Pa Michael and son, Mikel
Jos-based
transporter and father to Super Eagles star, Chief Michael Obi, has
shared his harrowing experience in the hands of kidnappers, and why his
famous son rarely calls him or comes home.
While speaking in an exclusive interview with DailyTrust, 74-year-old Chief Michael Obi, the father of Super Eagles Captain, John Mikel Obi, who recently regained freedom from kidnappers for the second time, shared his terrifying 5-day experience, and reasons why Mikel rarely comes home.
Here are excerpts from the chat;
You recently regained your freedom from kidnappers. Can you share your experience?
I was travelling home for a family meeting, early evening, in
Enugu. I’d just reminded my driver to stop at the Ninth Mile to buy Okpa
in case I fall asleep. Not quite long after a checkpoint, we heard
gunshots ahead of us, so we stopped. My driver reckoned it was armed
robbers, and tried to reverse the car.
But another car from nowhere blocked us from behind, and the people
within came and dragged us out. The kidnappers were six, well-armed and
masked. They assaulted us, and dragged us into the bush. We walked for
many hours, and when I complained that I could not continue, they beat
me again. Eventually, they told my driver to carry me on his back. But
after a while, he also got tired and dropped me.
We walked into the bush for what seemed like the whole night, until
the next morning. I asked them what they wanted from me, and that was
when they told me they wanted N100 million. We communicated in Hausa,
and some broken English. I told them I could not afford it, and they
said they heard that my son sends me N50 million to me bi-weekly. We
started to negotiate, and they threatened to kill me. I told them I only
had N2 million in my bank account.
When I noticed they were serious, I told them I could give them N5
million. We agreed on that sum, but they later refused, insisting on N50
million. I finally pegged it at N10 million.
Two days later, they brought out my phone to call my son Tony, and I
told him what was happening, and asked him to go to my bank. But when
they went there, the manager was not on seat, so my other son, Ebele,
who is the goalkeeper for Heartlands of Owerri, contacted Mikel. That
was how the ransom was made available.
How did they treat you when you were with them?
We slept on the ground, and for the five days we were with them,
there was heavy rain for three. It drenched us under a tree. It was only
once that they brought us Okpa and pure water. Miraculously, I was
never hungry. My thoughts were on how to get home safe.
Your son Mikel paid the recent ransom. What’s your relationship like?
It is an issue, but we don’t know what to do. It’s over five years
now without a phone call from him to me. But he communicates with his
mother. There is nothing I have not done to fix it. God has told me that
I should not feel hurt. When we start to talk about it, I say, ‘Well,
as long as I see him on TV, doing great, no problem’.
But some people say he called you recently
During the just-concluded World Cup, one or two days to one of
their matches, we spoke. He called his mum, and she told me that
Nchekwube (Mikel) was on the phone and I told him that God will see him
through. I prayed for him. That’sit.
When he first joined Chelsea, my people in Anambra were very happy
that God has blessed their son, and when he came to Abuja, they prepared
very well with the hope that he will come to our hometown. They even
made some magazines. It was grand. But he didn’t come. It was a shameful
thing to me, as a father. He once told his brother that sometimes he
picks his phone to call me, but something tells him not to.
Have you met your grandchildren, the twins, yet?
Sometime last year, he was to bring them so that I could name them,
he said he would. But he didn’t. His other colleagues frequent home, so
I don’t understand.
Do you encourage him to invest at home?
Isn’t that why kidnappers are targeting me? Because they think the money he makes, he ships it to me to make investments.
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