•Crimes rise, as police lament manpower shortage
Last Friday, May 5, gunmen attacked a Chinese expatriate in
Owerri, the Imo State capital, and made away with N10 million he had withdrawn
from a second generation bank.
During the attack, the gunmen killed an inspector, who was
his orderly. A source said: “Immediately the foreigner was driven out of the
bank premises in his Toyota car, the gunmen, who were already waiting, double
crossed his vehicle. Two of them jumped out of their car and attacked their
target.”
Same day, four suspected armed robbers were arraigned in
court in Owerri. Parading the suspects at the command’s headquarters before
their arraignment, the State Police Public Relations Officer, Mr. Andrew
Enwerem, said: “On April 23, 2017, operatives of the Imo State Police Command
arrested the suspects during a routine patrol along Naze in Owerri North LGA.
“Suspects were arrested while conveying a stolen 50KVA sound
proof Perkins power generator in a Nissan Wagon vehicle with registration number
KRD 687 AM.
“Investigation revealed that the Perkins power generator
belongs to Amanbo Ebikoro community in Ikeduru LGA. Investigation has been
concluded and suspects would be charged to court this morning.”
On May 2, gunmen suspected to be armed robbers broke into
the Imo State House of Assembly complex in Owerri and stole electronics, office
equipment and some important documents. According to sources, the latest attack
is the third this year.
There is a potential threat to peace in parts of the state,
as Fulani herdsmen are destroying farmlands and crops with reckless abandon. On
May 3, the Ogbako Ngor Okpala Youth, a socio-political group, raised the alarm
over the activities of Fulani herdsmen in the area. It warned that further acts
of provocation might result in self-help.
The group said: “Fulani herdsmen are no longer a distant story in our
council but an ugly reality, going by the recent invasion of farmlands of the
people of Umuehie village, Ngor Autonomous Community by them and subsequent
destruction of farmlands and crops worth millions of Naira.”
Indeed, it could be said that, in Imo, it’s one week, one
trouble. For a couple of months now, the state has consistently remained in the
news for the wrong reasons. Despite the killing of Vampire, crime rate
continues to soar in the state.
More examples will suffice
A first year student of the Imo State University (IMSU),
Owerri, whose name was given as Nkechi Onwumelu, was injured by suspected cult
members on May 2 while returning to school after the Easter break. A source
volunteered: “The first year female student was returning from her home town,
Umugakwo-Eziama, in Ngor Okpala Local Government Area of Imo State when she was
attacked. The cult members made away with her bag, containing cash, West
African Secondary School Certificate Examinations results, receipts, medical
report, mobile phone and other materials.”
It was further learnt that the hoodlums, who were armed with
dangerous weapons, injured the student in the course of disposssessing her of
her valuables.
In fact, it could be said that Imo is a land brimming with
cultists, as the various groups often engage in supremacy battles and attack
innocent people. For some youths in the villages, cultism has become a way of
life. If you do not belong to one cult group or another, you will be looked at
with disdain. Consider this: Late last month, the police in the state charged
16 undergraduates of the Federal Polytechnic, Nekede, Owerri, and the Federal
University of Technology, Owerri (FUTO), for their alleged participation in
cult-related operations. Enwerem, a Deputy Superintendent of Police, disclosed:
“In a renewed onslaught against the menace of cultism in Imo State, operatives
of the state police command on April 14, 2017, arrested over 16 cultists in a
bush in Ihiagwa in the Owerri West Local Government Area. They are members of
the Neo Black Movement of Africa Confraternity. The suspects have been charged
to court accordingly.”
It was also learnt that three live cartridges and expended
SMG ammunition were recovered from the suspected cultists. Investigation
revealed many of the cultists in the state were involved in sundry criminal
activities, including armed robbery, breaking and entering, rape and
consumption and peddling hard drugs.
Someone who is in the know said: “In some cases, rape is
part of the initiation. To show that you are a real man, you are expected to
donate a girl for the members that night. About three or four boys will rape a
girl that night. Sometimes, they do it even without using condoms. It is
disgusting. These boys have turned to animals.”
Last month, tragedy was averted at FUTO when a Materials and
Metallurgical Engineering student, Sydney, attempted to take his life by
jumping into the Otammiri river. The student, who is the leader of a security
outfit in the school, was said to have made several telephone calls before
taking the plunge.
Stella, an eyewitness, said: “While my friends and I were
doing our morning exercise at the Otammiri river bank, he was at the other side
of the river, crying as he was making phone calls. We ignored him and kept
jogging. But after about 20 minutes, he jumped into the river. That was when he
started shouting and screaming for help from passers-by.”
She further disclosed: “He was struggling and gasping for
breath. My friends ran to the street to solicit assistance from people and
immediately I saw his head, I started encouraging him to hold on to a tree in
the river. He finally lost consciousness and was already drowning when
professional swimmers arrived and rescued him.”
A report attributed Sydney’s attempt to commit suicide to
his being frustrated by the school authority. It said: “The school management
has refused to allow him graduate. He has a lot of spill-over courses. And as
the leader of the Man O’ War, all the allowances accrued to him in the last 12
months have been withheld. After fighting cultists in the campus, it is very
annoying that the school management has been frustrating him.”
The other day, two community youth leaders, identified as
Uzoma Ebo, alias Van Dan, and Chinedu, were killed by gunmen suspected to be
hired assassins at Eke Obollo in the Isiala Mbano LGA of the state. It was
gathered that the young men met their end at a drinking spot, called Okeosisi
Bar, where the gang of four, operating in an SUV, pumped them with bullets.
“The gunmen shot them repeatedly on their chests and abdomen until they were
sure that their victims were dead before zooming off into the night,” a source
said.
Confirming the killings, Enwerem said: “Immediately we got
information that some gunmen had killed two youths of Obollo in the Isiala
Mbano LGA, the commissioner of police, Chris Ezike, swiftly dispatched a crack
team of police officers to the crime scene.”
Fake military men
are also on the prowl in the state. Parading three suspected fake
soldiers last month, Ezike explained that they were arrested at Amakohia Ubi,
in the Owerri West LGA where they set up an office used to defraud unsuspecting
members of the public on the pretence of recruiting them into the Nigerian
Army. He said that the suspects, Edet Okon, Victor Akpan and Kingsley Inyang,
were collecting N8000 and N70,000 from victims for medical tests and
recruitment processing. The police boss revealed that one laptop, camouflage
cap, two pairs of army uniforms and a pair of army boots were some of the
exhibits recovered from the suspects.
Inyang, who was dressed in an army uniform, said that the
uniform belonged to his retired soldier father. He admitted that his group had
deceived and duped 22 people.
Few days earlier, a burial ceremony in Awo Omamma in the Oru
East LGA came to an abrupt end when an officer of the Imo Security Network
allegedly shot one of his comrades whose name was given as Chidi Onyenekwu at
the event. While an unconfirmed account alleged that the unidentified security
personnel used the occasion to settle scores with the deceased, a report said:
“It was simply a case of accidental discharge. The security agent forgot to
return his trigger lock after shooting repeatedly in the air, as part of the
entertainment at the burial. Bullets hit his colleague in the chest, as he
lowered the gun. The victim died on the spot.
The family of a bank worker in the Okigwe area of the state,
Mr. Enyioma Okwudiri, are still weeping in the valley of tears, following the
killing of their bread winner alongside one Nanman Lamak by a ruthless gang allegedly
led by Toosolo Sphapiro. Same day, the gang killed two people withdrawing money
from ATM as well as a police inspector along the Enugu Port Harcourt Highway.
They also escaped with the officer’s Toyota Camry car. However, Shapiro was
gunned down 48 hours later by the police while attempting to escape after he
was cornered at Aba, Abia State.
A top politician from the area, who did not want his name
mentioned, told the reporter: “There was wild celebration in Okigwe and
environs when the news was heard that Shapiro had been killed by the police. He
was a turn in the flesh of the people. He was in the mould of the notorious
kidnapper and armed robber, called Vampire; in fact, he was our own Vampire.
Some people are still doubting if he had actually been killed because he
appeared to be above death.”
Kidnapping is also returning to Imo. A 55-year old
businessman, Mr. Benedict Kpaduwa, was abducted last month by gunmen in his
hometown in Isiala Mbano LGA last month. According to a source, “the gunmen shot
repeatedly into the air. They went straight to their target and dragged him
from his Toyota Corolla into their Hummer bus. They ordered a pastor of a
nearby church, who came out on hearing gunshots, to lie down.”
In revenge of the killing of a member of the Black Axe
allegedly by the Vikings cult group, a member of the latter, 23-year old
Decency Chibundu of Umulele Irete in Owerri West LGA was murdered in April. The
killing of the Black Axe member led to a supremacy war, throwing the residents
into panic. “We are living in fear, we can no longer sleep. It is one killing
or shooting or the other every day. The annoying aspect is that these boys are
not in higher institutions. They are just villagers who have seen cultism as a
way of life.”
In the same vein, a fresh graduate of Political Science and
Public Adminstration, Emeka Ndubueze, aka Jayboy, was killed at IMSU back gate
while waiting for his call-up letter for the National Youths Service Corps
programme. A source informed that the assailants shot him several times on the
chest, adding that his killing may be connected to inter-cult war on the
campus. The IMSU authority confirmed the killing of the student.
Going to do transactions in banks at Owerri has become a
risky venture. Again in April, daredevil armed robbers shot a man coming out of
a bank and snatched the money he withdrew. The victim and his wife were robbed
in front of the Imo Government House. And while the robbery was going on,
policemen and NSCDC personnel at the roundabout opposite the Government House
took to their heels.
An eyewitness gave the following narration: “I was at the
newspaper stand across the road just before the Okigwe roundabout about 11am
when I heard a gunshot and then two young men in a Camry car blocked a man and
his wife, driving in another car. They asked them to handover the money. The
woman ran out of the car but the man refused to handover the money to them. One
of the robbers shot him three times and collected the money from him.”
Another said: “I was driving behind them, about four cars
away. When I heard gunshots, it dawned on me that those in the Camry were
robbers because the way they overtook me made me wonder where they were
hurrying to. After snatching the money, they were shooting into the air, which sent
people running in different directions, including the policemen at the Okigwe
roundabout.”
Reacting to the development, prolife advocate and human
right activist, Dr. Philip Njemanze, argued that it was a function of the
failure of government and/or poor governance. He said: “Crime wave is
increasing all over the country but it is epidemic in Imo State. The reason is
that there is so much problem in the state, even to move around Owerri has
become another thing. Crime wave is on the rise because of the recession in the
country. In Imo, there has not been any real government programme to develop
and absorb the youths. What do you want the youths to do? How do you want them
to survive? Their parents are not paid salary. The workers were promised 70% of
their salary monthly but most of them are either getting nothing at all or are
getting 40% of what they are supposed to get. The issue is that the government
has become a major obstacle to both individual development and the entire
development of the state. The policies are not proper at all. They have no
target goal. They are directionless in all what they doing. So, the outcome is
increasing crime rate, increasing mortality of people and increasing anger.
There is social discord and a lot of resentment among the people. Ordinary
people are very resentful of government and every other person.”
Meanwhile, the commissioner of police in the state, Chris
Ezike, who recently assumed office, admitted that the state lacked the
personnel to check crime in the state. Said he: “When I arrived Imo on April 3,
I discovered that the 5,500 policemen we have are not enough. I would be
partnering with the vigilante group, the Imo Security Watch and all other
security outfits in the state in our collective resolve to reduce crimes in the
state.
“The whole essence of governance is the maintenance of law
and order. When we have security, there would be abundant food, the private
sector would strive, there would be good life and the economy and social life
of the people would be assured.”
A police source maintained that the command and its
leadership were committed to reducing cultism and criminal activities in the
state.
But after a meeting with members of the Imo State Security
Council yesterday, Governor Rochas Okorocha spoke about the security challenges
facing the state. Among other things, he said: “We have also noticed with
dismay the rising spate of cultism, which is among university students and
secondary schools. We have taken decision to review the laws in this regard and
make it more punitive for offenders. The House of Assembly will take this up to
make the appropriate laws to check the menace of cultism in our state.
“We have noticed few cases of kidnap suspects coming from
Ngor Okpala area. The security agencies are carefully watching the development
in those areas with a view to making sure that it does not rear its ugly head
again.”

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