join him to go and fight the robbers. She lamented that her husband was a victim of a set up. “It was after his death that we heard a lot of things.” She believed that her husband was killed by the speculators because they thought he was going to expose their nefarious activities.

    She added: “I relied on my husband who used to support me financially but now everything is gone! I sell pap and I make about N700 once in a while daily when the market is good. Now how will I take care of these six children? This is wicked.”

    Alhaji Muraino Ayinde who was an uncle to the deceased said, “I am an old man, I remember that I was on my way to the toilet on that fateful day when Adegbite informed me that he had a distress call that he should come and rescue the community from armed robbers, it was later we started hearing strange stories.”

    Sodiq Adegbite, son of the late Adegbite, described the death of his father as strange and gruesome. He said, “When I saw the mutilated body of my father I could not believe that human beings could be that wicked. They shot him in the heart, back, chest and buttocks. There were several holes in his body showing traces of knives used in stabbing him. Now we are left fatherless.”

    Chief John Gbadegesin, who is the vice chairman of Abule Oke Central Community Development Association, described the killing of the security guards as shocking. He said “the victims were recruited four years ago to be safe guarding the electric cables and our transformers in this area. They had been performing very well and were hardworking, but see how they dealt cruelly with them. The families demanded for their corpses and said they wanted to quickly bury them for they were Muslims and we organised and paid for the expenses of the burial .They had been buried in their respective houses.”

    Also, Olu Ogundele, an ex officio said the manner and way the victims were killed was too gruesome. “We all saw their bodies , they really destroyed them to the extent that only God can judge. But we pray to the Federal Government to wade into the matter. This is too much,.” he said.

    A stained stool?

    The village head (Baale), Chief Adekunle Adefemi, who was accused of supporting the land speculators, denied any complicity in what happened. He said his community is peaceful. “I am still surprised that these people accused us of many things that never happened. It was the former President Olusegun Obasanjo who assisted us by giving us the land the Lagos University Teaching Hospital (LUTH) once acquired. He released the acquired land to the community and said we should use the proceeds for our development.”

    He continued: “ Where Azeez built his house falls into the acquisition land in our area and I was told that the land agents who are in charge asked him to come and see our agents to discuss about the ratification fee before he continued the roofing of his house, but instead of obeying them, his boys seized our representative’s okada. I learnt that the boy then went to call his colleagues and they fought. Azeez too is a land agent and does his business in Ilepa, but the Ilepa land had fallen into our own area released by the LUTH. We have documents like Certificate of Occupancy, Memorandum of Understanding(MOU), Survey and Agreement between Abule and LUTH they gave us on the acquisition. We went to our lawyer who gave us instruction to post awareness notice to the people and for them to come and pay certain amount for the ratification into WEMA Bank.”

    The village head who confirmed that he was arrested in connection with the case, said, “Around 10:15 pm on January 4, some police officers came from Ifo Police Station to arrest me, saying that I knew about the death of a worker at the site. I spent six days in the police cell at Ifo where they tortured me and again was detained for three weeks at Eleweran Police Station, Abeokuta.”

    On the late Omoola who is still in the mortuary, the Baale said, “he could not have been a carpenter. If he was then the Carpenters’ Society would have come to me to officially inform me as the head of the community. Those they claimed are missing are seen walking along the streets, it’s all tissues of lies. Azeez who started the crisis and wanted to roof his house was even begging me at Eleweran Police Headquarter, Abeokuta, saying he was, being misled and was begging for forgiveness.”

    On the death of the vigilantes, the village head denied ever having hand in it , he said, “I had been in the cell since and I have just come out. I am not after anybody’s life. These men (vigilantes) were working for us without being paid, they were our own people, in fact, I am one of the chief mourners.”

    Narrating his experience in the hands of the police, the Baale said, “I was detained for six days at Ifo where they hanged me on the ceiling. They beat the hell out of me for doing nothing. I have not seen where a traditional ruler is being treated like that. I was stripped naked. In fact, you need to see my body, it is full of wounds.”

    On the death of Omoola, the traditional ruler said, “it, the corpse, was found in the house of Azeez. I don’t kill. On Wednesday, the Azeez’s group and the community called me for a settlement and for a peace meeting, saying they wanted to beg me, but I have contacted my lawyer who said investigation is on at the police station and I should not go. They cannot rubbish and lie against me in the public and now beg me in a corner. We shall meet in the law court.”

    The question about who killed Omoola is still a puzzle, while Azeez claimed the land speculators brought the corpse from the police station to his house, the traditional ruler said the body was found in Azeez’s house.

    The community has appealed to the Inspector General of Police to wade into the matter and investigate thoroughly since both parties are accusing each other of being responsible for the murder of the three men. When contacted, the Investigation Police Officer in charge of the case confirmed the story, adding that investigation was still in progress.

     

  • Ekiti chief to remain in prison till January for alleged murder

    Ekiti chief to remain in prison till January for alleged murder

    Justice Oluwatoyin Bodunde of the Ekiti State High Court 4, sitting in Ado-Ekiti, yesterday ruled that Chief Dayo Orojo should remain in prison custody until January.

    Orojo, who is the head of the Ilisa Quarters in Omuo-Ekiti, Ekiti East Local Government Area, and two others have been in prison custody since September 4 for allegedly killing Mrs. Rebecca Adewumi on May 11.

    The three suspects and others at large were arraigned on a six-count charge of felony, conspiracy to commit murder, unlawful accusation for witchcraft, unlawful participation in trial by ordeal, unlawful deprivation of liberty and murder.

    The late Mrs. Adewunmi, who was 70 years old, was accused of afflicting her stepson, Ola Adewumi, with a strange ailment using witchcraft powers and was beaten to death.

    Ola died few weeks after the septuagenarian was killed.

    Urging the court to grant the accused bail, defence counsel Oladele Adedeji said Orojo was hypertensive and needed medical attention.

    He said the mother of the late Ola, Mrs. Adesola Adewumi, should also be granted bail to enable her mourn her son.

    Prosecution counsel Femi Onipede opposed the bail application. He said the prosecution was ready to present its witnesses.

    Justice Bodunde denied the accused bail. He said: “I am particularly happy that the defence counsel said prison officials have always taken Orojo to the hospital. It would have been a different thing, if the accused was deprived of such right. I hereby order that on no account should any of them be denied access to medical care.

    “It is pathetic that these people are being incarcerated, despite their conditions, but the court does not adjudicate on matters based on sentiments, or else, we would not get anywhere in the dispensation of justice.”

    The ruling on the bail application was adjourned till January 17.

     

  • Six remanded for alleged pipeline vandalism, murder

    A Federal High Court in Lagos on Thursday ordered that six accused persons be remanded in prison custody after they were docked on allegations of oil pipeline vandalism and murder.

    The accused are facing a seven-count charge bordering on the offences, in connection with the vandalism of an oil pipeline and the murder of three engineers of the Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation.

    Those charged are Joel Inerepamu (25), Rueben Oluwole (60), John Isaiah (28), Ineye Okposa (40), Timi Gunugunu (22), and Olisa Saheed (25).

    Justice Mohammed Idris ordered their remand, pending trial, following an application made by the prosecutor, Mr. Toyin Ibadin.

    The News Agency of Nigeria reports that he fixed December 18 for commencement of trial.

    Ibadin had told the court that the accused, on September 5, at about 6p.m., at Arepo, Ogun, conspired to vandalise an NNPC oil pipeline located in the vicinity.

    He alleged that the accused had vandalised the pipeline and scooped out large quantities of petroleum products for illegal sale.

    Ibadin said on sighting engineers assigned to the area from the NNPC, to maintain the pipelines, the accused, who were armed with guns, opened fire.

    He alleged that the engineers were shot dead by the accused.

    According to the prosecutor, the offences contravened sections 3(6), 7(a), 7(b), and 17(a) of the Miscellanous Offence Act, Cap M17, Laws of the Federation of Nigeria, 2004.

    He said the also contravened Section 319 of the Criminal Code, Cap C 38, Laws of the Federation of Nigeria, 2004.

    However, all the accused persons pleaded not guilty to the charges

     

  • Two Auchi Poly students held for ‘kidnap’, ‘rape’ and ‘murder’

    Two Auchi Poly students held for ‘kidnap’, ‘rape’ and ‘murder’

    The Edo State Police Command has arrested two students of the Federal Polytechnic, Auchi, Henry Onoriode Edewo (21) and Emmanuel Isiekhuieme, for the alleged kidnap, rape and murder of Miss Mercy Peters (21).

    The late Mercy was a student of Auchi Polytechnic and was in the same department with the suspects.

    She became missing on July 29.

    It was gathered that the late Mercy was abducted by the suspects and taken to a forest at Ugbor in Oredo Local Government Area, where she was raped.

    She was said to have been killed four days after the abduction.

    The suspects allegedly buried her in a shallow grave in the forest and started demanding ransom from her family.

    Police sources said the family paid some money to the kidnappers, but the hoodlums insisted on N1 million.

    Police spokesman Anthony Airhuoyo said the suspects were arrested on October 17.

    Airhuoyo said the suspects took the police to where they buried Mercy.

    He said her remains had been exhumed for an autopsy.

    A third suspect, simply identified as Charles, is still at large.