Police in Enugu have exhumed three
decomposed human bodies buried in the foundation of a new building site,
believed to be a church building
located at the Ugwuaji area of Enugu, along
the Enugu/Port Harcourt Expressway.
The corpses were
already covered with concrete before they were discovered and exhumed.
Construction of the building, whose owner was yet to be ascertained
as at the time of filing this report was said to have commenced recently and
was still at the foundation level by the time the police made the discoveries.
Sources told Daily Sun that the victims could be Keke (tricycle)
operators some of whom have been reported missing of recent.
Another source claimed it was duri Keke operators that the
discovery was made.
A worker at the site, who got wind of the bodies, was said to have raised the alarm
leading to police investigation and discovery.
The police allegedly moved in on a tip-off and reportedly mobilised
some labourers who dug the foundation open and exhumed the already decomposed
bodies.
Some people who spoke to Daily Sun expressed shock at the discovery
and urged government and security agencies to ensure that the culprits were
arrested and brought to book.
There were further revelations that the building, which is believed
to be a proposed place of worship was being put up by a suspected ritualist who
disguised himself as a man of God.
The state police command, through its Police Public Relations
Officer, Mr. Ebere Amaraizu confirmed the discovery and added that the corpses
were recovered from the site following a tip-off.
“Three decomposing bodies were found and full-scale investigation
has commenced with a view to fishing out the culprits.”
Meanwhile, fear has gripped residents of Ugwuaji as security
operatives were said to have swung into action to crackdown on the ritualist
and his cohorts who killed and buried the deceased persons.
In 1996, a similar incident occurred in Owerri, Imo State when
police arrested a man, Innocent Ekeanyanwu, with the head of a young boy,
Ikechukwu Okonkwo.
In the course of investigation, the police traced the buried torso
of Ikechukwu to the premises of Otokoto Hotel, owned by a business man, Chief
Vincent Duru, and uncovered a syndicate which specialised in ritual killing and
the sale and procurement of human parts.
The horrifying discoveries sparked off violent protests in Owerri,
which led to the burning and looting of property belonging to suspected killers.
Following the protests in which both the police and the state’s
military administration were accused of aiding and abetting the crime of ritual
killing, the state government set up a panel headed by Justice P.C Onumajuru,
to investigate the case.
The panel at the end of its assignment recommended the trial of the
Otokoto syndicate members. The two sets of trials that went on for many years
represented all that the state military administration had been able to do with
the implementation of the Justice Onumajuru panel of inquiry.
Six years after, the seven men charged with his murder were
sentenced to death by hanging. Those condemned were Alban Ajaegbu, Sampson
Nnomita, Ebenezer Egwuekwe, Rufus Anyanwu, Lawrence Eboh, Leonard Unaogu and
Chief Vincent Duru (a.k.a Otokoto).
Source:The Sun
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