Suspected Badoo cult group yesterday struck at Oke Ota, Ibeshi area of Ikorodu, Lagos, killing four members of a family. A member of the family, Seyi, survived the attack but is still unconscious in hospital.
Daily Sun gathered that the group had forcefully gained entrance into the home of Oluwarotimi Adejare through one of the windows in the apartment and murdered four family members.
It was gathered that Adejare, his wife and a daughter were already dead when sympathisers got to the scene, while two others were rushed to the hospital, but one could not make it as she died on the way while another is stll battling for survival.
A neighbour, John Madariola, said when another resident noticed that the Adejares did not wake up as they normally did on Sunday, he raised the alarm and “we raced to the house and discovered that one of the windows had been destroyed. We knew that Badoo cult had struck again. We now called the police.
“When the door was opened, Mr. Adejare, his wife and one of their daughters were dead; two others were still breathing, they were rushed to the hospital but one gave up the ghost, while Seyi is still unconscious.
“We are tired of Badoo cult killings. Let the police who claimed they arrested many suspects tell us those who are Badoo members and their sponsors.”
The Lagos State Police image maker, Olarinde Famous-Cole, said a murder incident was reported, “in the early hours of Sunday, July 30, 2017, and police operatives responded to a distress call at Oke Ota, Ibeshe, Ikorodu area of Lagos State.
“Police operatives found it difficult to locate the house, which was situated in a thick forest. The room and parlour apartment was eventually located. One of the windows was opened and we discovered that a family of five were attacked.
Three died on the spot and one other died while receiving treatment at the hospital and the last member, who is alive, is responding to treatment.
“Preliminary investigation showed that no visible trace of violence or clues linked to the cultist group was found. No stone was found at the scene. A case of murder is being investigated by police detectives .
“The command is using this opportunity to call on local government chairmen, community development chairman and traditional rulers to check their area and report to the police anyone or families that are still staying in isolated areas that are not safe for living.”
He called on the public not to resort to jungle justice, but to give the police information that would lead to the arrest of the perpetrators of the dastardly act.
Over 26 persons have been killed by the suspected Badoo cult group within one year.
Daily Sun Report.
31 July 2017
30 July 2017
Life in kidnappers’ den: Freed Lagos students recount ordeal
The father and an aunt of two of the six students of Lagos State Model School, Igbonla, Epe, who were freed last Friday, after 64 days in the custody of their abductors have given an insight to the ordeal which the young boys passed through.
The six boys – Peter Jonah, Isiaq Rahmon, Adebayo George, Judah Agbausi, Pelumi Philips and Farouq Yusuf, were abducted from the school premises on Thursday, May 25, 2017 by gunmen.
Overwhelmed by the joy of being reunited with their children, the aunt of one of the boys, who revealed that all parents of the six boys had been put under strict directive not to speak with journalists, however ignored the gag and recounted what her nephew told the family.
Earnestly pleading not to be named in print, she said: “My nephew (one of the boys) has spoken to us. After the Lagos State Government administered a medical checkup on all of them, we had to still take the child to a private hospital just to be sure the boy is restored to his real self, health wise.
“He said they were taken to three different camps and they were beaten and starved at some point because parents couldn’t pay the ransom on time. He said the distance between the first camp and the second took less than an hour while the distance between the second and third camps was the farthest as it took so many hours.
Their abductees beat them and even starved them when they got to the second camp because they were not happy with the fact that the expected ransom was being delayed. Anyway, he said they were fed and treated very well in the third camp.”
As Sunday Sun gathered, the first camp was located in Ikorodu.
The second camp was in Ogun State while the third was in Aboto Creek in Ilaje Local Government area of Ondo State.
When the boys arrived Lagos from Ilaje, Ondo State, where they were released, the pupils were taken to the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital (LASUTH), last night. Some were reconciled with their parents late Friday night night while others joined their waiting families yesterday morning.
The father of one of the freed boys, who also requested not to be identified, while thanking God for the release of the six students, lamented that his son and the other boys experienced psychological trauma.
He said: “We thank God for everything. He is the only child we have. The boy is now with us. He was released to us yesterday. I will say that it is only God that helped us find them, despite that we paid a ransom. I cannot disclose the amount we paid but we all paid as much as we could afford. Some people also supported us while the payment system lasted,” he said.
When asked if he would allow his son go back to the school, he replied: “That is impossible. Go back? I would have to look for another school for him. I have not questioned him as to what they faced particularly because I think he is still undergoing some psychological trauma at the moment. The kids were exposed to what is too big for them.”
In the same vein, the Lisa of Ketu-Epe, High Chief Adewale Badru, who spoke with Sunday Sun said: “I can say that we are very happy that the children came home safely and that is why the entire community has been jubilating since.
It is good news for us. Everybody is happy with the efforts of the security agencies and that of the state government. At the moment, the traditional rulers are all working with the security agencies and the state government to ensure that such incident doesn’t happen here again.
When the spokesman of the Lagos State Command, ASP Famous Cole, was contacted to comment on the view that the parents, not the police, deserve the commendation for the release of the pupils, since they had to pay a ransom, he said: “I cannot really start reacting to whether the police should take the glory since no ransom you are talking about was paid.
The pupils were released based on a joint effort by all. We are all glad that the they came back home and that’s all I can say. All we are after now is that the pupils be psychologically rehabilitated. Everybody involved contributed in the area of ensuring their safety.”
To secure the release of the six boys, the parents paid N37 million as ransom to the abductors who kept demanding for more money. It took the combined effort of the Federal and Lagos, Ondo and Ogun state governments, the Rapid Response Squad (RRS) and Anti-Kidnapping Unit of the Lagos State Police Command, to facilitate the release of the boys.
It was also gathered that their final release was a culmination of underground work by the police operatives who were deployed to help in the rescue of the boys.
The abduction of the students naturally generated so much dust, and necessitated the Acting President Yemi Osinbajo and the National Assembly to mandate the Inspector-General of Police, Ibrahim Idris, to expedite action to secure their safe rescue.
Residents flee Ondo community as security operatives hunt abductors
The coastal town of Aboto in Ilaje Local Government Area of Ondo State, which was thrust into national limelight on Friday following the release of the six students of Igbonla Model secondary School, Epe, Lagos, is currently under the siege of the Nigeria Police, the Department of State Services and the Nigerian Navy.
The students, who were kidnapped in Lagos State were taken to Delta State and held hostage while negotiations for their release were ongoing.
They were set free at the once obscure settlement on Friday, and taken to Akure, the Ondo State capital before being handed over to officials of the Lagos State government.
Sunday Sun investigations revealed that police detectives from Ondo, Lagos and Delta states police commands have invaded the town in search of the abductors of the six students.
The Police Public Relations Officer (PPRO) for Ondo State Police command, Mr Femi Joseph, confirmed that police officers had been deployed to conduct further investigations on how the students were found in the creek. He refused to disclose if any arrest had been made in connection with the incident.
Joseph, who said the Lagos State Police was handling the matter, hinted that security agencies are collaborating to ensure that the abductors of the students are found.
“The matter is a national one and there is little which we can do even though the students were found in our jurisdiction. I can assure you that the police are on top of the situation and the kidnappers will not go free,” he said.
“Ondo State Police command is not fully involved in this matter. The Lagos command and the Force Headquarters are in charge. But, we are following the matter up from our end and we are providing men to team up with other officers to ensure that we achieve success at the end of the day.” Aboto is a community surrounded by water and bounded by Ajakpa community.
The two towns are said to be notorious for kidnapping and militancy as no fewer than four cases of kidnap had taken place in the two towns in the last three months.
Sunday Sun gathered that many residents of the community who are mainly of Ijaw extraction have started vacating the town, just as the police and other security agents deployed to the town had intensified efforts to apprehend the kidnappers.
A source in the town hinted that the students were brought into the town through the water ways, and were left inside a boat by their captors at the riverside.
It was learnt that some Niger/Delta militants live in the town, but it was not certain whether or not any of them has been arrested in connection with the incident.
In the recent past, Nigerian Navy patrol teams had sometimes invaded the town during a battle with militants in the town, just as Ajakpa, a town close to Aboto, was recently invaded by soldiers after militants allegedly killed one of their colleagues during a raid on the town.
Also, a leader of the All Progressives Congress, (APC) Mr Olumide Odimayo, who was kidnapped by some gunmen was later found dead at a location close to Aboto community.
Sunday Sun was reliably informed that the six rescued students got assistance from some residents of the town, who saw them where they were dropped, before the state Deputy Governor, Mr Agboola Ajayi, an indigene of the area, sent a delegation comprising senior police officers and his personal aides to move them to Akure.
It was learnt that some community leaders in the town rallied round to ensure that the Deputy Governor got wind of the development within a short time. A source in the town said: “We leant that the students were seen by some of our people and they provided necessary assistance to them before they were handed over to the police, who later took them to Lagos enroute Akure. The kidnappers are not from Aboto and the students were not held captive in Aboto, but our findings revealed that they were moved here from an unknown location.”
A community leader in the town, who spoke on behalf of the Alaboto of Aboto, Oba Beniah Idiogbe, distanced his people from the abduction of the students, saying, “It was unfortunate that the students were found in our town here. We should not suffer for an offence we know nothing about.”
He also urged the police and other security agencies to conduct proper investigation on the matter to ensure that innocent people do not suffer unjustly.
However, it was learnt that some suspects had been arrested in connection with the incident but it was not certain whether or not those apprehended were residents of Aboto community.
Sunday Sun Report
29 July 2017
How abducted Epe schoolboys regained freedom in Ondo creek
After more than two months in the den of kidnappers, respite came the way of the six Lagos Secondary School students kidnapped by gunmen from their Lagos State Igbonla Model College in the Epe area of Lagos State, as they regained their freedom on Friday.
Parents, other family members of the school boys and government officials wee full of joy at the Lagos State Deputy Governor’s office, Alausa, Ikeja, Friday night when the freed school boys were handed over to the Lagos State government.
The handover was done by Ondo State Governor Rotimi Akeredolu with his deputy, Agboola Ajayi, who took delivery of the boys from the kidnappers in one of the creeks of Ondo State on Friday afternoon. The deputy governor of Lagos State, Idiat Oluranti Adebule received the students on behalf of Governor Akinwumi Ambode.
The students were rescued at Aboto Creek, Ilaje Local Government Area of Ondo State, at about 3.30p.m on Friday.
The students are: Pelumi Philips, Farouq Yusuf, Isiaq Rahmon, Adebayo George, Judah Agbausi and Peter Jonah.
It was gathered that the release of the six students followed the intervention of the Ondo state government who the abductors contacted vowing not to release the children to any other state government in the south west except the Ondo State government.
The state government, however, mandated the state deputy governor, Agboola Ajayi, who hailed from a riverine local government where the boys were, to ensure the freedom of the school children.
According to an official of the state government who spoke with Saturday Tribune on condition of anonymity, the Ondo state government has been negotiating the release of the students in the last ten days.
He said the abductors vowed not to release the students to Lagos state government and disclosed that the Delta state government also tried to secure the release of the students but to no avail.
He, however, said the militants in the early hours of Friday released the six students to the deputy governor of Ondo State, between Ajakpa community and Igbonla in the state.
He said the students disclosed that they had been living comfortably with their abductors in the last 64 days saying they were being fed with bread and sardines .
Another source close to the Ondo State government told the Saturday Tribune on phone that no ransom was paid to secure the boys’ release.
“We went to pick them, the kidnappers insisted that they were not handing them over to anybody, they are from Ondo state and they are handing them over to Ondo State.
“The truth of the matter is that we have been in touch with them for 10 days, but nothing was given to them. The only thing they asked for was fuel money and we said we didn’t have fuel money.
Then they said buy bread, not like they were hungry but we decided to just buy bread and sardine like 10 or 15 pieces. When we got there, we spoke to them, we are lucky and we are very happy.
“The boys were handed over right in the creek between Ajakpa and Igbonla,” he said.
The Ondo State government in a statement, commended the Acting President, the governments of Lagos, Ondo, Ogun, Delta states over the release of the six kidnapped students.
In a press statement signed by the Chief Press Secretary to the governor, Segun Ajiboye, the state government said the release of the six students was as a result of the determined and conscientious efforts of the security agencies, including the Police, SSS and the Military across the country
He said “In the last few days, the deputy governors of Ondo and Delta states have worked tirelessly to ensure that the students were released.”
He said the students would be handed over to the deputy governor of Lagos State for further actions.
“We thank Nigerians for their prayers, and charge security agencies to remain committed to their responsibility of ensuring the safety of the citizens.”
However the released students were taken to the Lagos by the state official where they are expected to join a flight to Abuja, to meet with the Vice President, Prof. Yemi Osibajo who mandated the security agents to secure the release of the students within the shortest time.
The gunmen stormed the school on 25 May, 2017 and abducted the students.
A security source said the boys were apparently brought to Ondo State Friday morning, adding that the water ways had to be cleared of all the gun boats so that the boys would have access to travel.
They are also apparently tired of staying in those creeks in Lagos and Ogun, they wanted to come back home but how do they come back? With these children they saw an opportunity. They used them as human shield to go back home,” the source said.
Meanwhile, the Lagos State Government on Friday expressed excitement over the release of the six students commending the efforts of “security agencies who worked tirelessly to ensure the safe release and return of the students.”
In a press statement, the State’s Commissioner for Information and Strategy, Mr. Steve Ayorinde congratulated the parents of the students and all concerned stakeholders over the development, just as he said the students would undergo series of medical tests and trauma therapy before they are reunited with their families.
“This is a welcome development and the State Government has always believed that the students would be released unhurt. The news of their release is therefore a confirmation of that belief and we are glad that they would be reuniting with their families,” Ayorinde said.
He said the State Government remains resolute in its commitment to ensure the safety of lives and property of residents in the State and has already beefed up security in schools to prevent a re-occurrence.
“It is on record that the Governor Akinwunmi Ambode-led administration has invested massively on equipment and welfare of security personnel so as to ensure that the State remains safe for residents and investors.
“This Government has already taken giant steps to secure all our schools especially those in the suburbs and riverine areas and we are confident that the steps taken so far will go a long way in nipping a repeat of such in the bud,” Ayorinde said.
Tribune Report
Parents, other family members of the school boys and government officials wee full of joy at the Lagos State Deputy Governor’s office, Alausa, Ikeja, Friday night when the freed school boys were handed over to the Lagos State government.
The handover was done by Ondo State Governor Rotimi Akeredolu with his deputy, Agboola Ajayi, who took delivery of the boys from the kidnappers in one of the creeks of Ondo State on Friday afternoon. The deputy governor of Lagos State, Idiat Oluranti Adebule received the students on behalf of Governor Akinwumi Ambode.
The students were rescued at Aboto Creek, Ilaje Local Government Area of Ondo State, at about 3.30p.m on Friday.
The students are: Pelumi Philips, Farouq Yusuf, Isiaq Rahmon, Adebayo George, Judah Agbausi and Peter Jonah.
It was gathered that the release of the six students followed the intervention of the Ondo state government who the abductors contacted vowing not to release the children to any other state government in the south west except the Ondo State government.
The state government, however, mandated the state deputy governor, Agboola Ajayi, who hailed from a riverine local government where the boys were, to ensure the freedom of the school children.
According to an official of the state government who spoke with Saturday Tribune on condition of anonymity, the Ondo state government has been negotiating the release of the students in the last ten days.
He said the abductors vowed not to release the students to Lagos state government and disclosed that the Delta state government also tried to secure the release of the students but to no avail.
He, however, said the militants in the early hours of Friday released the six students to the deputy governor of Ondo State, between Ajakpa community and Igbonla in the state.
He said the students disclosed that they had been living comfortably with their abductors in the last 64 days saying they were being fed with bread and sardines .
Another source close to the Ondo State government told the Saturday Tribune on phone that no ransom was paid to secure the boys’ release.
“We went to pick them, the kidnappers insisted that they were not handing them over to anybody, they are from Ondo state and they are handing them over to Ondo State.
“The truth of the matter is that we have been in touch with them for 10 days, but nothing was given to them. The only thing they asked for was fuel money and we said we didn’t have fuel money.
Then they said buy bread, not like they were hungry but we decided to just buy bread and sardine like 10 or 15 pieces. When we got there, we spoke to them, we are lucky and we are very happy.
“The boys were handed over right in the creek between Ajakpa and Igbonla,” he said.
The Ondo State government in a statement, commended the Acting President, the governments of Lagos, Ondo, Ogun, Delta states over the release of the six kidnapped students.
In a press statement signed by the Chief Press Secretary to the governor, Segun Ajiboye, the state government said the release of the six students was as a result of the determined and conscientious efforts of the security agencies, including the Police, SSS and the Military across the country
He said “In the last few days, the deputy governors of Ondo and Delta states have worked tirelessly to ensure that the students were released.”
He said the students would be handed over to the deputy governor of Lagos State for further actions.
“We thank Nigerians for their prayers, and charge security agencies to remain committed to their responsibility of ensuring the safety of the citizens.”
However the released students were taken to the Lagos by the state official where they are expected to join a flight to Abuja, to meet with the Vice President, Prof. Yemi Osibajo who mandated the security agents to secure the release of the students within the shortest time.
The gunmen stormed the school on 25 May, 2017 and abducted the students.
A security source said the boys were apparently brought to Ondo State Friday morning, adding that the water ways had to be cleared of all the gun boats so that the boys would have access to travel.
They are also apparently tired of staying in those creeks in Lagos and Ogun, they wanted to come back home but how do they come back? With these children they saw an opportunity. They used them as human shield to go back home,” the source said.
Meanwhile, the Lagos State Government on Friday expressed excitement over the release of the six students commending the efforts of “security agencies who worked tirelessly to ensure the safe release and return of the students.”
In a press statement, the State’s Commissioner for Information and Strategy, Mr. Steve Ayorinde congratulated the parents of the students and all concerned stakeholders over the development, just as he said the students would undergo series of medical tests and trauma therapy before they are reunited with their families.
“This is a welcome development and the State Government has always believed that the students would be released unhurt. The news of their release is therefore a confirmation of that belief and we are glad that they would be reuniting with their families,” Ayorinde said.
He said the State Government remains resolute in its commitment to ensure the safety of lives and property of residents in the State and has already beefed up security in schools to prevent a re-occurrence.
“It is on record that the Governor Akinwunmi Ambode-led administration has invested massively on equipment and welfare of security personnel so as to ensure that the State remains safe for residents and investors.
“This Government has already taken giant steps to secure all our schools especially those in the suburbs and riverine areas and we are confident that the steps taken so far will go a long way in nipping a repeat of such in the bud,” Ayorinde said.
Tribune Report
28 July 2017
Sex workers want govt to legalise prostitution
The Nigerian Sex Workers Association has called on the Federal Government to decriminalise prostitution, saying such would curb the spread of HIV.
The association added that HIV infection had continued to increase because the government treated prostitution as a crime.
It stated that law enforcement agents, especially the police, consequently harassed sex workers and sometimes demand sex without using condoms.
The National Coordinator of the association, Amaka Enemo, said this in Abuja on Wednesday during an interview with journalists at the presentation of a report titled, ‘Understanding the High Risk of Urban Sexual Networks in Nigeria.’
Enemo was said to have played an active role in gathering information for the report, which was compiled by the National Agency for the Control of AIDS, the University of Manitoba, United States, and the World Bank.
She said, “Sex workers face violence, especially from their clients and law enforcement agents. Sex work is seen as a crime and the police raid streets and brothels to arrest sex workers.
They collect money and if the girl cannot pay money, she will have to give sex to the policemen. If the law enforcer does not want to use condom, the sex worker has to agree and this is why HIV is on the increase.
“So, in this study, all the sex workers we interacted with said their biggest trouble was law enforcers.”
The 36-year-old said several studies had shown that countries where prostitution is not illegal had lower cases of sexually transmitted diseases, while Nigeria, where it is illegal, had one of the highest rates of HIV in the world.
She said sex work should be made legal, and government should not saddle sex workers with the responsibility of paying tax.
Enemo said, “When I visited Amsterdam (Holland), I was able to visit the red light district where sex workers work because prostitution is legal there. I have also visited New Zealand where they have decriminalised sex work.
“When you decriminalise it, there will be less exploitation of sex workers and the violence will reduce.”
Emeno said since HIV is a communicable disease and had no cure, sex workers should be given proper treatment and not victimised.
She said an infected sex worker could directly or indirectly infect as many as 100 people, adding that the government must not hound, but partner them.
Emeno added, “Decriminalise the work so that all of us will be healthy. It might interest you to know that Nigeria has the second highest risk of HIV worldwide and we are hoping to get to zero before 2030.
“How can it end when the drivers of the epidemic are being criminalised?”
In his remarks, the Director, Strategic Knowledge Management, NACA, Dr Kayode Ogungbemi, said sex workers must be taken seriously since married men also patronised them.
He said the message of use of protection must also be taken to mega stores and other places where sexual relationships began.
Ogungbemi added, “This report looks at the history of casual sex, transactional sex and commercial sex. If we do not reach these women, the infection will continue to spread. So, we must teach these women the use of condoms and going for HIV tests because if we don’t do that, they will continue to spread it. Even married people patronise them.”
Also speaking, the Country Coordinator, Centre for Global Public Health, University of Manitoba, Dr. Kalada Green, said the exercise, which was funded by the World Bank, was done in order to improve the efficiency of HIV prevention methods.
Punch Report
The association added that HIV infection had continued to increase because the government treated prostitution as a crime.
It stated that law enforcement agents, especially the police, consequently harassed sex workers and sometimes demand sex without using condoms.
The National Coordinator of the association, Amaka Enemo, said this in Abuja on Wednesday during an interview with journalists at the presentation of a report titled, ‘Understanding the High Risk of Urban Sexual Networks in Nigeria.’
Enemo was said to have played an active role in gathering information for the report, which was compiled by the National Agency for the Control of AIDS, the University of Manitoba, United States, and the World Bank.
She said, “Sex workers face violence, especially from their clients and law enforcement agents. Sex work is seen as a crime and the police raid streets and brothels to arrest sex workers.
They collect money and if the girl cannot pay money, she will have to give sex to the policemen. If the law enforcer does not want to use condom, the sex worker has to agree and this is why HIV is on the increase.
“So, in this study, all the sex workers we interacted with said their biggest trouble was law enforcers.”
The 36-year-old said several studies had shown that countries where prostitution is not illegal had lower cases of sexually transmitted diseases, while Nigeria, where it is illegal, had one of the highest rates of HIV in the world.
She said sex work should be made legal, and government should not saddle sex workers with the responsibility of paying tax.
Enemo said, “When I visited Amsterdam (Holland), I was able to visit the red light district where sex workers work because prostitution is legal there. I have also visited New Zealand where they have decriminalised sex work.
“When you decriminalise it, there will be less exploitation of sex workers and the violence will reduce.”
Emeno said since HIV is a communicable disease and had no cure, sex workers should be given proper treatment and not victimised.
She said an infected sex worker could directly or indirectly infect as many as 100 people, adding that the government must not hound, but partner them.
Emeno added, “Decriminalise the work so that all of us will be healthy. It might interest you to know that Nigeria has the second highest risk of HIV worldwide and we are hoping to get to zero before 2030.
“How can it end when the drivers of the epidemic are being criminalised?”
In his remarks, the Director, Strategic Knowledge Management, NACA, Dr Kayode Ogungbemi, said sex workers must be taken seriously since married men also patronised them.
He said the message of use of protection must also be taken to mega stores and other places where sexual relationships began.
Ogungbemi added, “This report looks at the history of casual sex, transactional sex and commercial sex. If we do not reach these women, the infection will continue to spread. So, we must teach these women the use of condoms and going for HIV tests because if we don’t do that, they will continue to spread it. Even married people patronise them.”
Also speaking, the Country Coordinator, Centre for Global Public Health, University of Manitoba, Dr. Kalada Green, said the exercise, which was funded by the World Bank, was done in order to improve the efficiency of HIV prevention methods.
Punch Report
26 July 2017
Nigeria plans establishment of Council to regulate social media use in country
The National Council on Information (NCI) has recommended the “setting up of a Council to regulate the use of social media in Nigeria”.
The recommendation is contained in a communique issued at the end of Extraordinary Meeting of NCI on Hate Speeches, Fake News and National Unity held on Friday in Jos.
In the communique made available to journalists on Sunday, the Council recommended the use of stringent measures in checking conventional media and their programmes.
The Council, presided over by the Minister of Information and Culture, Lai Mohammed, noted that Social media has no address as such vetting and editing posting in social media might be difficult.
The Council recommended that Information managers at the state level should open a website to counter report of any misinformation posted by the social media as quickly as the hate speeches, misinformation and fake news are posted.
It recommended immediate killing of whatever postings on social media assumed or presumed to be hate speeches or fake news or misinformation by the information managers in various states.
The Council noted that social media might take over the 2019 elections because Nigerians had come to rely more and believe the social media over the conventional media.
It directed the Federal and State Ministries of Information to use jingles to promote peace and come up with cartoons on the TV and Newspapers telling the dangers of fake news and hate speeches.
“The collaboration must start with National Orientation Agency and the state governments,” the Council recommended.
The Council underscored the need to start talking to those responsible for law and enforcement of justice to address the issues of citizens taking laws into their hands.
The body also emphasised that “the welfare of the people is paramount, people well fed will listen to their government”.
NAN reports that the extraordinary meeting of the council was declared open by Governor Simon Lalong of Plateau, represented by his Deputy Prof. Sonni Tyoden.
Mr. Lalong observed that the combination of hate speech, conducts, commentaries, writing and displays that combined with the engagement of Hate Media Platforms had in global history proven their ability to incite genocide.
He emphasised that any person or group of persons using any media outlet to bait and explore the innocence and gullibility of a few people must be condemned and sanctioned as criminal, by all people of conscience
NAN also reports that the Minister of Information and Culture, Lai Mohammed, in a keynote address, expressed displeasure over the hate spewed on radio stations across the country which according to him has become alarming.
The Minister said the careless incitement to violence and the level of insensitivity to the multi-religious, multi-ethnic nature of the country must not be allowed to continue because it is detrimental to the unity and well-being of our country.
The National Council on Information is the highest policy making body for information articulation and delivery in the country.
Delegates to the Council included Heads of Parastatal Agencies in the Federal Ministry of Information and Commissioners for Information in the 36 States.
(NAN)
Culled From Premium Times
The recommendation is contained in a communique issued at the end of Extraordinary Meeting of NCI on Hate Speeches, Fake News and National Unity held on Friday in Jos.
In the communique made available to journalists on Sunday, the Council recommended the use of stringent measures in checking conventional media and their programmes.
The Council, presided over by the Minister of Information and Culture, Lai Mohammed, noted that Social media has no address as such vetting and editing posting in social media might be difficult.
The Council recommended that Information managers at the state level should open a website to counter report of any misinformation posted by the social media as quickly as the hate speeches, misinformation and fake news are posted.
It recommended immediate killing of whatever postings on social media assumed or presumed to be hate speeches or fake news or misinformation by the information managers in various states.
The Council noted that social media might take over the 2019 elections because Nigerians had come to rely more and believe the social media over the conventional media.
It directed the Federal and State Ministries of Information to use jingles to promote peace and come up with cartoons on the TV and Newspapers telling the dangers of fake news and hate speeches.
“The collaboration must start with National Orientation Agency and the state governments,” the Council recommended.
The Council underscored the need to start talking to those responsible for law and enforcement of justice to address the issues of citizens taking laws into their hands.
The body also emphasised that “the welfare of the people is paramount, people well fed will listen to their government”.
NAN reports that the extraordinary meeting of the council was declared open by Governor Simon Lalong of Plateau, represented by his Deputy Prof. Sonni Tyoden.
Mr. Lalong observed that the combination of hate speech, conducts, commentaries, writing and displays that combined with the engagement of Hate Media Platforms had in global history proven their ability to incite genocide.
He emphasised that any person or group of persons using any media outlet to bait and explore the innocence and gullibility of a few people must be condemned and sanctioned as criminal, by all people of conscience
NAN also reports that the Minister of Information and Culture, Lai Mohammed, in a keynote address, expressed displeasure over the hate spewed on radio stations across the country which according to him has become alarming.
The Minister said the careless incitement to violence and the level of insensitivity to the multi-religious, multi-ethnic nature of the country must not be allowed to continue because it is detrimental to the unity and well-being of our country.
The National Council on Information is the highest policy making body for information articulation and delivery in the country.
Delegates to the Council included Heads of Parastatal Agencies in the Federal Ministry of Information and Commissioners for Information in the 36 States.
(NAN)
Culled From Premium Times
25 July 2017
Three policemen dismissed for ‘robbing’ residents of N200,000
Three policemen attached to the Area N Command, Ijede, Ikorodu, Lagos State, have been dismissed from the Nigeria Police Force for unlawful arrest and extortion.
The dismissed cops are Inspector Okelue Nkemeonye with Administrative Police Number, 136005; Sergeant Braimoh Sunday, with Force Number, 355897, and Yusuf Olukoga with F.No., 359928.
PUNCH Metro learnt that the ex-policemen, led by one Bayo Obadia, an Assistant Superintendent of Police, with AP No., 98199, had reportedly paraded themselves as operatives of the Special Anti-Robbery Squad on June 21, 2017.
It was said that the men stationed a van in front of a bank in Ikorodu, where one of their victims, a graduate, had gone to deposit some money.
On coming out of the bank, they collected his phone and forced him to enter their van.
The graduate, in a petition written to the Public Complaint Rapid Response Unit via its Whatsapp number, 08057000003, stated that the policemen accused him of being a Yahoo boy (Internet fraudster), and asked him to pay N1m.
The victim, whose identity was not disclosed, wrote, “I went to the bank this morning (June 21) to deposit money to a company’s account, but there was no network; so I deposited the money into my personal account to do the transfer to the account later. When I came out of the bank, I saw a van with some SARS policemen inside.
“I was told to enter the vehicle at gunpoint. They collected my mobile phone and asked me what I did for a living. I told them that I had just finished my youth service and I was living with my brother. I pointed my brother’s shop to them to stop by and see him because he was the one that sent me to the bank.
“They refused to wait and they did not allow me to pick my calls or make any call. I received an alert on my phone confirming the money I went to deposit. They searched my phone and on seeing the alert, they said I was a Yahoo boy, telling me that I would pay them N1m. One of them slapped me.”
The victim said one of the cops beat him up and the team eventually collected N50,000 from him.
He explained that some other persons were picked and falsely tagged Yahoo boys, adding that the team extorted money from them.
“They drove round places in Ikorodu, Ijede, Gberigbe, Ibeshe, Ipakodo, Ita-Elewa, Agric and First Gate, harassing people and extorting money from them. They collected N50,000 from me, but I noticed that each junction that we reached, people were hailing their leader by his nickname,OJ(Ojewunmi). One Austin slapped me.
They picked me up around 9am and released me at about 6pm. They even used my account to collect money from the guys that I met in the car and used my ATM card to withdraw the money,” he said.
The PCCRU Commandant, ACP Abayomi Shogunle, said upon the receipt of the victim’s complaint, a team was sent to the Area Command for investigation, adding that they were found culpable.
Shogunle, in a statement on Monday, said, “PCRRU preliminary investigation revealed that all the allegations contained in the Whatsapp message actually happened.
“Also, the four police officers, who were armed on the day of the incident, falsely paraded themselves as operatives of the Special Anti-Robbery Squad despite not being posted to SARS by the police authorities.
“Investigation also showed that the officers extorted a total sum of N200,000 from the young men who they tagged, ‘Yahoo Yahoo boys.’ The money was forced from them via N90,000 ATM withdrawal and N110,000 mobile bank money transfer to a third party account provided by the policemen. All the extorted N200,000 was recovered.”
He said the erring policemen and exhibits recovered from them, including a bank statement, were handed over to the Assistant Inspector-General of Police, Zone 2 Command, Onikan, Lagos, Ibrahim Adamu, for further investigation and and necessary disciplinary measures.
He said the outcome of the AIG’s investigation led to the dismissal of the policemen.
The PCRRU commander stated that the move was in line with the efforts of the Inspector-General of Police, Ibrahim Idris, to flush out unethical officers in the force.
“Approval has been given for the dismissal of three policemen attached to the Area ‘N’ Command, Ijede, Ikorodu, under the Lagos State Command, for giving the Nigeria Police Force a bad image.
“In the case of ASP Bayo Obadiah, who led the team of the infamous men on this unacceptable conduct, an official query was issued to him by the AIG Zone 2, Lagos.
“Both his reply and query have been forwarded to the office of the Force Secretary, Force Headquarters, Abuja, from where it would go to the Police Service Commission as required by police regulations,” Shogunle added.
Meanwhile, two sergeants and a constable attached to the Isheri Osun Police Station, Lagos, have been detained after two suspected robbers escaped from the cell.
It was said that the suspects removed the roof of the cell and escaped when the policemen were on duty.
The suspects were said to have been re-arrested by a team led by the Divisional Police Officer.
The Lagos State Police Public Relations Officer, ASP Olarinde Famous-Cole, said, “The policemen are in custody and will face disciplinary actions.”
Punch Report
The dismissed cops are Inspector Okelue Nkemeonye with Administrative Police Number, 136005; Sergeant Braimoh Sunday, with Force Number, 355897, and Yusuf Olukoga with F.No., 359928.
PUNCH Metro learnt that the ex-policemen, led by one Bayo Obadia, an Assistant Superintendent of Police, with AP No., 98199, had reportedly paraded themselves as operatives of the Special Anti-Robbery Squad on June 21, 2017.
It was said that the men stationed a van in front of a bank in Ikorodu, where one of their victims, a graduate, had gone to deposit some money.
On coming out of the bank, they collected his phone and forced him to enter their van.
The graduate, in a petition written to the Public Complaint Rapid Response Unit via its Whatsapp number, 08057000003, stated that the policemen accused him of being a Yahoo boy (Internet fraudster), and asked him to pay N1m.
The victim, whose identity was not disclosed, wrote, “I went to the bank this morning (June 21) to deposit money to a company’s account, but there was no network; so I deposited the money into my personal account to do the transfer to the account later. When I came out of the bank, I saw a van with some SARS policemen inside.
“I was told to enter the vehicle at gunpoint. They collected my mobile phone and asked me what I did for a living. I told them that I had just finished my youth service and I was living with my brother. I pointed my brother’s shop to them to stop by and see him because he was the one that sent me to the bank.
“They refused to wait and they did not allow me to pick my calls or make any call. I received an alert on my phone confirming the money I went to deposit. They searched my phone and on seeing the alert, they said I was a Yahoo boy, telling me that I would pay them N1m. One of them slapped me.”
The victim said one of the cops beat him up and the team eventually collected N50,000 from him.
He explained that some other persons were picked and falsely tagged Yahoo boys, adding that the team extorted money from them.
“They drove round places in Ikorodu, Ijede, Gberigbe, Ibeshe, Ipakodo, Ita-Elewa, Agric and First Gate, harassing people and extorting money from them. They collected N50,000 from me, but I noticed that each junction that we reached, people were hailing their leader by his nickname,OJ(Ojewunmi). One Austin slapped me.
They picked me up around 9am and released me at about 6pm. They even used my account to collect money from the guys that I met in the car and used my ATM card to withdraw the money,” he said.
The PCCRU Commandant, ACP Abayomi Shogunle, said upon the receipt of the victim’s complaint, a team was sent to the Area Command for investigation, adding that they were found culpable.
Shogunle, in a statement on Monday, said, “PCRRU preliminary investigation revealed that all the allegations contained in the Whatsapp message actually happened.
“Also, the four police officers, who were armed on the day of the incident, falsely paraded themselves as operatives of the Special Anti-Robbery Squad despite not being posted to SARS by the police authorities.
“Investigation also showed that the officers extorted a total sum of N200,000 from the young men who they tagged, ‘Yahoo Yahoo boys.’ The money was forced from them via N90,000 ATM withdrawal and N110,000 mobile bank money transfer to a third party account provided by the policemen. All the extorted N200,000 was recovered.”
He said the erring policemen and exhibits recovered from them, including a bank statement, were handed over to the Assistant Inspector-General of Police, Zone 2 Command, Onikan, Lagos, Ibrahim Adamu, for further investigation and and necessary disciplinary measures.
He said the outcome of the AIG’s investigation led to the dismissal of the policemen.
The PCRRU commander stated that the move was in line with the efforts of the Inspector-General of Police, Ibrahim Idris, to flush out unethical officers in the force.
“Approval has been given for the dismissal of three policemen attached to the Area ‘N’ Command, Ijede, Ikorodu, under the Lagos State Command, for giving the Nigeria Police Force a bad image.
“In the case of ASP Bayo Obadiah, who led the team of the infamous men on this unacceptable conduct, an official query was issued to him by the AIG Zone 2, Lagos.
“Both his reply and query have been forwarded to the office of the Force Secretary, Force Headquarters, Abuja, from where it would go to the Police Service Commission as required by police regulations,” Shogunle added.
Meanwhile, two sergeants and a constable attached to the Isheri Osun Police Station, Lagos, have been detained after two suspected robbers escaped from the cell.
It was said that the suspects removed the roof of the cell and escaped when the policemen were on duty.
The suspects were said to have been re-arrested by a team led by the Divisional Police Officer.
The Lagos State Police Public Relations Officer, ASP Olarinde Famous-Cole, said, “The policemen are in custody and will face disciplinary actions.”
Punch Report
24 July 2017
Wife arranges own kidnap to get money from husband
•Gang demands N10million as ransom •I only wanted him to relocate me to the United States —Wife
A housewife, Mrs Bukola Ogun, has been arrested by the Oyo State Police Command for allegedly staging her own kidnap with the intention of extorting money from her husband, and to also make the man, who is an American citizen, relocate her to the Unites States.
The Oyo State Commissioner of Police, Mr Abiodun Odude, who was speaking during the parade of 12 arrested suspects in the state at the Police Headquarters, Eleyele, Ibadan, said the 37-year-old businesswoman, had conspired with a two-man gang, among whom was his cousin, Kayode Adepoju, to orchestrate her own kidnap in order to fraudulently obtain money from her husband.
The police boss said the incident happened at about 7:45p.m. on Tuesday, July 4, when three armed hoodlums stormed the residence of the supposed victim and ‘kidnapped’ her to an unknown destination.
“Barely four hours later, the suspects contacted the victim’s husband, demanding for N10million as ransom as a condition for his wife’s release.
“Unknown to the husband that the kidnap was actually arranged by his wife, he reported the case to the police, and upon the receipt, operatives of the Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS) began a manhunt for the hoodlums.
“During intensive investigation, two suspects were arrested, and they let the cat out of the bag, as operatives were stunned to discover that the victim was the architect of the fake kidnap.
“The woman, for the three days she was away, lodged in a hotel at Imalefalafia area, Ibadan, while efforts were on to rescue her, but after two of the suspects were eventually arrested in their criminal hideout at Imalefalafia area, they confessed to the crime and the mastermind was arrested,” the police boss said.
However, while speaking, the woman, Mrs Ogun, said she called her cousin, Kayode, informing him that she wanted her husband to relocate her to the United States, so wanted to stage her own kidnap so after her rescue, her husband would be left with no option than to send her abroad.
“So I left home on Tuesday, July 4, and returned on Thursday, July 6, acting as if I was kidnapped. It was then that my husband started calling about that I had been kidnapped before finally informing the police.
“Everything is still like a child’s play; he is an American citizen and I just wanted him to relocate me to the US. I told the gang to demand for N10million from my husband; I knew he could not afford that kind of money, but just for the whole plan to look real.
“And within the three days I was away, I lodged myself in a hotel, but I regret everything now,” Mrs Ogun, who had been married to her husband for six years with two children, said.
While speaking on his role in the whole case, Mrs Ogun’s cousin, Kayode, said the woman just called her one day, informing him that she wanted to stage her own kidnap so that her husband would agree to relocate her to the United States since he is a citizen.
“So she told me to find one of my friends who has a car and we would come to her house in the evening of the day we wanted to stage the kidnap.
“When we even got to her house, she was the one who walked out herself and entered the car we brought, and we took her to the hotel where she lodged for three days.
“After that, we called her husband, asking for N10million ransom, just to make the whole plan look real, but we didn’t collect anything from him.
“However, I was arrested the following day after she returned home; policemen came to my office to arrest me, and we had no option than to tell the police the truth,” Kayode said.
The Oyo police boss, however, said that the suspects would be charged to court as soon as possible so as to serve as a less to others who might be planning such stunts.
The police were also able to arrest a gang that specialized in stealing industrial batteries from telecommunication firms’ generating sets.
According to Mr Odude, five suspects, Abayomi Gbenga (24), Ayilara Ahmed (24), Bamimore Nurudeen (32), Adedokun Opeyemi (19) and Bakare Farouk (19), had stolen about 48 inverters from telecommunication masts at Tede, Sepeteri, Igboho, Komi and Ogboro in Saki area of the state.
“The bandits, who were armed with guns, cutlasses and other dangerous weapons, attacked the companies’ security guards before carting away various inverters and other equipments belonging to the firms.
“However, following a distress call received about a robbery operation, SARS operatives launched a manhunt for the hoodlums, and the efforts yielded result when three suspects were arrested along Ago-Are/Sabe road, and the stolen property recovered from them.
“Further investigation carried out led to the arrest of other suspects from their criminal hideouts,” the police boss said, while revealing that one locally-made pistol, 48 inverters, a Peugeot 505 saloon car with registration number ET246APP, a long cutlass and three iron cutters were recovered from the suspects.
The police commissioner said that 12 suspects, included nine suspected armed robbers and three kidnappers, while four arms, 23 ammunition and two vehicles, among others, were recovered.
Tribune Report
A housewife, Mrs Bukola Ogun, has been arrested by the Oyo State Police Command for allegedly staging her own kidnap with the intention of extorting money from her husband, and to also make the man, who is an American citizen, relocate her to the Unites States.
The Oyo State Commissioner of Police, Mr Abiodun Odude, who was speaking during the parade of 12 arrested suspects in the state at the Police Headquarters, Eleyele, Ibadan, said the 37-year-old businesswoman, had conspired with a two-man gang, among whom was his cousin, Kayode Adepoju, to orchestrate her own kidnap in order to fraudulently obtain money from her husband.
The police boss said the incident happened at about 7:45p.m. on Tuesday, July 4, when three armed hoodlums stormed the residence of the supposed victim and ‘kidnapped’ her to an unknown destination.
“Barely four hours later, the suspects contacted the victim’s husband, demanding for N10million as ransom as a condition for his wife’s release.
“Unknown to the husband that the kidnap was actually arranged by his wife, he reported the case to the police, and upon the receipt, operatives of the Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS) began a manhunt for the hoodlums.
“During intensive investigation, two suspects were arrested, and they let the cat out of the bag, as operatives were stunned to discover that the victim was the architect of the fake kidnap.
“The woman, for the three days she was away, lodged in a hotel at Imalefalafia area, Ibadan, while efforts were on to rescue her, but after two of the suspects were eventually arrested in their criminal hideout at Imalefalafia area, they confessed to the crime and the mastermind was arrested,” the police boss said.
However, while speaking, the woman, Mrs Ogun, said she called her cousin, Kayode, informing him that she wanted her husband to relocate her to the United States, so wanted to stage her own kidnap so after her rescue, her husband would be left with no option than to send her abroad.
“So I left home on Tuesday, July 4, and returned on Thursday, July 6, acting as if I was kidnapped. It was then that my husband started calling about that I had been kidnapped before finally informing the police.
“Everything is still like a child’s play; he is an American citizen and I just wanted him to relocate me to the US. I told the gang to demand for N10million from my husband; I knew he could not afford that kind of money, but just for the whole plan to look real.
“And within the three days I was away, I lodged myself in a hotel, but I regret everything now,” Mrs Ogun, who had been married to her husband for six years with two children, said.
While speaking on his role in the whole case, Mrs Ogun’s cousin, Kayode, said the woman just called her one day, informing him that she wanted to stage her own kidnap so that her husband would agree to relocate her to the United States since he is a citizen.
“So she told me to find one of my friends who has a car and we would come to her house in the evening of the day we wanted to stage the kidnap.
“When we even got to her house, she was the one who walked out herself and entered the car we brought, and we took her to the hotel where she lodged for three days.
“After that, we called her husband, asking for N10million ransom, just to make the whole plan look real, but we didn’t collect anything from him.
“However, I was arrested the following day after she returned home; policemen came to my office to arrest me, and we had no option than to tell the police the truth,” Kayode said.
The Oyo police boss, however, said that the suspects would be charged to court as soon as possible so as to serve as a less to others who might be planning such stunts.
The police were also able to arrest a gang that specialized in stealing industrial batteries from telecommunication firms’ generating sets.
According to Mr Odude, five suspects, Abayomi Gbenga (24), Ayilara Ahmed (24), Bamimore Nurudeen (32), Adedokun Opeyemi (19) and Bakare Farouk (19), had stolen about 48 inverters from telecommunication masts at Tede, Sepeteri, Igboho, Komi and Ogboro in Saki area of the state.
“The bandits, who were armed with guns, cutlasses and other dangerous weapons, attacked the companies’ security guards before carting away various inverters and other equipments belonging to the firms.
“However, following a distress call received about a robbery operation, SARS operatives launched a manhunt for the hoodlums, and the efforts yielded result when three suspects were arrested along Ago-Are/Sabe road, and the stolen property recovered from them.
“Further investigation carried out led to the arrest of other suspects from their criminal hideouts,” the police boss said, while revealing that one locally-made pistol, 48 inverters, a Peugeot 505 saloon car with registration number ET246APP, a long cutlass and three iron cutters were recovered from the suspects.
The police commissioner said that 12 suspects, included nine suspected armed robbers and three kidnappers, while four arms, 23 ammunition and two vehicles, among others, were recovered.
Tribune Report
23 July 2017
Pathetic story of three children whose mother murdered their father
• They now live alone in family home
for the three children of the late Alhaji Hakeem Salaudeen, life suddenly turned upside down recently, when their mother, 39-year-old Omotayo allegedly connived with an ex-convict, Oladapo Dolapo, to murder him.
Expectedly the tragic incident has put the children in a pathetic condition of having to fend for themselves while their mother is now gnashing her teeth in regret in custody at Ilesa Prison, where she was remanded by the court following her arraignment by the Osun State Police Command.
The children, Barakat, 17, Uthman, 15 and 12-year-old Fatima, despite urgings by members of the extended family, have elected to continue residing in their parents’ home, to keep it warm and open, as it were, rather than relocate to the family house in the Agowande area of Osogbo. Since the gruesome murder of their father, they have been living alone in the big apartment located on the sleepy street.
One of the children, Uthman and the elder sister, Barakat, told Sunday Sun they preferred to live in the house alone located in a suburb of Osogbo, the capital city of Osun State.
“We can only go out when we want to visit our grandma,” they said together. The grandmother he referred to is the 95-year-old mother of their late dad, and who is fondly called Alhaja Mosobalaje.
Prodded to explain how they have been coping, especially with respect to food, Barakat said: “We still have foodstuff in the house. The foodstuff that mummy bought is still remaining. That is what we are eating now.”
But how will they survive if the food finishes, Sunday Sun sought to know, and she said: “We don’t know. That is why we want the law enforcement agents to forgive our mummy so that she can come back home and take care of us. Family members alone can’t do everything for us.”
At this point, the three children could no longer hold back tears and they began to sob, wondering what would become of the beautiful plans their father laid for them.
Barakat, who just finished from Delightsome Group of Schools, wants to study at the Obafemi Awolowo University to become an accountant. Her brother, Uthman wants to go to the Nigeria Defence Academy (NDA) and become a soldier. But the youngest, Fatima wants to study Theatre Arts and become an actress.
Uthman and Fatima will be in SSS III and JSS III respectively in the same school as from next session.
Meanwhile, more details have emerged on how the tragedy that befell them, when residents of the sleepy area woke up and heard the shocking news that one of their neighbours had been hacked to death by an unknown assailant the previous night.
Sunday Sun gathered that Salaudeen, who was in his 40s, was gruesomely murdered in his house about 3.00 am by his wife who hired an ex-convict, Oladapo Dolapo. The ex-convict is alleged to have stabbed Salaudeen in the stomach with a knife as his wife choked him with a pillow.
At the headquarters of the Osun Police Command, where she was paraded along with her accomplice, Omotayo confessed that she and Dolapo connived to commit the crime.
“I choked him with a pillow, after having sex with him and Dolapo stabbed him to death with a knife. I never thought it would turn out this way. I hired Oladapo Dolapo to help me kill my husband.”
Dolapo, 24, admitted that the woman contracted him to kill the man after promising to give him whatever he wanted if the operation was successful. He disclosed that the deceased’s wife, promised him a befitting accommodation and other largesse.
While parading the suspect, the Commissioner of Police, Olafimihan Adeoye disclosed that Mr. Salaudeen Adesina Jimoh of 3, Engineer Adesina Salawu Street, Osogbo, reported the case at the station on May 12, 2017. He said that on the fateful day about 3:00 am, two unknown men entered his brother’s house, stabbed him to death with knife but nothing was carted away.
Adeoye further explained that a team of police detectives and patrol men went to the scene, where the following inscriptions were found on the wall of the deceased’s house: “No Price, No Pay,” “Aye Axe” and “Forgiveness is a sin.”
The CP said investigation by the police revealed that Omotayo did not only hire Dolapo but actively participated in killing her husband.
The police later arraigned the suspects in court, from where they were remanded at Ilesa Prison.
In an interaction with Sunday Sun, Omotayo said she had lost interest in her marriage, though she confessed that her husband was a good person who always took care of her needs and the needs of her children.
“We’ve been married for 17 years. We are blessed with three children aged 17, 15 and 12. He did not offend me. I was just mad at him,” she said.
Sunday Sun’s investigations indicated that Omotayo and her accomplice after murdering the man, made it look like armed robbers killed him.
A family source said that Dolapo, who made open confessions to the family members at the police station, before he was paraded alongside Omotayo, said that after he had agreed with the woman to carry out the dastardly assignment, she smuggled him into the house around 6.00 pm when the deceased had not come home and hid him inside a small shack made of woods at the back of the house. He remained there until the husband came home in the night.
He disclosed that when the man got home, his wife received him warmly and served him dinner. When the man was eating, the woman went out of the sitting room and met the assailant where he was hiding and told him that her husband had arrived and was eating his dinner in the sitting room.
Before then, when the eldest child, Barakat, noticed that her father had come back and wanted to greet him and also ask him to take her to a JAMB examination centre the following morning, her mother chased her back into the children’s room. She also asked all the children to go and sleep and warned them not to disturb their father.
It was at that point that she then took Dolapo into one of the rooms while the three children were in their room. When she got back to the room, she lured the husband to their room after he had had his dinner. She began to caress him and they eventually had sexual intercourse.
After the session, she left her husband in bed and went out naked, pretending to go and have a shower in the bathroom. Instead she went to meet Dolapo, where he was hiding in one of the rooms and told him that her husband would soon fall asleep so that they could execute their plan.
When she returned to the room again, she joined her husband in bed until she noticed that he had fallen asleep. That was between 2.00 am and 3.00 am. She then sneaked out quietly and led the assailant into the bedroom where the man was sleeping.
Once back in the room, she slammed a pillow on his face trying to choke him, while Dolapo attacked him with a knife and killed him.
To cover up the crime, they made inscriptions on the wall of the house to indicate that the deceased was a member of a cult group, whose members must have come to kill him. The inscriptions read thus: “No price, no pay,” “Aye axe,” and “Forgiveness is a sin.”
She collected the deceased’s phone which was left on a stool, went to the children’s room and also took their only phone, removed other items and gave to the assailant to take away, to make it look like the robbers who killed her husband made away with the items.
Sunday Sun gathered that she asked Dolapo to remove his shirt and hang it on top of the fence as evidence that it was left there by one of the robbers who was trying to escape.
For Dolapo to be able to escape, the woman gave her late husband’s jalabia dress to him to wear, to impersonate him in case he was confronted by vigilantes, who knew the husband often wore the jalabia in the neighbourhood.
Then she opened the gate quietly, to let out Dolapo, but he was noticed by some vigilantes, who truly mistook him for the deceased because of the jalabia he wore.
Sunday Sun gathered that the assailant sold the deceased’s phone to a friend. When the crime was reported, MTN was contacted and the police tracked down the buyer.
It was the buyer who helped the police to trace the assailant and he was later identified as an ex-convict.
When he was paraded by the police, Dolapo said he used to shuttle between Lagos and Osogbo “to do runs.” According to him, whenever he was broke, he would go to Lagos to do ‘runs’ and if he made good money, he would come and spend it in Osogbo.
He disclosed further that it was during his stay in Osogbo that the woman got in touch with him and they struck the deal that led to the killing of Alhaji Salaudeen.
The deceased’s younger brother, Adetunji Idris Babatunde, who spoke with Sunday Sun, said that his late brother told him two weeks before he was killed that he suspected that his wife was planning to kill him.
But when he asked if he had any serious contention with her, the deceased said there was no serious issue between them; but he was just having a feeling that the woman would kill him one day.
On the character of the deceased, Babatunde said: “He was a responsible man to the core. He was a businessman and very responsible and committed to his family. He didn’t live a wayward life. He even bought a car for the wife. I never met them quarrelling any day. Whenever I visited them, I always noticed that they loved each other.”
Asked what he could suspect as being responsible for the sudden change in the couple’s relationship, Babatunde said it could be due to his late brother’s decision to marry the second wife.
According to him, the second wife identified as Tawakalitu who lives in a different house and Omotayo often had quarrels.
Uthman also confirmed that his late father was a nice and responsible family man who loved his family dearly. His parents were very close and loved each other very well. He added that they used to go out together in his father’s car and also shared the same bedroom.
But did the mother ever complain about his late father’s attitude or character in the presence of the children? Uthman said: “Mummy used to complain sometimes that daddy’s behaviour towards her had changed since he married the second wife. She used to complain that daddy was not giving her attention like before and was not providing all her needs as he used to do.”
“Mummy was always disturbing daddy to look for a job for her or open a big shop for her but he did not do that. So, mummy was always complaining that she was not satisfied with the small shop she had. Since then, they would quarrel from time to time. But it was not serious.”
Sunday Sun Report
for the three children of the late Alhaji Hakeem Salaudeen, life suddenly turned upside down recently, when their mother, 39-year-old Omotayo allegedly connived with an ex-convict, Oladapo Dolapo, to murder him.
Expectedly the tragic incident has put the children in a pathetic condition of having to fend for themselves while their mother is now gnashing her teeth in regret in custody at Ilesa Prison, where she was remanded by the court following her arraignment by the Osun State Police Command.
The children, Barakat, 17, Uthman, 15 and 12-year-old Fatima, despite urgings by members of the extended family, have elected to continue residing in their parents’ home, to keep it warm and open, as it were, rather than relocate to the family house in the Agowande area of Osogbo. Since the gruesome murder of their father, they have been living alone in the big apartment located on the sleepy street.
One of the children, Uthman and the elder sister, Barakat, told Sunday Sun they preferred to live in the house alone located in a suburb of Osogbo, the capital city of Osun State.
“We can only go out when we want to visit our grandma,” they said together. The grandmother he referred to is the 95-year-old mother of their late dad, and who is fondly called Alhaja Mosobalaje.
Prodded to explain how they have been coping, especially with respect to food, Barakat said: “We still have foodstuff in the house. The foodstuff that mummy bought is still remaining. That is what we are eating now.”
But how will they survive if the food finishes, Sunday Sun sought to know, and she said: “We don’t know. That is why we want the law enforcement agents to forgive our mummy so that she can come back home and take care of us. Family members alone can’t do everything for us.”
At this point, the three children could no longer hold back tears and they began to sob, wondering what would become of the beautiful plans their father laid for them.
Barakat, who just finished from Delightsome Group of Schools, wants to study at the Obafemi Awolowo University to become an accountant. Her brother, Uthman wants to go to the Nigeria Defence Academy (NDA) and become a soldier. But the youngest, Fatima wants to study Theatre Arts and become an actress.
Uthman and Fatima will be in SSS III and JSS III respectively in the same school as from next session.
Meanwhile, more details have emerged on how the tragedy that befell them, when residents of the sleepy area woke up and heard the shocking news that one of their neighbours had been hacked to death by an unknown assailant the previous night.
Sunday Sun gathered that Salaudeen, who was in his 40s, was gruesomely murdered in his house about 3.00 am by his wife who hired an ex-convict, Oladapo Dolapo. The ex-convict is alleged to have stabbed Salaudeen in the stomach with a knife as his wife choked him with a pillow.
At the headquarters of the Osun Police Command, where she was paraded along with her accomplice, Omotayo confessed that she and Dolapo connived to commit the crime.
“I choked him with a pillow, after having sex with him and Dolapo stabbed him to death with a knife. I never thought it would turn out this way. I hired Oladapo Dolapo to help me kill my husband.”
Dolapo, 24, admitted that the woman contracted him to kill the man after promising to give him whatever he wanted if the operation was successful. He disclosed that the deceased’s wife, promised him a befitting accommodation and other largesse.
While parading the suspect, the Commissioner of Police, Olafimihan Adeoye disclosed that Mr. Salaudeen Adesina Jimoh of 3, Engineer Adesina Salawu Street, Osogbo, reported the case at the station on May 12, 2017. He said that on the fateful day about 3:00 am, two unknown men entered his brother’s house, stabbed him to death with knife but nothing was carted away.
Adeoye further explained that a team of police detectives and patrol men went to the scene, where the following inscriptions were found on the wall of the deceased’s house: “No Price, No Pay,” “Aye Axe” and “Forgiveness is a sin.”
The CP said investigation by the police revealed that Omotayo did not only hire Dolapo but actively participated in killing her husband.
The police later arraigned the suspects in court, from where they were remanded at Ilesa Prison.
In an interaction with Sunday Sun, Omotayo said she had lost interest in her marriage, though she confessed that her husband was a good person who always took care of her needs and the needs of her children.
“We’ve been married for 17 years. We are blessed with three children aged 17, 15 and 12. He did not offend me. I was just mad at him,” she said.
Sunday Sun’s investigations indicated that Omotayo and her accomplice after murdering the man, made it look like armed robbers killed him.
A family source said that Dolapo, who made open confessions to the family members at the police station, before he was paraded alongside Omotayo, said that after he had agreed with the woman to carry out the dastardly assignment, she smuggled him into the house around 6.00 pm when the deceased had not come home and hid him inside a small shack made of woods at the back of the house. He remained there until the husband came home in the night.
He disclosed that when the man got home, his wife received him warmly and served him dinner. When the man was eating, the woman went out of the sitting room and met the assailant where he was hiding and told him that her husband had arrived and was eating his dinner in the sitting room.
Before then, when the eldest child, Barakat, noticed that her father had come back and wanted to greet him and also ask him to take her to a JAMB examination centre the following morning, her mother chased her back into the children’s room. She also asked all the children to go and sleep and warned them not to disturb their father.
It was at that point that she then took Dolapo into one of the rooms while the three children were in their room. When she got back to the room, she lured the husband to their room after he had had his dinner. She began to caress him and they eventually had sexual intercourse.
After the session, she left her husband in bed and went out naked, pretending to go and have a shower in the bathroom. Instead she went to meet Dolapo, where he was hiding in one of the rooms and told him that her husband would soon fall asleep so that they could execute their plan.
When she returned to the room again, she joined her husband in bed until she noticed that he had fallen asleep. That was between 2.00 am and 3.00 am. She then sneaked out quietly and led the assailant into the bedroom where the man was sleeping.
Once back in the room, she slammed a pillow on his face trying to choke him, while Dolapo attacked him with a knife and killed him.
To cover up the crime, they made inscriptions on the wall of the house to indicate that the deceased was a member of a cult group, whose members must have come to kill him. The inscriptions read thus: “No price, no pay,” “Aye axe,” and “Forgiveness is a sin.”
She collected the deceased’s phone which was left on a stool, went to the children’s room and also took their only phone, removed other items and gave to the assailant to take away, to make it look like the robbers who killed her husband made away with the items.
Sunday Sun gathered that she asked Dolapo to remove his shirt and hang it on top of the fence as evidence that it was left there by one of the robbers who was trying to escape.
For Dolapo to be able to escape, the woman gave her late husband’s jalabia dress to him to wear, to impersonate him in case he was confronted by vigilantes, who knew the husband often wore the jalabia in the neighbourhood.
Then she opened the gate quietly, to let out Dolapo, but he was noticed by some vigilantes, who truly mistook him for the deceased because of the jalabia he wore.
Sunday Sun gathered that the assailant sold the deceased’s phone to a friend. When the crime was reported, MTN was contacted and the police tracked down the buyer.
It was the buyer who helped the police to trace the assailant and he was later identified as an ex-convict.
When he was paraded by the police, Dolapo said he used to shuttle between Lagos and Osogbo “to do runs.” According to him, whenever he was broke, he would go to Lagos to do ‘runs’ and if he made good money, he would come and spend it in Osogbo.
He disclosed further that it was during his stay in Osogbo that the woman got in touch with him and they struck the deal that led to the killing of Alhaji Salaudeen.
The deceased’s younger brother, Adetunji Idris Babatunde, who spoke with Sunday Sun, said that his late brother told him two weeks before he was killed that he suspected that his wife was planning to kill him.
But when he asked if he had any serious contention with her, the deceased said there was no serious issue between them; but he was just having a feeling that the woman would kill him one day.
On the character of the deceased, Babatunde said: “He was a responsible man to the core. He was a businessman and very responsible and committed to his family. He didn’t live a wayward life. He even bought a car for the wife. I never met them quarrelling any day. Whenever I visited them, I always noticed that they loved each other.”
Asked what he could suspect as being responsible for the sudden change in the couple’s relationship, Babatunde said it could be due to his late brother’s decision to marry the second wife.
According to him, the second wife identified as Tawakalitu who lives in a different house and Omotayo often had quarrels.
Uthman also confirmed that his late father was a nice and responsible family man who loved his family dearly. His parents were very close and loved each other very well. He added that they used to go out together in his father’s car and also shared the same bedroom.
But did the mother ever complain about his late father’s attitude or character in the presence of the children? Uthman said: “Mummy used to complain sometimes that daddy’s behaviour towards her had changed since he married the second wife. She used to complain that daddy was not giving her attention like before and was not providing all her needs as he used to do.”
“Mummy was always disturbing daddy to look for a job for her or open a big shop for her but he did not do that. So, mummy was always complaining that she was not satisfied with the small shop she had. Since then, they would quarrel from time to time. But it was not serious.”
Sunday Sun Report
22 July 2017
Badoo strikes at Ojodu Berger, kills lovers
Suspected members of the Badoo cult early Friday morning killed two lovers in their apartment in Ogun State.
A source told our correspondent that the heads of the victims were smashed.
The incident happened at a storey building located on Hassan Abiodun Street, off Ojodu Berger, in Ifo Local Government Area of the state.
Many of the residents could not be consoled as policemen from Ojodu Abiodun Division took away the remains of the deceased for onward transfer to the General Hospital Sagamu.
Many of the residents wailed as the corpses were brought out of the room and wrapped in wrappers.
A resident told our correspondent that the victims were to be officially married in December.
“The lady recently lost her father and the man she was to marry only came on a visit. She was a tall, beautiful lady and was also pregnant, ” the resident said.
It was gathered that their assailants tore the window net to gain entry and thereafter smashed the lovers’ heads.
Another resident said none of the tenants knew what happened until daybreak.
The resident said, “There is a police officer who lives next door to the deceased’s Boy’s Quarter. He did not hear anything. It is very sad and this development will create panic in the area.”
Our correspondent observed that the police station is a stone’s throw from where the murder took place even as residents said vigilantes patrol the street every night.
The police also arrested a man who tried to take a picture of their van and the vehicle the victims were put in.
As of 111 am the occupants of the building were still crying at the frontage.
The spokesperson for the police in Ogun, ASP Abimbola Oyeyemi, could not be reached for comments as his mobile indicated that it was switched off.
Punch Report
A source told our correspondent that the heads of the victims were smashed.
The incident happened at a storey building located on Hassan Abiodun Street, off Ojodu Berger, in Ifo Local Government Area of the state.
Many of the residents could not be consoled as policemen from Ojodu Abiodun Division took away the remains of the deceased for onward transfer to the General Hospital Sagamu.
Many of the residents wailed as the corpses were brought out of the room and wrapped in wrappers.
A resident told our correspondent that the victims were to be officially married in December.
“The lady recently lost her father and the man she was to marry only came on a visit. She was a tall, beautiful lady and was also pregnant, ” the resident said.
It was gathered that their assailants tore the window net to gain entry and thereafter smashed the lovers’ heads.
Another resident said none of the tenants knew what happened until daybreak.
The resident said, “There is a police officer who lives next door to the deceased’s Boy’s Quarter. He did not hear anything. It is very sad and this development will create panic in the area.”
Our correspondent observed that the police station is a stone’s throw from where the murder took place even as residents said vigilantes patrol the street every night.
The police also arrested a man who tried to take a picture of their van and the vehicle the victims were put in.
As of 111 am the occupants of the building were still crying at the frontage.
The spokesperson for the police in Ogun, ASP Abimbola Oyeyemi, could not be reached for comments as his mobile indicated that it was switched off.
Punch Report
21 July 2017
Senate probes sale, use of ‘kidney-killer’ malaria drugs
The Senate yesterday directed its committee on health to urgently investigate an allegation that 42 anti-malaria drugs banned by the European Union (EU) in all countries are still being stockpiled, sold and consumed in Nigeria.
The action of the Senate was informed by the adopted motion sponsored by Theodore Orji representing Abia central senatorial district titled, “Anti-malaria drugs banned by European Union, still being sold and consumed in Nigeria; the need for Senate to investigate.”
In his lead debate, Orji affirmed that the reason for the ban of the drugs was because they cause kidney failure.
EU countries were warned not to stock any drugs containing substances like plasmotrin, artequin, co-arinate, arco, artecon and dialquin, yet, it was alleged that they are still being stockpiled, sold and consumed in the country.
The President of the Nigerian Medical Association (NMA), Prof. Mike Ogirima, was said to have confirmed the delisting of the dangerous drugs.
Against the backdrop of the dangers posed by the drugs, the Senate flayed the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) and Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON) for not adequately waging the war against the influx of fake and sub-standard items into the country.
The lawmakers observed that the drugs on the banned list are very popular, particularly in the rural communities where there is little or no knowledge of the dangers, and where they are obtained across the counter with or without prescription.
Guardian Report
20 July 2017
Graduate dies after alleged wrong diagnosis by Lagos hospital
Controversy has arisen over the death of a 29-year-old graduate of the University of Bauchi, Kolawole Idowu, at the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital, Ikeja.
Family members of the victim said although Kolawole died at LASUTH, they believed his condition was worsened by doctors at the Ikeja Medical Centre, a private facility on Allen Avenue, Ikeja.
PUNCH Metro gathered that Kolawole, who concluded his youth service in Lagos sometime in April, took ill a few days afterwards.
He was reported to have complained of “teary eyes and body pains” and had gone to the Ikeja Medical Centre, which was the family hospital. It was gathered that like other children of the family, he was born at the hospital.
After a doctor allegedly recommended some malaria drugs and later an eye drop, the situation was said to have worsened, leading to his admission to the hospital.
Our correspondent was told that the hospital later said he was manifesting signs of a mental illness and began treating him for “psychosis.”
When there was no improvement, the hospital was said to have referred him to LASUTH, where he went into a coma and later died at the Intensive Care Unit.
The victim’s brother, Kunle, told PUNCH Metro that his late brother’s medical condition was not handled properly at the medical centre, adding that he was given some injections which affected his health.
Kunle alleged that the injections made him to misbehave, saying anytime the effect of the injections wore off, he would regain his senses, run back home and beg to be taken away from the hospital.
He explained that when he (Kunle) observed that their maternal grandparents were adamant on keeping him (Kolawole) at the hospital, he challenged them and broke some property in the house, which led to his arrest and detention.
He said, “The illness started at the end of April, about a week after his youth service. I am a politician and I was running a campaign to become a councillor at that period. Kola complained that he had been having burning sensations all over his body and his eyes had been teary. I advised him to go for a lab test, but he said he would go to our family hospital. He went to the hospital where he was given an eye drop, which he started reacting adversely to.
“He went back to the medical centre and he was told that he had malaria. The doctor prescribed a malaria drug for him. However, he started reacting negatively again to the drug. That was when the doctor said he was having fits of delirium and showing signs of dementia.”
He explained that the doctor insisted on admitting Kolawole, but he objected, adding that the grandparents believed the doctor and supported the move.
On the first week of his admission, Kunle said he was not satisfied with his brother’s treatment, but the hospital assured him that Kolawole needed rest.
He noted that he became concerned when Kolawole’s friends, who also visited the hospital, made similar observations. He said he asked for the victim’s transfer to another hospital.
Kunle said he met the grandparents and asked for permission to move his brother from the hosipital, but they objected due to the family’s long-time relationship with the hospital.
“I was angry with the hospital because they kept saying different things. First, it was delirium, then stress. They kept giving him injections. My brother was always saying he wanted to leave the hospital. Once he said that, they would say he had started again and give him more injections.
“I told them that my brother was not mentally ill; he wanted to leave the hospital because they didn’t know what they were doing,” Kunle said.
He added that because of his increasing political engagement, the time he had for Kolawole became limited.
PUNCH Metro learnt that there was a crisis in the house on May 17, 2017, when late Kolawole ran home from the hospital.
The grandparents were reported to have called a doctor at the medical centre to come with an injection for psychiatric patients to calm him down, a suggestion rejected by Kunle.
“I was angry because each time they give him the injection, he lost his senses. They (grandparents) asked me to shut up. For two weeks, that was what they told me. I was angry and I couldn’t take it again because I knew the doctor was on the way with the injection. I lost control and started shouting that they should not give him any drug.
“He was always coming home each time he realised that they were not treating him well. But my grandparents would take him back and he would obey so that he would not look like a disobedient child. The injection was killing him.
“That day, they asked the house help to lock the door. Because I could not sit down and watch him take another injection, I broke the door and left the house,” he added.
PUNCH Metro learnt that some relatives alerted the police of Kunle’s action and he was detained for a day.
Kunle said after that incident, he was told that his brother’s condition had aggravated and he had been taken to LASUTH.
He explained that Kolawole was admitted to the psychiatric ward of LASUTH, based on a referral letter from the medical centre.
Kunle said his brother was put in the same ward with patients who had serious mental problems and he spent about 10 days in the ward.
“He was later taken to the ICU where he spent two months and struggled to live. But the damage had been done because my brother had spent two weeks at the medical centre, 10 days at LASUTH psychiatric ward before he collapsed and was taken to the ICU.
“Some specialists at LASUTH later examined him and said it was not a psychotic case. They moved him to the ICU because he was at the point of death. I watched over him at the ICU for the two months.
“At one point, the seizure he was having stopped, and I thought he was getting better, not knowing my brother was dying,” he said.
PUNCH Metro learnt that the Idowu family comprised four children – Kunle, Kolawole, Adeniyi and a younger sister who is in the United States.
The children’s father died while they were young, while their mother, Mrs. Mopelola Osiyemi, travelled to the US in 2016.
Adeniyi, who studied in the Cyprus University, got a job in Dubai where he is now based.
Kunle and Kola, however, stayed with their grandparents at their family house on Bolanle Close, Allen Avenue, not far from the Ikeja Medical Centre.
Adeniyi, who said he was on holiday in Nigeria, told PUNCH Metro that he was shocked that his brother, who laughed with him during their time together, suddenly lost control of himself and went into a coma.
While insisting that Kolawole was not a drug addict, he said he had arranged with an Iranian doctor to move him out of the country, but was told that the brother must come out of a coma before he could be flown out.
He said, “The doctors at LASUTH told us that he was not mad; that he had bacteria which probably got into his brain. They said the medical practitioners at the first hospital messed him up. I called a doctor friend, who said my brother had an infection called meninges and it affected his brain. She said antibiotics could have cured him.
“Each day he spent at the ICU cost us N50,000. And that was aside the N100,000 on drugs and another N500,000 on a particular test. We spent millions of naira on treatment.
“When my brother died, we had to give out some of the drugs he didn’t use. But my eldest brother, Kunle, decided to bring home a particular one recommended for us from the medical centre, called Haloperidol. When I googled it, I discovered that my brother manifested the exact signs stated in the abuse of the drug, including stiffness and coma, before he died.”
PUNCH Metro was told that the deceased, who marked his 29th birthday in coma on June 23, became a graduate in 2013 after studying Accounting.
Our correspondent was told that he died around 4pm on July 1, 2017, at the ICU of LASUTH.
“My brother, Kolawole, has never slept at a hospital before. We want the hospital investigated. We want the government and the Nigerian Medical Association to intervene,” Olaniyi said.
The victim’s mother, Mopelola, in an emotional message she broadcast on Whatsapp a few days to her son’s death, alleged that the doctor who treated him apologised to the family.
“To God be the glory; this is very said. But I must tell it. I gave birth to Kolawole 29 years ago at the same hospital that administered wrong medication that has put him in a life-threatening condition. The doctor that started his treatment went to my aged father of 86 years to apologise, confessing that he gave Kolawole a wrong medication.
“I believe this is the beginning of Kolawole’s healing process. What can I do at this stage? We are spending millions on hospital treatment in an intensive care unit because of one little mistake that shouldn’t have happened. God, you know best. Kolawole must live to testify to your glory,” the message read.
She told our correspondent on the telephone after the son’s death that the hospital must be held accountable for the alleged mistake.
She said, “He was never diagnosed. I don’t know my son as a drug addict. I left Nigeria 11 months ago; are they saying he took to drugs within that period, a son I have known for a long time? They should have conducted proper checks on him. We have spent millions of naira just because of one mistake.
“They insisted on treating him even when they lacked the competence because of the money they wanted to make from my family.”
LASUTH’s reaction
PUNCH Metro had a meeting with the Chief Medical Director of LASUTH, Prof. Adewale Oke, and some top principal officers of the government hospital.
Oke said there was a limit to the information that could be released due to the ethics of the medical profession.
He noted that Kolawole was examined and treated by specialists.
The hospital’s consultant psychiatrist, Dr Atilola Olayinka, said he was the first to have contact with Kolawole after he was brought to the hospital.
He said, “He came in as an emergency case and we didn’t have any other information to make us doubt the fact that it was most likely an ongoing psychiatric illness. On that basis, we received him to manage him for the illness.
“In the course of treatment,we,however,saw other symptoms that did not jell with a pure case of psychiatric illness. We investigated and called in our medical team to review it with us. When his level of consciousness was going down, we had to move him to the ICU.”
The consultant medical officer, one Dr Bamisile, said he observed fissures, including epileptic fits, neck stiffness and running fever.
“We saw that he could have some organic problems, apart from a functional psychosis. The following day, I went to see him and observed that his consciousness was going. I examined and saw that there were other medical issues. He was jerking and had epileptic seizures. His neck was also stiff. He had running fever at a time,” he added.
He explained that the deceased also had fissures and inflammation of the brain, “which could be caused by some organism.”
At this point, Bamisile said he asked that a microbiologist and a professor of neurology attend to Kolawole.
LASUTH’s consultant neurologist, Dr Olaitan Ojelabi, said the 29-year-old appeared “febrile, with restive signs and other symptoms, pointing at a case of meningoencephalitis (inflammation of the linings of the brain).”
“This condition could be caused by bacteria. To treat this, we upgraded his antibiotics, among other treatments,” he added.
The Consultant Anaesthesia, Dr A.A. Majekodunmi, said the victim was later placed on a life-support machine.
“After about two weeks in the ICU, he started having problems with breathing and we had to put him on a ventilator to help him breathe. We repeated some investigations to find out what was wrong with him. The family was aware of the prognosis, and they were aware when it was getting worse.
We saw that he was not responding to some medications that we gave him. Eventually, we had to put him on a supportive medication for his blood pressure until he eventually died. He was on life support for about a month before he passed on,” she said.
A professor of Neurology, Prof. Yomi Ogun, expressed sadness at the death of Kolawole, saying a partial autopsy revealed the deceased’s brain was swollen.
He noted that nobody could tell what really killed him “until the autopsy is subjected to histology.”
He said, “He had inflammation of the brain. If you have meningitis, there are two signs that we look out for, which were there. And maybe, some signs of inflammation; but we need to subject it to a histology for a definitive answer.
“When you suspect that your patient has meningitis, what you need to do is to commence a therapeutic trial of anti-TB medication. Because the moment they get unconscious, it might be difficult to reverse it and that was also done.
“By the time I got to see him, he was already in a coma. He was having convulsions all the while. We modified his treatment and he was stabilised for a few days.”
The CMD of LASUTH, Oke, said the hospital started treatment based on the referral letter from the Ikeja Medical Centre, adding that nothing in the letter showed a case of malaria.
“His referral letter stated categorically that he had a mental issue. There was never a question of malaria. When patients come like that, we take them as we see them and we manage them based on whatever our specialties say.
“He had been outside our hospital for two weeks. The referral letter brought here says he had been having neuro-psychiatric symptoms,” he added.
Efforts by our correspondent to speak with Ikeja Medical Centre were frustrated by the hospital. Its workers harassed our correspondent during a visit to the facility on Tuesday.
Punch Report
Family members of the victim said although Kolawole died at LASUTH, they believed his condition was worsened by doctors at the Ikeja Medical Centre, a private facility on Allen Avenue, Ikeja.
PUNCH Metro gathered that Kolawole, who concluded his youth service in Lagos sometime in April, took ill a few days afterwards.
He was reported to have complained of “teary eyes and body pains” and had gone to the Ikeja Medical Centre, which was the family hospital. It was gathered that like other children of the family, he was born at the hospital.
After a doctor allegedly recommended some malaria drugs and later an eye drop, the situation was said to have worsened, leading to his admission to the hospital.
Our correspondent was told that the hospital later said he was manifesting signs of a mental illness and began treating him for “psychosis.”
When there was no improvement, the hospital was said to have referred him to LASUTH, where he went into a coma and later died at the Intensive Care Unit.
The victim’s brother, Kunle, told PUNCH Metro that his late brother’s medical condition was not handled properly at the medical centre, adding that he was given some injections which affected his health.
Kunle alleged that the injections made him to misbehave, saying anytime the effect of the injections wore off, he would regain his senses, run back home and beg to be taken away from the hospital.
He explained that when he (Kunle) observed that their maternal grandparents were adamant on keeping him (Kolawole) at the hospital, he challenged them and broke some property in the house, which led to his arrest and detention.
He said, “The illness started at the end of April, about a week after his youth service. I am a politician and I was running a campaign to become a councillor at that period. Kola complained that he had been having burning sensations all over his body and his eyes had been teary. I advised him to go for a lab test, but he said he would go to our family hospital. He went to the hospital where he was given an eye drop, which he started reacting adversely to.
“He went back to the medical centre and he was told that he had malaria. The doctor prescribed a malaria drug for him. However, he started reacting negatively again to the drug. That was when the doctor said he was having fits of delirium and showing signs of dementia.”
He explained that the doctor insisted on admitting Kolawole, but he objected, adding that the grandparents believed the doctor and supported the move.
On the first week of his admission, Kunle said he was not satisfied with his brother’s treatment, but the hospital assured him that Kolawole needed rest.
He noted that he became concerned when Kolawole’s friends, who also visited the hospital, made similar observations. He said he asked for the victim’s transfer to another hospital.
Kunle said he met the grandparents and asked for permission to move his brother from the hosipital, but they objected due to the family’s long-time relationship with the hospital.
“I was angry with the hospital because they kept saying different things. First, it was delirium, then stress. They kept giving him injections. My brother was always saying he wanted to leave the hospital. Once he said that, they would say he had started again and give him more injections.
“I told them that my brother was not mentally ill; he wanted to leave the hospital because they didn’t know what they were doing,” Kunle said.
He added that because of his increasing political engagement, the time he had for Kolawole became limited.
PUNCH Metro learnt that there was a crisis in the house on May 17, 2017, when late Kolawole ran home from the hospital.
The grandparents were reported to have called a doctor at the medical centre to come with an injection for psychiatric patients to calm him down, a suggestion rejected by Kunle.
“I was angry because each time they give him the injection, he lost his senses. They (grandparents) asked me to shut up. For two weeks, that was what they told me. I was angry and I couldn’t take it again because I knew the doctor was on the way with the injection. I lost control and started shouting that they should not give him any drug.
“He was always coming home each time he realised that they were not treating him well. But my grandparents would take him back and he would obey so that he would not look like a disobedient child. The injection was killing him.
“That day, they asked the house help to lock the door. Because I could not sit down and watch him take another injection, I broke the door and left the house,” he added.
PUNCH Metro learnt that some relatives alerted the police of Kunle’s action and he was detained for a day.
Kunle said after that incident, he was told that his brother’s condition had aggravated and he had been taken to LASUTH.
He explained that Kolawole was admitted to the psychiatric ward of LASUTH, based on a referral letter from the medical centre.
Kunle said his brother was put in the same ward with patients who had serious mental problems and he spent about 10 days in the ward.
“He was later taken to the ICU where he spent two months and struggled to live. But the damage had been done because my brother had spent two weeks at the medical centre, 10 days at LASUTH psychiatric ward before he collapsed and was taken to the ICU.
“Some specialists at LASUTH later examined him and said it was not a psychotic case. They moved him to the ICU because he was at the point of death. I watched over him at the ICU for the two months.
“At one point, the seizure he was having stopped, and I thought he was getting better, not knowing my brother was dying,” he said.
PUNCH Metro learnt that the Idowu family comprised four children – Kunle, Kolawole, Adeniyi and a younger sister who is in the United States.
The children’s father died while they were young, while their mother, Mrs. Mopelola Osiyemi, travelled to the US in 2016.
Adeniyi, who studied in the Cyprus University, got a job in Dubai where he is now based.
Kunle and Kola, however, stayed with their grandparents at their family house on Bolanle Close, Allen Avenue, not far from the Ikeja Medical Centre.
Adeniyi, who said he was on holiday in Nigeria, told PUNCH Metro that he was shocked that his brother, who laughed with him during their time together, suddenly lost control of himself and went into a coma.
While insisting that Kolawole was not a drug addict, he said he had arranged with an Iranian doctor to move him out of the country, but was told that the brother must come out of a coma before he could be flown out.
He said, “The doctors at LASUTH told us that he was not mad; that he had bacteria which probably got into his brain. They said the medical practitioners at the first hospital messed him up. I called a doctor friend, who said my brother had an infection called meninges and it affected his brain. She said antibiotics could have cured him.
“Each day he spent at the ICU cost us N50,000. And that was aside the N100,000 on drugs and another N500,000 on a particular test. We spent millions of naira on treatment.
“When my brother died, we had to give out some of the drugs he didn’t use. But my eldest brother, Kunle, decided to bring home a particular one recommended for us from the medical centre, called Haloperidol. When I googled it, I discovered that my brother manifested the exact signs stated in the abuse of the drug, including stiffness and coma, before he died.”
PUNCH Metro was told that the deceased, who marked his 29th birthday in coma on June 23, became a graduate in 2013 after studying Accounting.
Our correspondent was told that he died around 4pm on July 1, 2017, at the ICU of LASUTH.
“My brother, Kolawole, has never slept at a hospital before. We want the hospital investigated. We want the government and the Nigerian Medical Association to intervene,” Olaniyi said.
The victim’s mother, Mopelola, in an emotional message she broadcast on Whatsapp a few days to her son’s death, alleged that the doctor who treated him apologised to the family.
“To God be the glory; this is very said. But I must tell it. I gave birth to Kolawole 29 years ago at the same hospital that administered wrong medication that has put him in a life-threatening condition. The doctor that started his treatment went to my aged father of 86 years to apologise, confessing that he gave Kolawole a wrong medication.
“I believe this is the beginning of Kolawole’s healing process. What can I do at this stage? We are spending millions on hospital treatment in an intensive care unit because of one little mistake that shouldn’t have happened. God, you know best. Kolawole must live to testify to your glory,” the message read.
She told our correspondent on the telephone after the son’s death that the hospital must be held accountable for the alleged mistake.
She said, “He was never diagnosed. I don’t know my son as a drug addict. I left Nigeria 11 months ago; are they saying he took to drugs within that period, a son I have known for a long time? They should have conducted proper checks on him. We have spent millions of naira just because of one mistake.
“They insisted on treating him even when they lacked the competence because of the money they wanted to make from my family.”
LASUTH’s reaction
PUNCH Metro had a meeting with the Chief Medical Director of LASUTH, Prof. Adewale Oke, and some top principal officers of the government hospital.
Oke said there was a limit to the information that could be released due to the ethics of the medical profession.
He noted that Kolawole was examined and treated by specialists.
The hospital’s consultant psychiatrist, Dr Atilola Olayinka, said he was the first to have contact with Kolawole after he was brought to the hospital.
He said, “He came in as an emergency case and we didn’t have any other information to make us doubt the fact that it was most likely an ongoing psychiatric illness. On that basis, we received him to manage him for the illness.
“In the course of treatment,we,however,saw other symptoms that did not jell with a pure case of psychiatric illness. We investigated and called in our medical team to review it with us. When his level of consciousness was going down, we had to move him to the ICU.”
The consultant medical officer, one Dr Bamisile, said he observed fissures, including epileptic fits, neck stiffness and running fever.
“We saw that he could have some organic problems, apart from a functional psychosis. The following day, I went to see him and observed that his consciousness was going. I examined and saw that there were other medical issues. He was jerking and had epileptic seizures. His neck was also stiff. He had running fever at a time,” he added.
He explained that the deceased also had fissures and inflammation of the brain, “which could be caused by some organism.”
At this point, Bamisile said he asked that a microbiologist and a professor of neurology attend to Kolawole.
LASUTH’s consultant neurologist, Dr Olaitan Ojelabi, said the 29-year-old appeared “febrile, with restive signs and other symptoms, pointing at a case of meningoencephalitis (inflammation of the linings of the brain).”
“This condition could be caused by bacteria. To treat this, we upgraded his antibiotics, among other treatments,” he added.
The Consultant Anaesthesia, Dr A.A. Majekodunmi, said the victim was later placed on a life-support machine.
“After about two weeks in the ICU, he started having problems with breathing and we had to put him on a ventilator to help him breathe. We repeated some investigations to find out what was wrong with him. The family was aware of the prognosis, and they were aware when it was getting worse.
We saw that he was not responding to some medications that we gave him. Eventually, we had to put him on a supportive medication for his blood pressure until he eventually died. He was on life support for about a month before he passed on,” she said.
A professor of Neurology, Prof. Yomi Ogun, expressed sadness at the death of Kolawole, saying a partial autopsy revealed the deceased’s brain was swollen.
He noted that nobody could tell what really killed him “until the autopsy is subjected to histology.”
He said, “He had inflammation of the brain. If you have meningitis, there are two signs that we look out for, which were there. And maybe, some signs of inflammation; but we need to subject it to a histology for a definitive answer.
“When you suspect that your patient has meningitis, what you need to do is to commence a therapeutic trial of anti-TB medication. Because the moment they get unconscious, it might be difficult to reverse it and that was also done.
“By the time I got to see him, he was already in a coma. He was having convulsions all the while. We modified his treatment and he was stabilised for a few days.”
The CMD of LASUTH, Oke, said the hospital started treatment based on the referral letter from the Ikeja Medical Centre, adding that nothing in the letter showed a case of malaria.
“His referral letter stated categorically that he had a mental issue. There was never a question of malaria. When patients come like that, we take them as we see them and we manage them based on whatever our specialties say.
“He had been outside our hospital for two weeks. The referral letter brought here says he had been having neuro-psychiatric symptoms,” he added.
Efforts by our correspondent to speak with Ikeja Medical Centre were frustrated by the hospital. Its workers harassed our correspondent during a visit to the facility on Tuesday.
Punch Report
19 July 2017
Desire to travel to Dubai led us into kidnapping —Suspects
THE Niger State Police Command has arrested two suspects who specialised in kidnapping students of the Federal University of Technology, Minna.
They suspects — Abraham Jatto, 30, from Edo State and Idowu Mafe, 29, from Ogun State — were said to have been on the police wanted list for sometime before they were eventually apprehended.
The police said the suspects, who were said to have successfully abducted three students, had been terrorising the neighbourhood for some time, adding that were arrested at their hideout in the Sauka Kahuta area of Minna by the command’s Special Anti-kidnapping Squad.
The police said they were still on the trail of two other members of the gang, who were in the habit of dispossessing residents of their valuables such as laptops, handsets, jewelry and money, besides collecting huge ransoms.
One of the victims, Esther Okwe, 24, a 500-level student of Estate Management, FUT, reportedly paid N500,000 to regain her freedom from the abductors.
The ransom, it was gathered, was paid by her parents.
Other kidnap victims were identified as Agbo Sylvanus, 24, of the Department of Mathematics and Peter Adown, 21, of the Department of Microbiology of the same institution.
Mafe, who claimed to be a graduate of the University of Ilorin, expressed regrets over his involvement in crime.
He said, “When the issue of getting a job in Dubai came up, my parents could not afford the N750,000 being demanded and Abraham suggested kidnapping which led us into this predicament.
“I have dragged my good family name in the mud; I pray my parents forgive me.”
Jatto admitted to our correspondent that he decided to go into kidnapping to raise money for a trip to Dubai to secure a job.
He explained that he rented a two-bedroomed apartment at the back of the Niger State Trade Fair complex where he kept his victims.
“I was a successful businessman who never depended on people for assistance; in fact, I cannot explain how I started kidnapping people,” the suspect said.
The Niger State police spokesman, Bala Elkana, confirmed that a Honda Accord car with an Abuja registration number, ABJ 583 AE, was recovered from the suspects, adding that investigation was ongoing.
“We are close to apprehending the other two suspects; they can run, but we will get them and bring them to book,” he added.
Punch Report
They suspects — Abraham Jatto, 30, from Edo State and Idowu Mafe, 29, from Ogun State — were said to have been on the police wanted list for sometime before they were eventually apprehended.
The police said the suspects, who were said to have successfully abducted three students, had been terrorising the neighbourhood for some time, adding that were arrested at their hideout in the Sauka Kahuta area of Minna by the command’s Special Anti-kidnapping Squad.
The police said they were still on the trail of two other members of the gang, who were in the habit of dispossessing residents of their valuables such as laptops, handsets, jewelry and money, besides collecting huge ransoms.
One of the victims, Esther Okwe, 24, a 500-level student of Estate Management, FUT, reportedly paid N500,000 to regain her freedom from the abductors.
The ransom, it was gathered, was paid by her parents.
Other kidnap victims were identified as Agbo Sylvanus, 24, of the Department of Mathematics and Peter Adown, 21, of the Department of Microbiology of the same institution.
Mafe, who claimed to be a graduate of the University of Ilorin, expressed regrets over his involvement in crime.
He said, “When the issue of getting a job in Dubai came up, my parents could not afford the N750,000 being demanded and Abraham suggested kidnapping which led us into this predicament.
“I have dragged my good family name in the mud; I pray my parents forgive me.”
Jatto admitted to our correspondent that he decided to go into kidnapping to raise money for a trip to Dubai to secure a job.
He explained that he rented a two-bedroomed apartment at the back of the Niger State Trade Fair complex where he kept his victims.
“I was a successful businessman who never depended on people for assistance; in fact, I cannot explain how I started kidnapping people,” the suspect said.
The Niger State police spokesman, Bala Elkana, confirmed that a Honda Accord car with an Abuja registration number, ABJ 583 AE, was recovered from the suspects, adding that investigation was ongoing.
“We are close to apprehending the other two suspects; they can run, but we will get them and bring them to book,” he added.
Punch Report
18 July 2017
LG worker detained for sharing name with UK-based woman
A local government worker, Mercy Oluwafeyibunmi, has been arrested by the police and detained at the Force Criminal Investigation and Intelligence Department (Annex), Alagbon, Ikoyi, Lagos State.
It was gathered that the woman, who had been in detention for two weeks, had also been admitted to the police clinic at Alagbon after falling ill.
PUNCH Metro gathered that the offence of the mother of three was that she bore the same middle name, Adetokunbo, with one Eileen, a Nigerian based in the United Kingdom.
Our correspondent gathered that Eileen sent a representative to an Ondo State High Court, who swore to an affidavit, claiming that Mercy’s middle name was “imposive.”
Mercy, 35, was subsequently arrested and detained at the Force CIID Annex, Alagbon, since July 7.
Investigations by PUNCH Metro, however, revealed that Mercy and Eileen’s differences were beyond a middle name.
The two women’s ex-lover, Bankole Ogunnowo, who is based in the UK, was at the centre of the conflict.
Our correspondent gathered that Bankole and Mercy had a brief relationship in Nigeria in 2006, which produced a baby girl, named Damilola.
Bankole later married Eileen and they both relocated to London, UK, where they also had a child together before they broke up.
Eileen, while allegedly seeking sole custody of their child, told a London court that her estranged husband was not to be trusted with children because he performed Female Genital Mutilation (FGM) on Damilola, the child he had with Mercy.
Mercy, who got wind of the allegation, deposed to an affidavit, dated November 27, 2015, clearing Bankole of the charges.
In the affidavit, which revealed her name as Mercy Adetokunbo Oluwafeyibunmi, she stated that FGM was also a criminal offence in Nigeria.
However, one Oyebo, who acted for Eileen, swore to a counter-affidavit before an Ondo State High Court, accusing Mercy of stealing Eileen’s name.
Bankole told PUNCH Metro that the accusation was the beginning of Mercy’s ordeal.
He said, “Eileen denied me access to the child she had for me in the UK. I went to court so I could take my child out once in a while despite our separation. But she told the court that I belonged to a gang in Nigeria called OPC, and that we kidnap children to do FGM for them.
“She said I did that for the daughter that Mercy had for me in Nigeria. It became a concern to the UK authorities because I also work with children here (UK). I contacted Mercy and asked if I did that for my child and she said no. I asked her to swear to an affidavit, which she did. The affidavit was sent to London.
“Eileen alleged that Mercy stole one of her names in order to bring my daughter, Damilola, to the UK.”
PUNCH Metro learnt that the counter-affidavit by Oyebo was given to the Commissioner of Police in charge of Interpol, CP Olushola Subair.
The commissioner was reported to have written the London court, saying Bankole and Mercy were being investigated.
After Bankole won the court case against this ex-wife in February 2017, some individuals were alleged to have threatened Mercy for her role in the matter.
The woman allegedly got a Federal High Court’s injunction forbidding any harassment.
However, despite the injunction, she was arrested and taken to the FCIID, Alagbon.
Mercy’s husband in Nigeria, Nicholas Oluwafeyibunmi, with whom she had two children in Akure, lamented that his wife was being harassed for the assistance she rendered to Bankole.
He said, “On the day she was arrested, she wanted to pick our child at school. A man called my wife that he wanted to see her at a place.
“When the call became intense, I decided to follow her, together with another friend. The caller brought out the Whatsapp picture of my wife and asked if she was the one. We didn’t know he had called the police.
“Suddenly, some policemen from the Ondo State Police Command came in and took her to the Yaba Police Division. They later sent a signal to those at Alagbon, Lagos, who came to take her away. Since then, she had been held incommunicado. I don’t know why they picked my wife. She did not commit any crime.”
Mercy, who spoke with our correspondent on the telephone on Monday, said she had been admitted to the police clinic after she fell ill.
She said, “They said my crime was that somebody in the UK, who I did not know, said I stole one of her names. My name is Mercy, Joy, Adetokunbo. Why will steal her name?”
Mercy’s mother, Gbonjubola, said Adetokunbo was among Mercy’s names.
She said, “When I gave birth to her, I named her Anu, Joy. She had up to 10 names given by different relatives. Her father, who was away, came back and gave her Adetokunbo. For the past two weeks, I don’t know where my daughter is. Please help us.”
Eileen’s father, Jimi Odumosu, did not pick his calls when our correspondent called him on Monday.
However, in a recorded conversation he had with Bankole, which was obtained by PUNCH Metro, Odumosu urged a peaceful resolution of the matter, saying he was separated from Eileen’s mother and he was not sure if she (Eileen) would listen to him.
The Deputy Commissioner of Police in charge of the FCIID, Alagbon, Mr. Abutu Yaro, confirmed that the suspect was in custody.
He, however, said he did not know the details of the case.
He said, “That case was investigated by Interpol Lagos and was sent to Interpol Abuja. The Interpol Abuja then wrote a note on the case file that the police lawyer attached to General Investigation, FCIID, should take the matter to court. So, I don’t know about the case. It is not our case.
The lawyer that they asked to prosecute the case is the lawyer attached to my office, but I don’t know the offence. I don’t know anything about the court process.”
Eileen did not pick her calls as her phone rang out severally, while a text message sent to her line had yet to be responded to as of press time.
The Force Public Relations Officer, Moshood Jimoh, had also yet to respond to a text message from PUNCH Metro.
Punch Report
It was gathered that the woman, who had been in detention for two weeks, had also been admitted to the police clinic at Alagbon after falling ill.
PUNCH Metro gathered that the offence of the mother of three was that she bore the same middle name, Adetokunbo, with one Eileen, a Nigerian based in the United Kingdom.
Our correspondent gathered that Eileen sent a representative to an Ondo State High Court, who swore to an affidavit, claiming that Mercy’s middle name was “imposive.”
Mercy, 35, was subsequently arrested and detained at the Force CIID Annex, Alagbon, since July 7.
Investigations by PUNCH Metro, however, revealed that Mercy and Eileen’s differences were beyond a middle name.
The two women’s ex-lover, Bankole Ogunnowo, who is based in the UK, was at the centre of the conflict.
Our correspondent gathered that Bankole and Mercy had a brief relationship in Nigeria in 2006, which produced a baby girl, named Damilola.
Bankole later married Eileen and they both relocated to London, UK, where they also had a child together before they broke up.
Eileen, while allegedly seeking sole custody of their child, told a London court that her estranged husband was not to be trusted with children because he performed Female Genital Mutilation (FGM) on Damilola, the child he had with Mercy.
Mercy, who got wind of the allegation, deposed to an affidavit, dated November 27, 2015, clearing Bankole of the charges.
In the affidavit, which revealed her name as Mercy Adetokunbo Oluwafeyibunmi, she stated that FGM was also a criminal offence in Nigeria.
However, one Oyebo, who acted for Eileen, swore to a counter-affidavit before an Ondo State High Court, accusing Mercy of stealing Eileen’s name.
Bankole told PUNCH Metro that the accusation was the beginning of Mercy’s ordeal.
He said, “Eileen denied me access to the child she had for me in the UK. I went to court so I could take my child out once in a while despite our separation. But she told the court that I belonged to a gang in Nigeria called OPC, and that we kidnap children to do FGM for them.
“She said I did that for the daughter that Mercy had for me in Nigeria. It became a concern to the UK authorities because I also work with children here (UK). I contacted Mercy and asked if I did that for my child and she said no. I asked her to swear to an affidavit, which she did. The affidavit was sent to London.
“Eileen alleged that Mercy stole one of her names in order to bring my daughter, Damilola, to the UK.”
PUNCH Metro learnt that the counter-affidavit by Oyebo was given to the Commissioner of Police in charge of Interpol, CP Olushola Subair.
The commissioner was reported to have written the London court, saying Bankole and Mercy were being investigated.
After Bankole won the court case against this ex-wife in February 2017, some individuals were alleged to have threatened Mercy for her role in the matter.
The woman allegedly got a Federal High Court’s injunction forbidding any harassment.
However, despite the injunction, she was arrested and taken to the FCIID, Alagbon.
Mercy’s husband in Nigeria, Nicholas Oluwafeyibunmi, with whom she had two children in Akure, lamented that his wife was being harassed for the assistance she rendered to Bankole.
He said, “On the day she was arrested, she wanted to pick our child at school. A man called my wife that he wanted to see her at a place.
“When the call became intense, I decided to follow her, together with another friend. The caller brought out the Whatsapp picture of my wife and asked if she was the one. We didn’t know he had called the police.
“Suddenly, some policemen from the Ondo State Police Command came in and took her to the Yaba Police Division. They later sent a signal to those at Alagbon, Lagos, who came to take her away. Since then, she had been held incommunicado. I don’t know why they picked my wife. She did not commit any crime.”
Mercy, who spoke with our correspondent on the telephone on Monday, said she had been admitted to the police clinic after she fell ill.
She said, “They said my crime was that somebody in the UK, who I did not know, said I stole one of her names. My name is Mercy, Joy, Adetokunbo. Why will steal her name?”
Mercy’s mother, Gbonjubola, said Adetokunbo was among Mercy’s names.
She said, “When I gave birth to her, I named her Anu, Joy. She had up to 10 names given by different relatives. Her father, who was away, came back and gave her Adetokunbo. For the past two weeks, I don’t know where my daughter is. Please help us.”
Eileen’s father, Jimi Odumosu, did not pick his calls when our correspondent called him on Monday.
However, in a recorded conversation he had with Bankole, which was obtained by PUNCH Metro, Odumosu urged a peaceful resolution of the matter, saying he was separated from Eileen’s mother and he was not sure if she (Eileen) would listen to him.
The Deputy Commissioner of Police in charge of the FCIID, Alagbon, Mr. Abutu Yaro, confirmed that the suspect was in custody.
He, however, said he did not know the details of the case.
He said, “That case was investigated by Interpol Lagos and was sent to Interpol Abuja. The Interpol Abuja then wrote a note on the case file that the police lawyer attached to General Investigation, FCIID, should take the matter to court. So, I don’t know about the case. It is not our case.
The lawyer that they asked to prosecute the case is the lawyer attached to my office, but I don’t know the offence. I don’t know anything about the court process.”
Eileen did not pick her calls as her phone rang out severally, while a text message sent to her line had yet to be responded to as of press time.
The Force Public Relations Officer, Moshood Jimoh, had also yet to respond to a text message from PUNCH Metro.
Punch Report
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