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How My Abductors Threatened To Kill Me After Raising N400k Out Of N10m Ransom – Olabisi

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By Kayode Sanni-Arewa

A 29-year-old man, Olabiyisi Mobolaji Charles, who was rescued by the operatives of Oyo State Command of Western Nigeria Security Network (WNSN) codenamed Amotekun, 15 hours after he was abducted has narrated his ordeal in captivity.

The victim, who hails from Akinmoorin but domiciled in Jobele, was abducted from his home in the early hours of Friday at about 1 a.m. and taken to the bush.

However community members immediately called the Amotekun office, and operatives were swiftly deployed to rescue the victim

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The second-in-command of Oyo Amotekun, Mr Kazeem Babalola Akinro, told Sunday Tribune that the security agency got a call after 1a.m. on Friday, February 28, that someone had been abducted in Jobele under Afijio Local Government.

“Immediately, we called our operatives in the four local government areas—Oyo East, Oyo West, Afijio and Atiba—to go all out to rescue him. We also left our operational headquarters in Ibadan to join them. Throughout the night, we were combing the bushes to find where they could be,” he said.

“At about 4:30 p.m., our paths crossed with those of the kidnappers in the bush. They started shooting when they saw us, and we replied and struggled to save the kidnap victim. He was even shouting to alert us that he was the victim so that he would not be hit by bullets. We could not get any of them because of the victim’s safety.”

Charles, who said he is an interior decorator, narrated his experience to the publication.

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“At about 1:09a.m. on Friday, our dogs started barking. We saw some people who scaled the fence to enter our house at Jobele. They started shooting and tried to break the door in. I tried to open the front door but it couldn’t open, so I decided to open the back door. When I noticed that they were not there, I ran away. My younger brother went to hide in the ceiling. But they decided to go with my wife so I decided to give myself in so that they would spare her,” he narrated.

“They told my wife to return inside. They tightened my hands with a long, strong rope (showing it). People in the community immediately called Amotekun operatives and they responded promptly. Not more than two minutes after, I saw Amotekun operatives, but one of them gagged my mouth with my T-shirt which they ripped with a knife, telling me not to talk.

“As they wanted to cross the expressway with me into the bush, one of the kidnappers who held an AK-47 rifle started waving oncoming trailer drivers to a stop. They had no choice than to obey. We walked in the bush for over three hours. The six of them were all from the Fulani tribe. One of them could speak spattered English.

“They were very cautious in their movement. Unknown to me, the Amotekun operatives were also combing the surrounding bush areas and the kidnappers could sense their movement. We got to a spot and drank water from a stream. I needed to defecate and they stopped to allow me. They directed me to another side of the stream to take water to clean myself. We started walking again

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“They were very cautious in their movement. Unknown to me, the Amotekun operatives were also combing the surrounding bush areas and the kidnappers could sense their movement. We got to a spot and drank water from a stream. I needed to defecate and they stopped to allow me. They directed me to another side of the stream to take water to clean myself. We started walking again

“They were suspicious that security operatives were after them. They said I should call my family. They called my father with my phone and started reducing the ransom payment to N30 million, N20 million, N15 million and later N10 million. Their thoughts were to quickly get some money and leave me. My father told them that all that could be gathered amounted to N400,000. The one that could speak a little English told my father ‘I will kill my son’. He meant he would kill me but spoke in that way.

“They became angry because of their desperation to leave the bush quickly. With my hands tied, they told me to lie face down and started using the flat side of a cutlass to beat me. I begged them that I didn’t have money. I told them to spare my life so that I would go and sell my car and give them the money. They laughed, mocking me for thinking of them as fools.

“They moved again, but as we came out at a farm’s path, we just stumbled on the Amotekun operatives. Initially, I didn’t see them. I just noticed that the person holding the rope that was used to tie my hands dropped it. I shouted that I was the victim because the kidnappers pushed me forward to aid their escape. If not, they would have been k!lled by Amotekun.

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“They began shooting as they made moves to escape. It was then I knew that they had other guns aside from the AK-47 rifle one of them held. However, Amotekun operatives responded to the firing. I believe some of them must have escaped with gunshot injuries. I was rescued at in the evening. I didn’t know the exact time because I had no phone or wristwatch to check. I did not pay any money for ransom.”

He revealed that he was not given food to eat throughout his stay with the kidnappers.

“I had nothing to eat except dates that they gave me, and I’m not used to eating them. I was so thirsty and felt I would die, before they went to a stream and got water for me. Later, they saw cashew and Agbalumo trees and plucked the fruits for all of us to eat in the evening,” Charles recounted.

The rescued victim showered praises on Amotekun operatives, saying that they would have brought down the kidnappers if not for the need to save him from being hit in the cross.

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“They (Amotekun) still traced the kidnappers after they escaped to see if they would find any of them that got bullet injuries. I saw the kidnappers smoking cigarettes but illicit drugs were found in the pockets of the camouflage when it was recovered by Amotekun,” he said.

He disclosed that kidnappings had been so frequent in Jobele Town, saying that he was the ninth or 10th person to have had the experience, not to talk of Ilora and Awe where it had also happened.

The survivor spoke further that things got to a point that there was protest against incessant kidnappings on Thursday.

“However, the kidnappers made me an icing on their cake by abducting me hours after the protest. They even told me that they had initially come on surveillance to my house and saw me feeding my dogs, and that made them to leave. They said they had been around my house since around 10 p.m.”

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“These people (kidnappers) didn’t know me before they came to me. They don’t just abduct people along the roads or bushy areas, they also target residences that are fenced and well built,” he further stated.

He appealed to the government to further empower Amotekun because Oyo residents see them as their saviour when it comes to safety of lives and property.

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Just in: EFCC Nabs Tinubu’s Aide Over Alleged N500Bn Fraud

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Operatives of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) have nabbed Mustapha Abdullahi, the director-general of the Energy Commission of Nigeria, over alleged money laundering offences involving more than N500 billion.

TheCable understands that Abdullahi was arrested in Abuja on Wednesday and is currently being held in the custody of the anti-graft agency for further investigation.

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NDLEA intercepts N10.4 billion Canadian Loud at Lagos Port(Photos)

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. We’ll continue to work with local and international partners until illicit drug supply chain is fully broken in Nigeria, Marwa assures

Operatives of the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) have intercepted a large consignment of Canadian Loud, a high-potency strain of cannabis, weighing 4,173.5 kilograms with a street value of Ten Billion Four Hundred and Thirty-Three Million Seven Hundred and Fifty Thousand Naira (N10, 433, 750,000.00) only at the Tincan Island Port in Lagos.

The successful interdiction of the illicit drug consignment followed painstaking intelligence gathering, sustained surveillance, and trailing of the container, which was transloaded a number of times since it left Toronto, Canada on 28th March, conveyed through rails to Montreal, where it was loaded on board a vessel, Jakarta express voyage, which arrived Tanger Med Port in Morocco on 15th April, discharged and reloaded on another vessel, Osaka voyage, which eventually arrived the Lagos Port on Saturday 9th May 2026.

The over two months of monitoring the shipment by the Marine Intelligence Unit of NDLEA and the Tincan Island Strategic Command of the Agency, working in close collaboration with international partners particularly the United Kingdom Home Office International Operations, the United States Drug Enforcement Administration, and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, culminated in the eventual seizure of the consignment on Tuesday 12th May during a joint examination of the container by NDLEA operatives, men of Customs Service and other security agencies.

The development comes barely four days after NDLEA operatives raided a Lekki mansion used as stash house where 4,000 parcels of same psychoactive substance weighing 2,326 kilograms worth over Five Billion Eight Hundred and Fifteen Million Naira (N5,815,000,000.00) were recovered.

The illicit drug consignments from Canada were professionally packed and concealed inside two vehicles: a used Ford Bus and a Mercedes Benz C300 car, stashed within the shipping container. Speaking during the handover of the exhibits by the NCS at the Port in Lagos on Wednesday 13th May, the NDLEA’s Director of Seaports Operations, ACG Ibinabo ArchieAbia said the “achievement once again demonstrates the effectiveness of inter-agency cooperation, international collaboration, and intelligence-driven operations in combating transnational organized crime and illicit drug trafficking.”

Reacting to the development, the Chairman/Chief Executive Officer of NDLEA, Brig. Gen. Mohamed Buba Marwa (Rtd), commended the officers of the Tincan Command and the MIU of the Agency for their vigilance and professional conduct, noting that the volume of recent Loud seizures highlights a coordinated attempt by international drug syndicates to flood the Nigerian market with synthetic strains of cannabis.

“This second massive seizure in less than a week is a clear message to the international syndicates who think they can use our ports as entry points for their soul-destroying trade, that the synergy between NDLEA and Customs Service as well as other security agencies and our international partners like the Canadian Royal Mounted Police, the UK-HOIO and the US DEA is yielding fantastic results. We will not rest until every link in this supply chain is broken and those behind these shipments are brought to justice”, Marwa stated.

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Prominent Analyst Calls for Immediate Halt to Amukpe–Escravos Pipeline Sale Process

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A prominent public affairs analyst, Prof. Okey Ikechukwu, has called for the immediate suspension and possible termination of all processes related to the proposed sale of a 40 per cent stake in the Amukpe–Escravos Pipeline, warning that proceeding under the current terms would amount to a “giveaway” of a strategic national asset.

Ikechukwu, Executive Director of the Development Specs Academy, made the remarks during an interview on Tuesday on Arise News, where he questioned the pricing, procedure, and transparency surrounding the transaction.

According to him, Nigeria is not in such financial distress as to justify disposing of a critical infrastructure asset at what he described as a “giveaway price.”

“If that is allowed to happen, it means there is no governance,” he said. “It means that people can exercise arbitrary discretion. It means that processes can be routinely violated.”

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His intervention comes amid mounting controversy over the valuation of the pipeline asset. Independent assessments conducted in 2025 reportedly valued the 40 per cent stake at between $544 million and $641 million, more than double the $243 million offer associated with a transaction that collapsed in October 2024.

Ikechukwu argued that any attempt to revive or proceed with the sale on the basis of disputed or outdated valuation benchmarks would undermine due process and public confidence.

“We are not under any desperate need to sell it at a giveaway price, and that’s what appears to be happening here,” he said. “If that is allowed to happen, then it means there is no governance.”

Describing the pipeline as a “performing national asset,” the analyst noted that the facility reportedly maintains operational uptime levels of as high as 95 per cent.

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“If you must sell a performing national asset, it must be sold at the right value,” he stated.

To illustrate his concerns, Ikechukwu compared the situation to a failed private land transaction later revived at an outdated price, arguing that such a practice would be unacceptable in any credible commercial environment.

He further warned that proceeding without an updated valuation process could damage investor confidence and weaken perceptions of regulatory integrity.

“But beyond all of that, where will investor confidence be?” he asked. “If you are a lender, how do you feel in this kind of environment? It might even be interpreted as sabotage.”

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Beyond the question of pricing, Ikechukwu said the larger issue at stake was institutional credibility and adherence to due process.

“If that is allowed to happen, it means there is no governance,” he reiterated. “It means that people can exercise arbitrary discretion. It means that processes can be routinely violated.”

The development expert consequently called for an immediate halt to all ongoing steps connected to the proposed transaction.

“All processes leading up to the presumed attempt to sell it now should be stopped,” he said. “Quite frankly, terminated. An independent evaluation should take place so that we know the current value of what is on the table and ensure that the country does not lose money in the process.”

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