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Saturday, 22 October 2016
We planned to kidnap Ibeju-Lekki monarch – Abductors of Lagos landlords
Five suspects – Natei Okunna, James Akegbe, Thank-God
Jegede, Trust Bourdillon and Timi Inomi – who carried out
the kidnap of four landlords in Isheri North area of Lagos
State on September 17, are now in the custody of the
Inspector-General of Police Response Team.
The suspects were hunted down across three states –
Ondo, Ogun and Delta states – after they got a N12m
ransom to free the landlords.
PUNCH had reported that the landlords, Kennedy
Ucheagwu, Dr. Omololu Bello, Fidelis Esang and their
trainer, Olalere Olawale, were jogging around their area
when they were abducted at gunpoint by the suspects.
A police source said Akegbe (A.K.A JJ) was the first to be
arrested in his hometown of Ore in Ondo State, while the
leader of the gang, Okunna, an ex-Niger Delta militant also
known as Osama, was trailed to his hideout in Sapele,
Delta State.
The IRT operatives trailed the other three suspects to
various hideouts in Ogun and Lagos states.
After their arrest, more details emerged about the
abduction of the landlords, which netted the kidnappers
N12m after many days of negotiation and reduction of the
N1.2bn they initially demanded.
For instance, the suspects stated that the landlords were
kept in the creeks of Ikorodu, Lagos, an intricate network
of hideouts used by many criminal gangs in Lagos as a
result of the fact that the area is largely inaccessible to
security agencies.
But the police said the most important victory about the
arrest of the suspects is that it stalled the plans of the
suspects to kidnap the traditional ruler of Ibeju Lekki, Oba
Rafiu Salami, whom the suspects said they had already
perfected plans to abduct.
A police source explained that the suspects already sent
out scouts to monitor the movement of the monarch, but
had yet to choose a date to grab him before they were
arrested.
It would be recalled that kidnappers suspected to be Niger
Delta militants had on August 7 kidnapped another Lagos
monarch, the Oniba of Iba, Oba Goriola Oseni, who was
only released after a ransom of N15.1m was paid.
The police said the Inspector-General of Police had
mandated the IRT to ensure that no such abduction
occurred again.
Okunna, 29, said in his confessional statement that an
informant brought them the job and told them that the
security around the Ibeju-Lekki king was lax.
“We sent him to watch the oba’s movement and tell us
how often he comes to the waterside. Our informant gave
us a positive result, but we have not chosen a date yet,”
the suspect said.
Okunna said he stopped being a militant when he became
a beneficiary of the presidential amnesty for Niger Delta
militants.
He said as soon as the amnesty office stopped paying his
monthly stipend, he went back to his old ways.
He said, “During the amnesty programme, I was trained as
a marine pilot in South Africa, but when I returned to
Nigeria, I could not get any job and was only surviving on
the stipend they were paying us monthly. The stipend
stopped in 2015 and I relocated from my hometown in
Warri North Local Government to Lagos to join some of
my friends who are into pipeline vandalism in Ikorodu
area of Lagos State.
“When I arrived in Lagos, a friend, Vickar, accommodated
me and showed me how the pipeline operations were
being done. It was when the pipeline operation stopped
that we went into kidnapping. We had a camp in Ishawo,
Ikorodu but when the Army started bombing us, we fled
and set up another camp inside the creek at Ajegunle,
around Ikorodu.
“We had carried out many kidnappings before the job of
the landlords came. When my boys went to kidnap the
landlords, I did not go with them because my rank was
higher. I was like a boss. I sent one of the boys to do
surveillance on the landlords till we chose a day to strike.
“I was in the camp when they brought the landlords and I
instructed them to ensure that they did not go hungry. But
I was not the one who negotiated the ransom.”
Okunna said he left the camp three days after the
landlords arrived and lodged in a hotel with his girlfriend.
He said he was there till the ransom was paid and
N500,000 was brought to him.
“I was assured every other member of the gang had got
their shares. The plan to kidnap the Oba of Ibeju-Lekki was
already on before we even released the landlords,” he
said.
Akegbe who was arrested in his house at Ore, said he was
a fisherman and a native of Arogbo, Ondo State.
He explained that when his fishing business became
unprofitable, he decided to join the kidnapping gang.
Speaking about the kidnap of the Lagos landlords, he said
the gang’s informant told them the exact time the
landlords usually came out to jog in the morning.
According to him, seven of them arrived Isheri through the
waterways in one boat, armed with five guns.
He said, “Four of us stood by the roadside with guns
waiting for them. When they sighted us, they got scared
and tried to run away. We pursued them, shooting in the
air until they lay on the ground, shaking with fright.
“After we took them to our camp, it was Julius and Senior-
Man, who negotiated and collected the ransom from
where it was dropped in Ajegunle. My share of the ransom
was N300,000.”
The third suspect, 27-year-old Jegede, who is a kinsman of
Akegbe, said he worked as a cleaner in a hotel in Isheri
North.
Jegede revealed that his step-father, a man he identified
simply as MB, was the one who brought the job of
kidnapping the landlords to the gang.
The police are still on the trail of the step-father.
Jegede said, “My step-father did not tell me about the
plans. One of our gang members whom we call Trust, was
even the one who told me about the kidnap plans. Trust
also told me that it was my step-father that brought the
gang. The man married my mother and they had four
children together. He is a fisherman and hunter. He
normally hunts inside the Isheri bush and he lives inside
an uncompleted building within the area with my mother.
“After I heard about the job, I told the gang I was
interested and I was told all I needed to do was monitor
the movement of the landlords and alert them anytime I
saw them jogging. When we eventually got the ransom, I
got N300,000 while my step-father got N500,000.”
Twenty-eight-year-old Bordillon on the other hand, said his
role in the kidnapping was ensuring that there was food in
the camp to feed the captives.
He also admitted that he and Akegbe led the landlords out
of the camp and dropped them where they found their
way home after the payment of the ransom.
“I sell foodstuff with my wife at Ikorodu. I have been
involved in a number of other kidnappings with the gang. I
was taught how to shoot by our leader (Okunna). I went
with them to kidnap the landlord and was one of the
people who shot in the air when the landlords were trying
to run away,” Bordillon said.
He also said he got N300,000 as his share of the ransom.
The Force Public Relations Officer, Don Awuna, who
confirmed the arrest, said efforts were on to arrest other
members of the gang who are still at large.
SOURCE: PUNCH
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