The Suspects |
For
members of a notorious kidnap gang operating in Port Harcourt, the Rivers State
capital, nothing could go wrong, but Wednesday, October 12, 2016 was the day
the long arm of the law caught up with them.
The nine members of the gang,
who were apprehended by the operatives of the Inspector-General of Police
Special Intelligence Response Team in a five-hour raid that day, said they were
so efficient in their criminal operations that they once kidnapped four victims
on the same day.
The afternoon raid led to the
arrest of Daniel Gabriel (33), Alaso Igodo (25), Akeodi Aselemi (34),
Ayibinmotei Livinus (25), Anikuroka Marshal (33), Biebele Elijah (34) Efiye
Anda (34), Daniel Lessor (31) and Isaac Reuben (27), all living within the Port
Harcourt metropolis.
The police said the gang
was responsible for most of the kidnappings that took place within GRA Phase 2,
Port Harcourt, Borokiri General Area and YKC axis of Woji in Rivers State.
Saturday
PUNCH learnt
that the string of events which led to the apprehension of the nine suspects
started with the abduction of a woman identified as Mrs. Okotie, who was
kidnapped few weeks ago opposite the Royal House of Grace Church in Port
Harcourt.
The gang was said to have
abducted her in the Mazda car they used as operational vehicle.
The victim told the police that
she had told the suspects that she was not feeling fine but they did not listen
to her.
Fortunately for Mrs. Okotie,
the car broke down along the way and the leader of the gang named Blackie,
called for another vehicle, a Nissan Primera, which arrived shortly after.
“But they did not know that we
had got information about them. They were on their way to the Ornage Waterside
when we intercepted them. As soon as they saw us, they fled and abandoned the
woman in the car along with one of their rifles,” the source said.
Few days after the botched
kidnapping of Mrs. Okotie, IRT operatives who were following up on a lead,
arrested Gabriel, a taxi driver, around 2.pm on October 12.
When Gabriel, an Akwa-Ibom
indigene living at Navy Market Borikiri, Port-Harcourt was taken in for
questioning, he confessed that he had personally been involved in 15 kidnaps in
the last few months in the state.
He then led the police to
his house where five members of the gang were already planning another kidnap.
“When we got to his
house, we arrested five of his gang members and from there, we proceeded to
Enugu Waterfront where we arrested Anikuroka Marshal, the gang’s armourer.
The suspects also identified Diobele Elijah and Akodi Aselemi as their spies
who go around town scouting for victims. They confessed to have three
AK47 rifles, two pistols, which they use in their operations,” a police source
said.
Saturday PUNCH learnt that in
one of the kidnaps carried out by the gang, on August 10, 2016, a pastor, Mrs.
Luis Ubah and one Mr. Chika Ezenwa were abducted. The same day, the gang
kidnapped a business woman, Mrs. Ubah in her store, they also grabbed another
victim identified as Ezenwa who was with Ubah at the time.
The four victims were taken by
the gang to the Indoki Estate Waterfront.
The source explained that while
on their way to the waterfront, the gang encountered a police team and
instantly opened fire on the policemen.
“Inspector David Ijosi and one
Corporal Dike Ledee were injured by bullets in the attack. One was hit in the
leg while another was hit in the neck and the kidnappers escaped into the Isaka
creeks in Okrika,” the source said.
Soon after, the gang made
contact with Ubah’s husband, Bishop Prince Ubah, from whom they demanded a N50m
ransom for her freedom.
During the ensuing negotiation,
the ransom for the release of the bishop’s wife was reduced to N2.8m and a
place was agreed on for the family to drop the ransom.
But in a dramatic turn of
events, when two brothers of the bishop, Onyeka Ani and Pastor Okezie Akara,
took the money to the agreed place on August 25, 2016, 15 days after Mrs. Ubah
was kidnapped, the gang members decided to release her along with Ezenwa but
kidnapped the two brothers instead.
The police said they then
demanded another N1m ransom from the bishop for his brothers. But N750, 000 was
eventually paid for their release.
Police investigation also
showed that in August 2016, the gang kidnapped one Nkechi at YKC Junction in
Woji Town, Port Harcourt, and she was transported to the Woji Waterfront where
they ferried her by speedboat to Kula community in Akukotoru Local Government
Area of Rivers State.
The woman was reportedly
kept in captivity for two weeks and was released after a ransom of N2m was paid
by her family.
In September, a victim
identified as Coachie, who was abducted around Number One Stadium, Port
Harcourt, was released after a ransom of N2.5m was paid.
In his statement, Gabriel
explained that he came to Port Harcourt in 2015 and worked as a taxi driver but
when things became difficult for him, he moved his family back home and joined
his first kidnapping gang.
He said, “I met the members of
the gang in March 2016. I was plying the Aba Road looking for passengers one
day when they stopped me and entered my taxi. They asked me to take them
to Borikiri in Port Harcourt.
“When we got there, I was
surprised that they paid me more than I demanded and I told them that I wanted
to know more about them. The leader who sat in front passenger seat
then gave me his phone number and said he would like me to work with them.
“Few days later, they invited
me to a hotel in Borikiri and told me what they did. In April, Blackie, the
gang leader, called and asked that I should meet him in his hotel. When I got
there, I met other members of the gang preparing for an operation. They showed
me two bags containing guns and put it in my car. I then drove them to GRA in
Port Harcourt.
“When we got there, the gang’s
informant said we had missed the target, a woman, who had just left the place.
While leaving, we saw a man driving a nice car and we kidnapped him. He was
taken to the Indoki Estate Waterfront. We put him in a speed boat and took him
to a camp across the river.”
Gabriel said they carried out
many kidnappings and that in August 2016, when they kidnapped Mrs. Okotie, it
was like God just wanted them to be caught.
According to him, he had no
idea what happened to his car, which he converted from a taxi cab to the gang’s
operational vehicle.
“When we were intercepted by
the police that day, we left one gun in the car while escaping while Blackie
escaped with one other rifle. He gave it to one of our boys, who normally kept
our rifles. But after I was arrested, I took the police to the boy and they
recovered the rifle and my cab,” he said.
However, in his confessional
statement, Anda, a speed boat operator, said he got N200,000 each time he
ferried the kidnappers and their victims to their camps across the river in his
speed boat.
The suspect, a Bayelsa State
indigene, said he was involved in pipeline vandalism and oil theft before the
military destroyed the camps in which they “cook” the oil, referring to the
numerous makeshift oil refineries that dot creeks where oil militants operate
in the country.
“When I became jobless, my
friends invited me to Port Harcourt to join the kidnapping business. I became
their boat operator. Apart from the transport duty, I was also in charge of
buying food for the gang members and the victims. I bought a speed boat with
the money I have made so far,” Anda said.
Marshal (the gang’s armourer)
on the other hand, said he was paid N40,000 per each operation.
The suspect, who is an indigene
of Opobo-Nkoro Local Government Area of Rivers State, said he usually kept the
guns in an abandoned bus parked inside the Baptist Church field in Borokiri.
“I did not usually go out with
them for the operations. My job is to keep the guns,” he said.
Another suspect, Elijah, a
native of Okrika in Rivers State, said he was lured to the gang by his boss,
whom he identified as Elvis.
According to him, his role was
to assist Elvis to monitor the movement of their targets.
“There was a time I
followed Elvis three times to spy on a woman we wanted to kidnap. We could not
carry out the operation because our leader, Blackie did not come on time. I was
also with him in GRA where we kidnapped the woman who was rescued by the
police. Elvis had only been giving me little money since I started working with
him. But he loved to buy me a lot of drinks,” he said.
The police said investigation
on the scale of the operations of the gang was still on and that they were
making efforts to arrest other members of the gang who are now underground.
full source: PUNCH NG
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