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The 13 suspects arrested in connection with the murder of four UNIPORT students have been charged before a Port Harcourt Magistrate on a five-count charge of conspiracy and murder and were yesterday remanded in prison till the case comes up again in December. The Nigeria Police Force has also dismissed the policeman who was part of the mob that killed the students. The policeman has been identified as Lucky Orji.
Three of the suspects charged, gave accounts of what happened on that very sad day of the lynching. Read below:
The 13 suspects arrested in connection with the murder of four UNIPORT students have been charged before a Port Harcourt Magistrate on a five-count charge of conspiracy and murder and were yesterday remanded in prison till the case comes up again in December. The Nigeria Police Force has also dismissed the policeman who was part of the mob that killed the students. The policeman has been identified as Lucky Orji.
Three of the suspects charged, gave accounts of what happened on that very sad day of the lynching. Read below:
David Ugbaje's recount
“Around 7 am, I left my house. I dressed up to go to work. On my street,
I saw a crowd of people with four unclad boys, who were being led into
my compound, No. 9, Royal Villa in Omuokiri-Aluu. I said what was the
problem and they said the boys were armed robbers. I said that is my
compound, let us go and see the person, if he is their member or let
them point the particular person, who is their member they were going to
look for”.
“I opened the gate, they entered. A crowd of people that I could not
control. They entered the compound. They pointed to the room of one of
our co-tenants, whose name is Bright. They said one of the boys was
staying with Bright. When they got there, Bright’s door was locked. Some
people wanted to break the door. They started beating the boys. Very serious. Along the line, two
policemen came around. One of the policemen was pleading. The other
policeman joined in beating the boys and later said the crowd should
hand over the boys to them, but the crowd said ‘no’. ‘We no go gree, we
no go gree’.
“As the policemen were leaving, they said whatever this thing was going
to bring, you would bear the result. Since I live in the yard, I said if
I stayed there and the people were killed, automatically, the house
would be in trouble. We are now in trouble. I brought out my belt; I
started flogging people and asked them to leave the yard. I was beating
the people (crowd) very seriously”.
“One Ikwerre man in the crowd asked why I was beating the crowd for the
boys to be moved from our yard. I continued to beat the crowd to carry
the boys to where they brought them from. I drove them out of our
compound and gate. They injured me in my hand, when I was trying to open
the gate”.
“I started flogging for them to leave. There is water in our (house’s)
frontage. They went there and soaked the boys (four) inside the water. I
discovered that one of the boys was my customer on campus, at the
University of Port Harcourt, where I work. He was an Igbo student. I
asked the boy: are you a student?
“If you watch the video, you will see me
where I held a belt, asking the boy. The boy told me ‘no’, that he was not
a student (of UNIPORT). Quite all right, I knew him very well. He once
bought slippers from me and used to repair slippers from me. I am a
shoemaker at UNIPORT”.
Maybe the boy was afraid to tell me he was a student. There was nothing I
could do because of the crowd. If I talked more than that, they could
join me with them.
“The beating was going on, here and there. At the end, they finally
moved the boys out of my street. I then went out. My wife has just been
delivered of a baby.”
On his role in the lynching of the four students, Ugbaje said: “I flogged the boys twice.”
Amadi's account of what happened
“I live at No. 9. Royal Villa in Omuokiri-Aluu. I am from Ikwerre. I
work at UNIPORT. I am a printer. I do photocopying and binding. In the
morning on that day, I dressed up, as usual, so that I could go to my
work. When I came out at the junction, so that I could pick a bike, I
saw a crowd of people, with four boys. They were unclad, with tyres on
their necks”.
“I shifted a bit, but to verify what was happening, they told me the
four boys came to rob. I asked where they were taking them to. They said
they were taking them to No. 9, where I live”.
They said they mentioned one of our neighbours. That they came to look for him as well.
“I followed the crowd. Before I reached my estate, they had already
reached the house with the four boys in front of my neighbour, Bright,
from Ogoni. They said they were looking for one of the boys. Before they
came, the back door was locked. Some of the people in the crowd said
they were going to break the back door. Others said no, they should
leave the door, since Bright was not around. At the end, they started
beating the boys”.
“They started beating the boys. In the
process of beating the boys, policemen came, but they said no, they were
not going to leave the four boys. I called this my neighbour (David
Chinasa Ugbaje), with other neighbours, that we were not going to allow
that kind of thing to take place in our estate that we would be in
trouble.
“This my neighbour (Ugbaje) collected his belt. I collected a small
stick, and we started chasing people, flogging everybody, to take the
boys out of our yard. We started pushing everybody out, including the
four students. They left their tyres, I said they should take their
tyres out of the yard and we locked our gate.
“I flogged everybody, including the four
boys, for everybody to go out. I beat one of the four boys twice and the
other one, I beat once.
Segun Lawal
“My name is Segun Lawal. I am from Osun State. I live in Omuokiri-Aluu. I
was in the house, around 6:30 am to 7 am. I am a taxi driver. I saw a
crowd and I parked my car outside. I saw a police vehicle coming and I
followed the police. I saw four policemen. I saw the policemen enter the
gate”.
“As I reached the gate, they were
beating the boys. I had to raise my hands up, to defend the boys. If you
watch the video, you will see it. I wore blue polo shirt. I started
pleading for the crowd not to kill the four boys. They did not listen”.
“The Policemen left immediately. I had to leave. As I left, I went to
GRA (Port Harcourt); one of my customers called that I should take him
to Obudu Cattle Ranch (in Cross River State).
“I came back on Saturday night (October 6). I was in my house. Policemen
came to arrest me. I never had this type of experience. I told the
police that I was not around. That I traveled to Obudu. I did not beat
the four boys.”
this is too sad, i feel lyk crying
ReplyDeletedt land is cursed, may dey never know peace
ReplyDeleteamen
Deletenow these animals are forming innocent. dey shd be beaten n burned.....animals!!
ReplyDeleteall of a sudden no one was around wen it hppnd...God,pls punish dese ppl
ReplyDeletemay d souls of d boys rip
ReplyDeleteamen
DeleteI can't judge this men.put i think they are involve in the killing.or let the police investigate carefully.thanks vanessa
ReplyDeleteDey must be judged o! Becos dey judged d innocent boys
ReplyDeleteVanessa tnks for d updates. U ® blessed!justice must be done!!!simple
ReplyDeleteMay God help us and help the parents of d boys and accept the souls of d boys. Dis is too much for one to bear
ReplyDeleteWhen ¶ saw dis news some days bk on stv ¶ almost crashed my tv against d wall...these guys must be killed!
ReplyDeleteOga/madam abeg no crash tv o...ppl go still need am.lol.but on a more serious note,these guys shd be dealt wth.all of dem
DeleteDis is not a laffin matter...¶ dnt know y nigerians ® like dis.
DeleteE do....no one is joking here
Delete