A
29-year-old lotto operator, Uzordinma Chukwudi, alongside three others have
been arrested by the Imo State Police Command in connection with the kidnap of
a certain woman in the state.
The
state Commissioner of Police, CP, Mr. Taiwo Lakanuwas who paraded Chukwudi and
his syndicate, one Joseph Chiaotu, aka Ejima, 21, Anozie Chinonso, aka Chiboy,
25 and Chukwuma Agim, a 27-year-old prison official, said investigations were
ongoing.
Confessing
before journalists at the Command headquarters in Owerri on Saturday, Chukwudi
said, ” I was studying Mechanical Engineering at Federal Polytechnic Nekede,
Imo State before I dropped out in my final year.
“What
led me into kidnapping was unfortunate. My girlfriend is pregnant and I have
been under pressure to pay her bride price but I had no money. She told me that
since she became pregnant her mother had been ostracised by her fellow women in
their village. The pressure was too much that I needed to look for money by all
means,” Chukwudi said.
Speaking
on how he came across the other suspects, the 29-year-old explained, “When the
pressure became unbearable, I contacted two of my friends; Nnamdi, who is now
in prison, and Chiboy, who later introduced me to Agim for the trade.
“Agim,
being a prison official, was the one making way for us whenever we approached a
police check point but our first operation was not successful because the
person we targeted escaped, but on the second operation, my friend went with a
policeman and they kidnapped the woman.
“I
was given N100, 000 as my share for my involvement in the deal and for taking
food to the victim in the bush,” Chukwudi confessed.
“Chiboy told me that he got only N1.1m from the woman but when we were
arrested, the woman told us she paid N3m as ransom. The moment I got my own
share, I gave my girlfriend part of it to start the preparation (for the
wedding) while I went to the market to buy drinks. That was when I got a call
from Agim and when I met him I was arrested.”
The
other suspect, Agim, a prison official from Imo State, said he was lured into the
trade by an inmate, Nnamdi.
Agim
told journalists that even though he was able to buy clothes, settle his debts
and fix his car with his N100, 000 share in the ransom paid by the victim’s
family, he regrets his involvement in the act.
He
said, “I was in my final year student in Imo State University where I was
studying Insurance. I was earning N43, 000 monthly as a prison official and I
was even thankful because I didn’t join the Service with a first degree.
“When
I came for industrial attachment last year, our chief warder told us that there
was a notorious kidnapper called Vampire who was arrested and would be brought
to Owerri Prison.”
He
recalled that when he was posted to the Owerri prison, his mother, who was also
serving in the prison, warned him to be wary of one inmate, named Vampire and
his friends so as not to get into trouble. He maintained that he was reluctant
when Nnamdi approached him but that he later found the offer attractive.
“Early
this year I met Nnamdi who was in the same cell with Vampire. Nnamdi first
asked me to get him a phone and he offered me N3, 000 but I refused. So, he met
another officer who got him the phone. They kept pressurising me that they
wanted us to be friends.
“So
one day, we sat behind the food store and they told me several stories about
their escapade in kidnapping and I found it attractive. They told me they were
rich people and they used to visit several popular bars in major towns in the
South East and South South states and that when they observe rich people leaving
the bar, they go after them and kidnap them.
“At
the end of the conversation, they gave me a number and with that contact, I was
able to link other members, including Chiboy, aka Eze Ekudeley, Ejima and
Chukwudi.
“We
used to work with a policeman and on the day we went to pick our victim, she
wasn’t the main the target but she was traced to her house where she was
picked.
“It
was Nnamdi who called me to and look after the woman in the bush. I borrowed
money from a friend and used it to buy food for the woman. I gave the food to
Uzordima to give to the woman. I learnt the woman stayed for two days. I was
given N100, 000 after the N1.1m ransom was collected. I bought clothes, settled
my debt and fixed my car.
“I
was arrested few days after the operation. It was Ejima who led them to me. I
regret getting myself into this mess he lamented,” Agim added.
Ejima,
on his part, said his share of the ransom was N70, 000, out of which he used
N10, 000 to buy shoes and clothes.
He
said, “I don’t know how the police heard about what I did; they came after me
and arrested me. I led the police to arrest the prison official and four other
members of the gang, but we were unable to arrest Chiboy. He noticed the
presence of the police and he attempted to escape. He ran into the bus and the
police fired several shots at him but he wasn’t hit.”
Meanwhile,
Chinonso, also an indigene of Imo State, said poverty led him into kidnapping.
“All
I was looking for was a little money to buy a bus on hire purchase because the
one I had got spoilt. I met Ejima recently and I told him I needed assistance
because I had no job. He promised he would help me.
“It
was poverty that led me into this crime. I am a very poor person struggling for
myself and my family. I have no one helping me and my mother is a very old
woman. I pray this woman (the victim) and her family would forgive me.
He
explained that he participated in the kidnap and that his share was N100,000
but that he was arrested when he was about hiring a bus.
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