Friday, 17 April 2015

Kidnapping is our family business says nanny who abducted three kids

The nanny, who kidnapped three children in the Surulere area of Lagos State, has said her husband, Waheed Kareem, is the mastermind of the kidnap.
She added that Kareem was the head of a kidnap ring that involved some members of his family. It was gathered that Kareem escaped arrest.
The nanny, who adopted a pseudonym, Mary Akinloye, to deceive the Orekoyas, confessed that her actual name was Funmilayo Adeyemi, a 35-year-old indigene of Osun State.
As earlier reported that the Orekoyas had posted on OLX, an online sales portal, saying they needed a nanny for their children.
The suspect was said to have contacted the family and was employed immediately.
Barely 24 hours after she was employed, the nanny abducted three children of the family – Aderomola (11 months), Adedamola (4 years) and Demola (6 years).
Our correspondent reported that N15m ransom was initially demanded from the family, which was later reduced to N13 after much appeal by the victims’ mother.
As earlier reported that the family paid an undisclosed amount of money into the bank account of the kidnappers before the children were released on Tuesday.
On Thursday, the Commissioner of Police, Lagos State, Kayode Aderanti, announced that the nanny had been arrested.
She was paraded at the Lagos State Police Command Headquatres in Ikeja.
The suspect told our correspondent that it was the second time she would be abducting kids in the state.
She confessed to have been responsible for the kidnap of two kids– Rapheal and Michael – in the Magodo area of Lagos State.
Adeyemi said her husband, four children and she were formerly living in the Ajah area of Lagos State, but relocated to Shasha to evade arrest after kidnapping the Magodo boys.
Adeyemi claimed that the victims’ parents paid N2m, adding that she was paid N30,000 by her husband.
She said she was contacted for maid jobs through her brother-in-law and his wife, who were always online to track posts.
On how she kidnapped the Orekoya children, she said, “On Wednesday, their father and mother went to work. I put the little one on my back, while I held the others by the hands, telling them that I wanted to buy them something. We boarded a vehicle to Ojuelegba and from there; I took another bus to Iyana Ipaja and contacted my husband.
“I took them home, where they stayed with me in one of the rooms. I bought cereal for the 11-months-old baby; he was always fed with pap at his mother’s place. I gave the others normal food. They always watch cartoon on the television; they never missed home.
“My husband told me that he wanted to collect a token from the parents, but the following day, I found out that the kidnappers demanded N15m.
“I challenged my husband for asking for such a big sum. He said I should shut up because I had already fulfilled my part and that it was time for them to do theirs. Later, I heard in the news that he had reduced it to N13m.”
The 35-year-old said she did not feel any remorse for her action until she saw the victims’ mother weeping on a national television.
She said she begged her husband to release the kids.
“But my husband said he would not release the kids until he collected the money. Later, he told me they had paid the money,” she added.
It was learnt that the kidnap gang consisted of four people– Adeyemi’s brother-in-law, Hakeem Kareem; her husband, Waheed Kareem; her sister-in-law, Ajoke Oseni, and herself.
She said when the police arrested her, she was at a fan repairer’s workshop, adding that her husband saw them taking her away and fled.
Adeyemi said she was a victim of bad marriage, advising parents to always investigate on the kind of man their daughters intended to marry.
She appealed to the Orekoya family to forgive her of her wrongs.
She said, “Mummy Damola, don’t be offended at what I have done. This is what bad marriage did to me. I only delivered the message of my husband.”
It was learnt that when the police arrested the suspect, a 16-year-old girl, Henrietta Odili, was equally apprehended.

Odili, an indigene of Delta State was said to be living with an uncle in Benin, when she saw a post on OLX that the gang needed a maid.
Odili, a Senior Secondary School pupil, told our correspondent that she ran away from home to work with the group and she was overwhelmed by the love they showed her.
She said, “I met this woman (Adeyemi) through OLX. I was searching for a job online when I saw that she needed a maid and I decided to work with her. When I got to their place in Lagos, they took my phone and said they would return it after one month. But they never did until after two months. When they returned it, they had removed my SIM card. I observed that all their things were done in secrecy.”
Asked if she saw the Orekoya kids when they were kidnapped, she said Adeyemi told her they were children of a popular artiste, Waje.
She said, “When she brought the first two kids– Michael and Rapheal – she said they were her family members and were on holiday.
“She told me that the new boys were Waje’s children and their mother asked her to take care of them. I never suspected I was living with kidnappers.
“But yesterday (Wednesday), we went to visit somebody. I just noticed she started running and I ran with her. The police caught up with us and said she was a kidnapper, and I was a suspect.”
The Commissioner of Police said the police got the suspect by tracking her telephone line.
He said, “Upon the rescue of the kids, I gave the directive that she should be arrested. We tracked her down through her phone, using the technological tools at our disposal. We arrested her at Shasha, where the children were rescued.
“Initially she denied that she was involved in the kidnap. But eventually she opened up. We are in hot pursuit of others and we will get them soon.”
Aderanti advised parents and guardians not to be in a hurry to employ house helps without doing background checks on them.”
When our correspondent visited the residence of the Orekoyas on Lawanson Road, he met the family in a joyous mood.
The children were seen playing around the house.
On their experience, one of the children, Demola, said, “Our aunty took us to our new house. She gave us bread, indomie and rice. They put us in a bag, like the one they put rice in, and put us inside the car.”
Their mother, Adebisi, said despite the criticism that had trailed her decision to hire a nanny on OLX, she did not think she was wrong.
She said by employing a nanny, she was also creating a job.
Their father, Leke, refused to disclose the amount paid to the kidnappers.

Xenophobic: Attack on shops owned by other Black Africans continue in South Africa

Despite the global condemnation over the recent Xenophobic attacks in South Africa on African migrants, Eastern Johannesburg yesterday night into the early hours of this morning recorded fresh attacks on shops owned by foreigners while a car and a building believed to be owned by a foreigner was set ablaze.

Over 200 foreigners had to run to the Gauteng province Police station where they are now taking refuge. 12 of the South Africans who carried out the attack have been arrested and according to the police, they will be charged to court. Meanwhile most shops owned by foreigners are still under lock and key as they wait for the South African government to bring the situation under control.

Plot to abduct Jega during presidential poll revealed

Fresh facts have emerged on the March 31 attempt by a former Minister of Niger Delta Affairs, Elder Godsday Orubebe, to scuttle the announcement of the March 28 presidential election results.
The main part of Orubebe’s action, according to Reuters on Thursday, was a plot to use hired thugs     to kidnap the Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission, Prof. Attahiru Jega, and consequently stall the electoral process.
The news agency quoted unnamed pro-democracy advocates and a Nigeria-based diplomat as saying that one of Jega’s aides unearthed the plot.
It said that the aide had sent a text message to an independent voting monitor, “warning of an imminent threat to the electoral process.”
Reuters said it pieced the information together from the text message, events on the ground during the announcement of the results and interviews with pro-democracy advocates and diplomats in   Abuja.
It added that when the independent voting monitor sent the SMS, he hoped the outside world would hear of the plot and the text of the message .
“Fellow countrymen, Nigeria on Trial,” read the SMS sent on the morning of March 31 to the head of the Situation Room, an Abuja-based coalition of human rights groups and pro-democracy advocates monitoring the elections.
“Plans are on storm [sic] the podium at the ICC Collation Centre and disrupt the process. Nobody is sue [sic] what will happen. Please share this as widely as possible,” the text read further.
At that moment,   Jega was about to preside over the announcement of the results.
As tallies from around the country showed that the All Progressives Congress candidate, Muhammadu Buhari, was leading, “unidentified PDP(Peoples Democratic Party) hard-liners started to panic, seeking ways of manipulating the count,” the boss of the Situation Room and the diplomat said, citing political contacts in the Niger Delta and Abuja.
Realising they could not engineer an outright win,   the PDP agents set about doctoring the tally at collation centres in pro- (Goodluck) Jonathan areas to ensure Buhari failed to meet a requirement for 25 per cent support in two-thirds of the states, the head of the Situation Room said, citing reports from election monitors on the ground.
Reuters said its reporter witnessed and photographed one tally list in Port Harcourt, Rivers State with suspiciously similar totals for registered voters at polling stations: 500, 500, 500, 500, 500, 500, 500, 500, 450.
In another tally centre in the city, 17,594 valid votes were recorded out of a registered voter population of 11,757, the Reuters reporter said.
Foreign election observers also noted the peculiarities – and contacted diplomats in Abuja who called in international intervention.
The United States Secretary of State, John Kerry, and his British counterpart, Philip Hammond, who were in Switzerland for talks on Iran – issued a tough statement saying vote counting “may be subject to deliberate political interference.”
But   as Buhari’s lead grew, some PDP supporters from the Niger Delta, including Orubebe, decided on a final gamble: to create a disturbance in the main INEC hall and have “thugs snatch Jega from the stage, Reuters quoted the Head of the Situation Room and the Abuja-based diplomat.
What the group planned to do after the abduction was unclear, they   said.
“It was a desperate thing, mostly by a group of people from the Niger Delta who were in the room,” the Situation Room head said, describing events that unfolded publicly in the minutes after he received the SMS.
When Jega opened proceedings on the morning of March 31, Orubebe had grabbed a microphone and launched into an 11-minute tirade accusing Jega of bias.
“Mr. chairman, we have lost confidence in you,” he shouted, pushing away officials trying to make him surrender the microphone. “You are being very, very selective. You are partial,” he continued, surrounded by three or four supporters. “You are tribalistic. We cannot take it.”
At this point, according to the Head of the Situation Room and the diplomat, Jega’s security details were approached by unidentified individuals telling them to stand down but they declined.
“Some of the guards who had been guarding Jega for years demanded a written order,” the Head of the Situation Room said.
Jega later rebuked Orubebe, saying, “Let us not disrupt a process that has ended peacefully,” he said as Orubebe slumped in his chair.
“Mr. Orubebe, you are a former minister of the Federal Republic. You are a statesman in your own right. You should be careful about what you say or about what allegations you make,” he said.
Orubebe later congratulated Buhari on Twitter, expressing his “apologies to fellow Nigerians.”
Orubebe did not respond to requests by the news agency for comment on the details of the plot.
INEC, said the news agency,   also declined to comment and turned down requests for an interview with Jega,
   Reuters however said it found no evidence to suggest that Jonathan, who accepted defeat in the election, was involved in the plot.
The Chief Press Secretary to the chairman of the commission,   Kayode Idowu, told our correspondent that he was not aware of the alleged plot to kidnap Jega.
Idowu said, “I think somebody is imagining here. The chairman was not aware of any such plan, he didn’t conduct any investigation to know that. He was not under such threat during or after the announcement.’’

TIME names Buhari, Ezekwesili, Adichie, Shekau 100 most influential in 2015

President-elect Maj. Gen. Muhammadu Buhari (retd.), has made the TIME’s list of 100 most influential people in the world.
Also included in the 2015 list are the advocate of the Bring Back Our Girls Group, Mrs. Obiageli Ezekwesili; award-winning novelist, Chimamanda Adichie, and leader of the Boko Haram terrorist group, Abubakar Shekau.
The TIME 100 is an annual list of 100 most influential people in the world whose works are changing the world, regardless of the consequences of their actions.
Described as “a new choice for Nigeria,” TIME’s Africa Bureau Chief, Aryn Baker, said Buhari made history in March by becoming the first candidate to oust a sitting Nigerian President through the ballot box.
“Now he has to live up to voters’ expectations. From battling the Boko Haram insurgency to tackling endemic corruption, Buhari has many challenges ahead. The greatest may be overcoming his past as a military ruler, who seized power in 1983.
“Already the born-again democrat is demonstrating the inclusivity necessary to lead a nation driven by ethnic and religious tension. It’s a promising start for a President-to-be, who wants to leave a legacy to match the historic conditions of his election,” Baker noted.
Renowned Ugandan activist, Sister Rosemary Nyirumbe, said of Ezekwesili, “It has been a year, and the girls(Chibok girls) haven’t been rescued, but she has made a difference by speaking about it. Not just speaking but shouting. I know some people will say she is too loudmouthed. The loud mouth is needed. People hear it.”
Adichie was also described as “conjurer of character” by the deputy Managing Director of TIME, Radhika Jones.
“It’s the rare novelist, who in the space of a year finds her words sampled by Beyoncé, optioned by Lupita Nyong’o and honoured with the National Book Critics Circle Award for fiction,” she said.
The last Nigerian to make the list is Shekau. Described as the “scourge of Africa” by General Carter Ham(retd.), a former Commander of US Africa Command from 2011 to 2013.
Ham said Shekau was the “most violent killer” Nigeria (and Africa) had ever seen.
Shekau took over the Boko Haram group in 2009 after the group had been weakened by the Nigerian military.

Xenophobic (pics): Nigerians in South Africa seek Safety at Home Affairs office

To avoid being killed or injured, some Nigerians who live in areas where Zulu boys have unleashed terror ran to the Department of Home Affairs in Pretoria to seek refuge. There, they claim the security asked them for money before they were allowed to enter the compound. Is Nigeria that bad that people would rather live like this than come home? for how long will they stay there only time will tell.

Kidnapped children reunited with family

Emotions ran high on Wednesday at the Police College Hospital, Ikeja, where the Orekoya children were being treated after they were released by their captors.
Their father, Leke, said they were put in bags by the kidnappers, who left them at the Shasha area of Lagos.
it was earlier reported how the children ─ Aderomola (11 months), Adedamola (4 years) and Demola (6 years) – were abducted by a nanny, Mary Akinloye, who was employed through OLX, an online sales portal, less than 24 hours after she resumed work in the house in the Surulere area of Lagos.
However, after being employed on April 7, 23-year-old Akinloye escaped with the children the following day when their parents were away at work.
The family was later contacted on the telephone by people suspected to be working with Akinloye, demanding a ransom of N15m.
The kidnappers were said to have reduced the ransom to N13m, insisting they would not take less.
They had threatened to kill the kids if the money was not paid.
On Wednesday, exactly eight days after the abduction, PUNCH Metro learnt the three children had been released to the family.
They were said to have been released on Tuesday night, and taken to the Police College Hospital, Ikeja, for treatment.
Our correspondent, who visited the hospital, observed as their father, Leke, cuddled 11-month-old Aderomola.
He sang a lullaby as the child slowly shut his eyes, drifting to sleep.
He had a drip fastened to his wrist.
The other boys ─ Adedamola and Demola ─ whose drips had been disconnected, played around the Female Ward of the police hospital.
While Demola played games on his father’s tablet phone, Adedamola asked for his portion of a chocolate bar being shared by their mother.
Their mother, while trying to keep them in check, asked if they wanted to go back to their “new house”.
The six-year-old, who quickly recoiled, said, “No, it’s a bad place. I don’t want to go back there.”
When our correspondent asked for an account of what transpired and how the kids were rescued, their father said the family would address the press formally on Thursday, adding, “we want to rest today.”
He said, “However, I give thanks to the Almighty God for saving my kids and bringing us together again.
“This is not by our power. This is a result of the prayers of people for us. We saw the effect of prayers at every point while we were trying to secure the release of the children.
“The children were put in bags. It is not the work of the SSS, the military or police. It was God and I am grateful to him.”
However, at the Orekoya’s residence on Lawani Road, Itire, where relatives and family members eagerly awaited their arrival, It was gathered that money was paid to the kidnappers.
The father of the children’s mother, Senior Apostle Abraham Adekunle, stress that the kidnappers sent an account number to the family to pay the ransom.
When asked for the amount paid, he said he could not tell.
He said, “For the eight days that the children were taken away, we did not rest. But yesterday (Tuesday), they called us and said we should send the money to them. They sent their account number to us. Immediately they collected the money, they called us and said they had dropped the children at Egbeda.”
It was gathered that children were picked up at about 9pm.
It was learnt that the children had mosquito bites on their bodies, which made their visit to the police hospital inevitable.
The children’s aunty, Adesumbo Alabi, said the family was happy that the children were returned hale and hearty.
She said the family was able to pay the ransom through the contributions of members of the public and relatives, who responded to the family’s distress call.
Alabi added, “The incident still appears like a home video to me. When I came here and saw the situation on the ground, I couldn’t hold back my tears. Even while we were looking for the kids on Sunday, we did thanksgiving after praying for hours, believing that the children will be back to us.
“We thank God the kidnappers asked for money, because there are cases where kidnappers don’t even ask for money, and the next thing you hear is that their captives are dead. But these ones asked for money, and the children are back.
“Many people supported us with money. The appeal we made through Facebook, television stations, radios, newspapers, were not in vain. But I don’t think the kidnappers were able to collect all the money they asked for.”
Alabi condemned OLX for not assisting the family to secure the release of the children.
It was gathered that the police were on the trail of the kidnappers.
A source said when Akinloye reported at the residence of the Orekoyas for work last week Tuesday, the victims’ mother took her to the office.
It was learnt that while their mother showed her to her co-workers as the new nanny she just employed, the Closed Circuit Television cameras got her image.
The source said, “When Akinloye reported to work, she(Mrs. Orekoya) took her to her office around 8am. She told her co-workers, ‘see my new nanny’, and they were all happy to see her.
“It was the following day, which was Wednesday, that she left the nanny at home with the children. The nanny then said she wanted to buy biscuits for them and she abducted them.”
The Lagos State Commissioner of Police, Kayode Aderanti, said the police rescued the children.
He said, “When we got the hideout, we cordoned off the area. The kidnappers got the information that we were closing in on them, and what they did was to quickly abandon the children and flee.
“They are beautiful children and we have returned them to their parents.”
The state police spokesperson, Kenneth Nwosu, said the police were on the trail of the kidnappers, adding that the victims were rescued around 9pm in the Shasha area of Lagos.

I abducted Magodo Children too says nanny who kidnapped three kids

The nanny, who kidnapped three Lagos children in the Surulere area of Lagos State last week, who called herself Mary Akinloye, has confessed that she also kidnapped the two kids (Raphael and Michael Esharegan) and from the Magodo area of the state, who were kidnapped last year.
 Akinloye (not her real name) was arrested on Wednesday evening in the Shasha area of Lagos by the Nigerian Police Force after she was tracked by “technological tools.” She said her team, which consisted of her brother-in-law, sister-in-law, her husband and herself, collected N2m for the Magodo kidnap, which occurred December last year.
She had been employed as a maid by the Magodo couple through the same OLX, an online sales portal. The suspect added that after the ransom was paid, she was given N30, 000 as her share. She revealed that her real name was not Mary Akinloye and she was not 23-year-old. Speaking in Yoruba, she begged the Orekoya family to forgive her. “It was not my fault. Mrs Orekoya, you were very nice to me and you took care of me. I was pushed to do it,” she said.
The suspect has four children. Lagos State Commissioner of Police, Kayode Aderanti, has said early on Thursday that the police had arrested self-styled Akinloye, who kidnapped three children in the Surulere area of Lagos State. Aderanti spoke on Thursday morning on a live Channels TV programme, Sunrise Daily. Police Public Relations Officer of the command, Kenneth Nwosu, said Akinloye was arrested by the Special Anti-Robbery Squad while a manhunt was ongoing to apprehend other fleeing accomplices of the househelp. Nwosu, a Deputy Superintendent of Police, added, “She was nabbed by SARS in the Sasha area (of Akowonjo, Lagos). She was arrested alone, and is now in police custody.
Efforts are on to arrest other fleeing accomplices, if any. “She is still making confessional statements.”
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