Two Nigeria soldiers, Lance Corporals Musa
Maidabra and Edwin George, serving at 122D30 Regiment in Maiduguri,
Borno State, have been arrested for transporting the ransom that was
paid for the release of the wife of the Central Bank Governor, Margaret
Emefiele.
Emefiele and three others were abducted
along Benin-Agbor Road about two weeks ago and were released 24 hours
later after the payment of undisclosed amount to their abductors. The two soldiers said they received N6.5m each as their share of the ransom estimated to be around N80m.
Maidabra and George, were paraded
alongside seven others on Monday in Abuja for alleged involvement in the
kidnapping, said they were given the money for assisting the gang to
transport the ransom to a hideout in Benin, the Edo State capital.
Maidabra said, “We were not involved in
the kidnapping; we only assisted them to transport the money to a
location. We carried the money and ran away with it in a vehicle; it was
part of my friend’s share that I collected. We didn’t know the money
was from a kidnap operation.”
“I was not involved in the kidnap; the
money they gave me was over N6m. I asked about the source of the money,
but they didn’t tell me,” he said.
Other suspects included a dismissed
soldier, Ernest Uduefe, Mohammed Abubakar, Mohammed Musa, Mohammed Sule,
Ibrahim Abdullahi, Aliyu Musa and Mohammed Yusuf.
The Force Public Relations Officer,
Donald Awunah, said the police recovered N14,725,000, two Honda Accord
cars, an Audi car, one AK 47 magazine and two cartridges from the gang.
He stated that a Jeep, valued at N1.5m
and N4m cash were recovered from Maidabra, while a Honda Accord,
estimated at N1.1m, was recovered from George.
Awunah explained that detectives
recovered N7.7m from Musa out of his N10m share, adding that he
sustained bullet wounds after a gun duel with the police while trying to
escape from the forest where they had kept their victim.
He said, “Mohammed Sule confessed to
have received N10m in cash as part of his share of the ransom paid and
claimed a soldier and a gang leader escaped with the rest of the loot.
Another suspect, Ibrahim Abdullahi, admitted to have received N10m in
cash.
“The police will continue to limit the
capacity of kidnappers and other criminals to disrupt the quality of
life of Nigerians by the deployment of adequate manpower and resources
in crime reduction, detection and prosecution of offenders.”
On the payment of ransom, the police
noted that it was sometime used as a bait or bargaining chip to save the
lives of victims of crime.
“It is absolutely important to mention that the police do not and will not encourage payment of ransom,” Awunah added.
Robber
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