Hmmm..........One of the freed pupils of the Lagos
State Model College, Igbonla, Epe, Ramon Isiaq, has said his stay in the
kidnappers’ hideout is an experience he would never forget in a hurry.
The 16-year-old Senior Secondary School 2
pupil said the abductors exposed him and his colleagues – Peter Jonah,
Adebayo George, Judah Agbausi, Pelumi Philips and Farouq Yusuf – to
rains in the camp they were kept.
He said they were fed with poorly cooked food and that they were only allowed to bathe once in a week.
The children were dropped at a creek in Ondo State around 12 pm on Friday after spending 64 days in captivity.
They were reunited with their parents in Lagos later.
Their release came on the heels of fresh N5m ransom collected by the kidnappers on Tuesday at Odi-Omi community in Ogun State.
Isiaq in a brief chat with one of our
correspondents on the telephone on Saturday said there were times they
went hungry all day.
He said, “After they kidnapped us that
day (May 25), we were kept around our school, while a (police)
helicopter was patrolling the area. They asked us to hide in a bush so
that people in the helicopter would not see us. In the midnight, they
sent a boat to pick us.
“The following day, they gave us
spaghetti. We ate the same thing in the afternoon and evening. They told
us that some security men were sent to fight them, but they killed the
men. They threatened that we would die there.
“We were seven in an uncompleted
building. The seventh person is a man that was looking after us. It was a
bad experience. We didn’t enjoy our sleep. We always prayed that rain
would not fall. If rain fell, it would beat us. Sometimes, they didn’t
give us food; at times they gave us food once in a day. At other times,
they wouldn’t give us food at all. We ate together. We bathed once or
twice in a week.”
At a point, Isiaq stated that he and the other pupils complained about their maltreatment to the leader of the kidnap gang.
“After some time, I met with their boss
called ‘Chief’ or ‘Chairman’ that we did not enjoy the food they cooked
for us and that we should be allowed to prepare our food by ourselves.
They didn’t allow us to move around…” the Lagos pupil stated as his
father stopped the conversation.
The father promised us that Isiaq would speak more with one of correspondents about his experience later in the day.
However, subsequent calls made to the father’s telephone line were not picked.
Also, parents of the other pupils rescued from the kidnappers did not allow us to speak with the freed kids.
They also declined to share any experience the kids narrated to them with one of our correspondents.
After some persuasion, one of the parents who preferred to speak on condition of anonymity told us that her son took ill while held hostage by the kidnappers.
“We have been told not to ask them any
question, except they decide to talk about their experience. So, I
wouldn’t want to expose him to any danger. But so far, he told me they
were moved from one camp to another and that they were cooking by
themselves at a point. He also fell sick while in captivity. While the
school was in second term, he was ill and was recuperating when the
abduction happened. I think the kind of environment he was exposed to by
those guys made him to fall sick again. He is relaxed now.
“He said one of the camps was built with
straw and that the kidnappers mounted a tarpaulin to cover them when
the rain was much. They allowed them to move around and did not maltreat
them. One of them, (Isiaq) who can swim had started teaching them how
to do so. My son told me they were wearing black clothes before they
gave them the jerseys they wore yesterday (Friday). The jerseys had been
collected for laboratory examination,” she said.
Meanwhile, a security source has denied that extra N5m was paid before the pupils were freed.
A top security officer who spoke on condition of anonymity told us that it was the extra efforts put in place by the Deputy Governor of Ondo State, Agboola Ajayi, which led to their release.
The source disclosed that Ajayi and one
of his aides, both of whom hail from Ese Odo Local Government Area, with
another ex-militant went to the creek on the order of Governor Rotimi
Akeredolu to negotiate the release of the children with the kidnappers.
“No ransom was paid as far we are
concerned. The deputy governor went into the creek with one of his aides
known as Donald Ojogo, without any security detail because the
militants (abductors) warned them against coming with security
operatives; that if they came with security men, they would kill the
pupils. He knows the terrain (of the creek).
“They also warned the government to move
away gunboats of the Navy and the police from the waterways in Lagos,
Ogun and Ondo states. They spoke with the deputy governor in pidgin
English. They told him they were indigenes of Ondo State and that they
wanted to be included in the amnesty programme of the Federal
Government. They said they would release the pupils and the Federal
Government too should include them in amnesty programme,” the source
stated.
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