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Released after 64 days in captivity, one of the six students of Lagos Model College, Igbonla, Epe, yesterday, narrated their horrifying experience in kidnappers’ den.

According to him, they were held in three camps at different times.

The boy, who spoke anonymously because the released students had allegedly been asked not to speak to journalists by security agents, said they were beaten by their captors and starved of food because their parents refused to pay the ransom they (kidnappers) demanded.

The students, abducted on May 25 after some gunmen stormed their school, had been released to security agents in Ondo State on Friday. They were brought to Lagos, yesterday, and received by the state Deputy Governor, Dr (Mrs) Oluranti Adebule.

Later yesterday, the students were handed over to their parents after undergoing treatment at Lagos State University Teaching Hospital (LASUTH).

Some of the parents, however, said they would take their children to other hospitals for more treatment, even as they expressed appreciation to Lagos State government for picking the bills for the boys’ treatment at LASUTH.

One of the parents who allowed her son to speak with Sunday Vanguard before taking him to a private hospital in Ajah, insisted his story must be told on strict condition of anonymity, adding that they were under instruction from security agents not to speak to journalists on their kidnapping.

Narrating his story, the boy said: “We were taken away in speed boats on the day the kidnappers struck.

“They told us not to play smart by attempting to put up any struggle, saying it would lead to our death. We sailed for close to two hours before we reached a camp made of woods. We met another group of people at the camp eating and drinking. One of them was directed to take our parents telephone numbers, after they announced to us that we had been kidnapped.

“We spent two days at the camp before we were relocated. Nobody could tell the exact time they relocated us because it was dark”.

The boy explained that at the second camp, three of them were allowed to speak with their parents.

“At a point, we lost count of the number of days we had spent in captivity.

“By this time, they started beating us. We were also starved of food because they said our parents were not cooperating with them and that they had run out of food stuff.
‘’Whenever they beat us, one of them would caution them to stop, that we were not responsible for the delay in payment. One day, we overheard them saying that some of their members had been arrested. They became furious and blamed the cause on our parents’ delay to pay. This was when they became brutal. We feared the worst could happen.

‘’I fasted and prayed fervently for God’s intervention during my stay with them.
“Again, like the first time, one of them woke us, while sleeping, to go into a boat. This time around, they took us on a journey that took several hours before we got to the third camp. None of us knew where we were. Sometimes they would threaten us that we were at a point of no return, if the money they needed was not brought.

“Ironically, it was at this camp that we were well fed. At times they gave us pounded yam and Egusi soup, jollof rice and noodles. According to him, on the day they were released, the kidnapped boys had thought they were being relocated again.

“Even when the security agents that came to pick us arrived, we thought they were another group of captors because some of our captors also wore uniforms,”he said.

“I am happy to be back home”.

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.”

To secure the release of the six boys, the parents reportedly 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.

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Immediate Past Women Affairs Minister Loses Only Son

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Richard, the only son of the former Minister of Women Affairs, Dame Pauline Tallen, passed away on Sunday morning at Cedar Crest Hospital in Abuja, after being hospitalised.

According to a statement released by the family, the exact cause of his death was not immediately known, though it was reported that he had been placed on oxygen in the hospital’s Intensive Care Unit on Friday night.

His alma mater, the Vom Old Boys’ Association, also confirmed his death, stating that he passed away in Abuja after a brief illness.

The group shared on its Facebook page: “On a very sad note, we regret to announce the sudden passing of our member, Mr Richard Adamu Tallen.

“Eternal rest grant unto him oh Lord, may perpetual light shine upon him.

“May the soul of Richard and all departed VOBA members RIP. Amen.”

Richard, a 42-year-old graduate of Computer Science from a university in the United States, is survived by his wife and three children.

The family will announce the burial arrangements.

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NDLEA Arrests 41-Yr-Old Canadian Woman Munju At Lagos Airport For ‘Importing Bags Of Cannabis’

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The operatives of the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) have apprehended a Canadian national, Adrienne Munju, accused of “importing a large consignment of synthetic cannabis.”

Femi Babafemi, NDLEA spokesperson, confirmed in a statement that the “41-year-old suspect” was arrested on October 3 during the inward clearance of passengers arriving on a KLM flight from Canada at terminal 1 of the Lagos airport.

According to Babafemi, Munju “was caught with 74 parcels of the illicit substance” weighing 35.20 kg, packed in two of her three bags.

In her statement, Munju revealed that she had been “recruited to traffic the consignment through an online platform for 10,000 Canadian dollars” upon successful delivery in Lagos. She reportedly accepted the offer to fund her ongoing master’s degree program in Canada.

Additionally, the agency intercepted “13,298,000 pills of opioids and 338,253 bottles of codeine-based cough syrup” at the Port Harcourt ports, Onne, Rivers.

Babafemi stated that the seized drugs are valued at over “N9 billion in street value” and included substances like Tramadol, Tramaking Quick Action Tramadol, Tamol-X, Royal Tapentadol, and Carisoprodol.

He added that the shipment, originating from India, was seized during a 100 percent joint examination of the containers by the NDLEA.

Furthermore, on October 3, NDLEA operatives at the Tincan seaport in Lagos “intercepted 100 parcels of Canadian Loud weighing 50kg.” The consignment was “packed in 20 parcels, each in five jumbo bags,” hidden within a container carrying four imported vehicles from Canada.

Although the container had initially been cleared from the ESS Libra Bonded Terminal in Ikorodu, “based on credible intelligence,” NDLEA operatives traced the illicit drugs to a warehouse in Ikorodu. The drugs were found inside one of the imported vehicles, a Toyota Sienna bus.

A suspect, Abubakar Shuaibu Ibrahim, was arrested in connection with the seizure.

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Governor Fubara Swears In 23 New Rivers Local Government Chairmen

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Rivers State Governor, Siminalayi Fubara, has sworn in the newly elected council chairmen” of the 23 local government areas.

The exercise took place on Sunday at the Executive Council Chamber of the Government House in Port Harcourt, the state capital, just hours after the chairmen were issued certificates of return by Adolphus Enebeli, the Chairman of the Rivers State Independent Electoral Commission.

Following an election held amid heightened tension on Saturday, the Action Peoples Party secured 22 out of 23 chairmanship positions, while the Action Alliance candidate won one seat.

 

More to come…

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