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Kidnapped/Murdered Ubulu-Uku King: Slow Wheel Of Justice

How would somebody who had escaped from kidnap­pers who had threatened to kill him feel when he later gets to face the suspected kid­nappers in court? This is especial­ly so when one of the two persons kidnapped at the same time and place and had received the same inhumane treatment, suffered from thirst and hunger as they spent days and nights under the open skies in­side the bush, during a particularly harsh harmattan weather, was killed by the kidnappers?

Then, the escapee, perhaps after hoping for, dreaming of, praying for such an outstanding opportunity suddenly gets it as he raised, his head, turned and faced a particular direction, raised his hand, stuck out his index finger, and announced for all to hear; yes, those people there were the very ones who kidnapped me and another person, took us through hell, gave us every torment that Satan ever devised, caused us every grief that has ever entered the human mind, even as we pleaded for mercy, not knowing that their mercy and all things akin to it was a strang­er to them.

 How would somebody who had escaped from kidnap­pers who had threatened to kill him feel when he later gets to face the suspected kid­nappers in court? This is especial­ly so when one of the two persons kidnapped at the same time and place and had received the same inhumane treatment, suffered from thirst and hunger as they spent days and nights under the open skies in­side the bush, during a particularly harsh harmattan weather, was killed by the kidnappers?

Then, the escapee, perhaps after hoping for, dreaming of, praying for such an outstanding opportunity suddenly gets it as he raised, his head, turned and faced a particular direction, raised his hand, stuck out his index finger, and announced for all to hear; yes, those people there were the very ones who kidnapped me and another person, took us through hell, gave us every torment that Satan ever devised, caused us every grief that has ever entered the human mind, even as we pleaded for mercy, not knowing that their mercy and all things akin to it was a strang­er to them.

This scenario played out in a High Court in Delta State on Monday 25 January, 2021 as the wheel of justice has started grinding for the late King of Ubulu-Uku, His Royal Majesty Ed­ward Akaeze Ofulue, the Obi Ofulue III and Pastor Afam Ugboh who is alive to tell their story. The saying that the wheel of justice grinds slow­ly but surely is proving true in this case.

Yes, on Monday, 25th of January, some of those suspected to have ab­ducted and killed the King of Ubu­lu-Uku, Obi Ofulue III, were in court once again. But the court session was not reported by a single news outlet in Nigeria. Yet, that day’s ses­sion was important because Pastor Ugboh, who was abducted with the king but escaped by 3.30 pm two days later and arrived at an Mbiri village farm settlement by 9.30 pm, testi­fied in court that those four persons arraigned in court that day were among those who kidnapped them. When the defendants’ lawyers tried to rubbish his testimony, pointing out that his police statement did not describe the suspects in detail as ei­ther fat or tin, tall or short, he replied that those who kidnapped them wore no face masks all through the ordeal they put him through, and that he knew the names they called them­selves, so he knew them intimately. Thus, he ascribed certain actions to the relevant accused persons in court, and said that he had also iden­tified the suspects during a parade the Police organised.

Actually, Pastor Ugboh had been hoping and praying for such a day. He had seen the faces of the sus­pects before. He had been called in a few times by the Police when the case was under investigation, and he identified the suspects who had nabbed him and the Obi Ofulue III. He had almost cried tears of blood when the chief demon among them was released because the other sus­pects were too afraid to point accu­satory fingers at him to show that he was one of them. Or, the must have hoped that as long as he was free, their chances of walking away free citizens were rife. Thus, he was freed.

Yet, as a criminal remains a criminal, the freedom he enjoyed must have emboldened that fellow because, shortly after, he kidnapped a Pastor who happened to be high up in the Police hierarchy of Delta state. Instead of releasing the man to free himself from trouble, he collected the ransom he had demanded from the man’s family, and then killed the luckless man.

The must have infuriated the Del­ta unit of the Nigerian Police Force. They got the man all right and prom­ised that he would have his day in court, to show like-minded others that crime will never pay in Delta state.

Now, wait for this; that man confessed he was involved in the kidnapping of the Obi of Ubulu and the pastor who escaped. And most terrifyingly, he narrated that after the success recorded in the kidnapping of the Obi of Ubulu and having murdered him, he had made the late Obi’s former domain, Ubulu-Uku, the centre of his theater of operations. Thus, he had camped the late husband of the Asaba-based Mobile Police woman right there at Ubulu-Uku, under the east-west high tension electricity power lines, at a spot near Isho quarters, Ubulu-Uku. Yes, the corpse of the man in ques­tion was recovered at the place he pinpointed. He also reportedly re­counted how the high tension power lines route, have become the route of choice for the kidnappers.

It would have been great to hear such a fellow tell his devilish tales in court. Alas, the Police was in for a terrible shock; the man died while being held but before he had his day in court as he would have had to answer for two cases; the snatching of human beings he did in Asaba and Ubulu-Uku and how he treated h=them most in humanely and took their lives as those they were flies.

Why would a case that had so cap­tivated the nation suddenly grow so cold that no news media was inter­ested in it? Well, one reason is that five good years have elapsed since the kidnapping and murder. Then, the Covid-19 pandemic further poured cold water on the case as it went into abeyance for months. Also, the normal court where the case used to hold was in Asaba, but it was destroyed by hoodlums during the anti-SARS protests which rocked Nigeria last year.

When that case broke on Tuesday 5th January 2016, it was regarded as murder most foul. Yes, by 2016, that a traditional ruler of a major town could be kidnapped and slaughtered by suspected Fulani cattle herders or any group at all, was a devilish nov­elty. Even wanton kidnapping was just crawling into the country. So the news hit Nigeria like a slap on the face. Respectable sensitivities were scandalised everywhere and cries rose up from every corner, asking for justice to be brought swiftly on the criminals’ heads.

The late monarch, His Royal Majesty the late Obi Akaeze Ed­ward Ofulue had wanted to go to Asaba, the Delta state capital and some persons, including his young­er brother, Prince Nzekwue and were waiting for him at an agreed spot. But instead of going east as the crow flies, he turned west, because he wanted to drop off somebody at Onicha-Ugbo, then he would contin­ue on his trip. That act of kindness was his last deed on Earth as he and the passenger he was giving a lift in his Land Cruiser off-road vehicle/ Full-size SUV, were abducted. The king was leaving Obior to enter the Benin-Asaba Expressway at Igbo­do. The unassuming Obi was in his noted simplicity driving himself, and no guards drove ahead of, or behind, him. Those who knew him closely would have been aware of that easy-going nature of his. He was totally down to earth, and was the sort of Christian that never allowed accidents of birth or position in the society to interfere with the way of life he had embraced; remarkable simplicity. Nothing worried him un­duly. Almost always, a smile played on his lips. Whether privately or in public, he preferred that to the grim visage most assume when they be­come kings. He was actually prepar­ing to travel to the UK on a Friday but he was kidnapped on Tuesday, three days before his trip.

After a terrible interlude of 15 days, 15 horrible days in which, grief, worry and uncertainty reigned in Ubulu-Uku, the Obi’s remains were discovered near Umunede town.

The ransom money had been contributed equally between an Asaba-based daughter and an Abu­ja-based son of Ubulu-Uku, and only doubts from the relevant authorities had counselled that the ransom mon­ey should not be delivered because it had appeared as though the king was dead, as the kidnappers no longer put him on the phone. But once the dead body was discovered the police stopped all pretension and went into an investigation over drive. In a matter of days the results showed. The Commissioner of Po­lice, Alkali Baba Usman deservedly, gloated mid-February that “In the course of investigation, on 8 Febru­ary, the late Obi’s Samsung handset was recovered from Jamilu Ahmed at Abraka market, Asaba and was promptly arrested. The suspect’s useful statement to investigators led to the arrest of Umar Abubakar who claimed to have sold the handset to the former.

Abubakar said the phone man claimed that a man nicknamed ‘Money Dey’ now at large gave him the Samsung handset to sell for him.”

CP Usman disclosed that Usman Musbau, who deleted the contacts from the Obi’s phone has been ar­rested, Suleman Musa, the second in command to the kidnap kingpin, Farida Abubakar, a girlfriend to Dogo who was in possession of Af­amefuna’s (the person kidnapped with the Obi) Nokia Asha 201 phone was nabbed in Adamawa State and Garba Abubakar, the leader of the gang nicknamed Dogo, was arrest­ed at a Fulani settlement in Alfarma village in Gangaza local government area of Sokoto State.

Yes, the trial had appeared as an open-and-shut one that should have been easily decided or solved because the facts seem very clear. Right? Wrong! A lawsuit is a law­suit is a lawsuit. It must go through the normal route of finding accused persons guilty…or innocent. The ac­cused persons have their lawyers and an Emir has been said to have even put up a court appearance to testify to the good character of one of those implicated in the handling of Obi Ofulue’s phone handset after his death. His passport has not been recovered. Lawyers for the defence cross examined Pastor Ugboh on Monday. So a full-blown trial is on.

Yet, that the case is still on after five years is a course for concern in certain quarters. This has made Ub­ulu-Uku people to become worried. Now that the trial has resumed, the anger in the town’s peoples’ hearts may be doused as the hope abides against that justice will be done and those really guilty of the murder of their king, will face the full wrath of the law. That is the only way to reas­sure Nigerians that the perpetrators of this murder most foul, which shook the entire nation, have not been complicity left off the hook by some authorities to roam free and continue with their unchecked mayhem.

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