The
Department of State Services has apprehended six kidnappers of Chief Nitabai
Inengite, an uncle to President Goodluck Jonathan. Inengite was abducted at
Otuoke community in the Ogbia Local Government Area of Bayelsa State in
February, 2014. The kidnappers, who were paraded at the DSS headquarters in
Abuja on Thursday include a 400-level undergraduate of the University of Jos,
Plateau State, Eldred Jonah,30; Raphael Inengesi, 32; Ibeabuchi Inya,29; Oreva
Abridi 29; Tammy Agbai,29; and a native doctor, Felix Onuoh,48. The Service
also paraded another set of kidnappers that were involved in the abduction of
two sisters, Ejura and Unekwu Opaluwa at Karmo, Abuja on June 8, 2014. The
suspects are Oyemire Asagba, 29, aka Paul/Sky; Sunday Attah,30, aka Shyne; the
armourer, Zacheus Salami,30, aka ‘D’; Victor Bassey,32; the driver, Sani
Mohammed,23;, and Aragba Ademo,33, aka IT/Topson. Others are Ojo Gambo,22;
Haruna Asama,38; Dikko Iko, 22; and Mohammed Adamu,20, aka Mikifi/Abu. The DSS
Deputy Director, Public Relations, Marilyn Ogar, explained that Jonah
masterminded the abduction of the President’s uncle and provided the take-off
grant of N40,000 for arms procurement and other logistics. According to her,
the suspect confessed that he carried out surveillance on Inengite and that the
gang had two teams for the operation, comprising the land team made up of five
persons, and the waterside (speedboat) team, made up of three persons. Ogar
stated that four pump action rifles were used for the operation, adding that
Inengite was whisked away in an ash-coloured Honda SUV to Onuegbu waterside
from where he was transferred into a waiting speedboat and taken to the creeks.
She said, “The victim was held captive at two different locations within
Bayelsa State in the creek of Brass, very close to the ‘mouth’ of the Atlantic
Ocean and Okigbene creeks. “Following a security operation by this service, he
was released after 17 days in captivity without payment of ransom.
Investigation into the incident eventually led to the arrest of the six
suspects in Bayelsa, Delta and Edo States.” Ogar stated that Agbai, an
unemployed graduate of Accounting from the University of Port Harcourt, was the
owner of the car that was used for the abduction, adding that the suspect
denied involvement in the kidnap operation, claiming that one of his friends,
Jonah, requested the use of the car for a burial ceremony, which he obliged
him. In an interview with newsmen, Jonah, who admitted to providing the money
and undertaking surveillance for the abduction, claimed that the motivation for
the operation was not ransom. Onuoha, the native doctor, explained that he
provided charms and herbal fortification for the kidnap gang because he was
afraid they may harm him and his family if he did not cooperate with them. He
said, “Abridi came with three men and said they want juju for business success
which I did for them. They later said that was not what they wanted, that they
wanted to kidnap someone and wanted charm for protection. “The moment they said
that, their faces changed and I was afraid that if I don’t cooperate with them,
they may harm me and my family because I was with my family at the time, so I
agreed to help them and I asked them to pay me 10 per cent of the ransom.” Ogar
also explained that the leader of the kidnappers of two girls in Abuja, Asagba
confessed to the crime, adding that the operation was carried out by him and
four other gang members. She said, “Paul had been arrested previously at a
military checkpoint at Uke, Keffi LGA, Nasarawa State, while in possession of
two Ak-47 rifles, magazines and 87 rounds of live ammunition. “He was arraigned
in court, convicted and sentenced to one and a half years in prison which he
served at Keffi Prison in March 2013. “Upon his release, he returned to his
criminal activities and confessed that he kidnapped the two sisters at Life
Camp, Abuja and that they collected N10m before releasing the victims, but they
lied to the co-opted members that they received only N6m.” The DSS stated that
the gang co-opted Iko, the security guard at the victims’ residence who
provided information on the movement of the Opaluwa family. The service said
that Iko had confided in a kinsman, Ezekiel, that his employer, the father of
the kidnapped girls, kept money at home and it was Ezekiel who promised to
introduce him to friends that could steal the money. “Dikko was given N3,000 to
buy a phone and SIM card for communication with the gang members,” Ogar
explained.
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