Okonjo family members have established communication with
kidnappers of Prof. Kamene Okonjo, the mother of Nigeria's Finance
Minister, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala.
Eighty-three-year-old Kamene Okonjo was kidnapped Monday. It was also
learnt that the kidnappers had also reduced their ransom from $ 1
billion to $ 1.26 million.
A highly-placed security source told
reporters that secret negotiation had commenced with the kidnappers
because of the fragile health of the retired professor of Sociology and
pressure from higher quarters.
It was also learnt that
the abductors are demanding the immediate resignation of Dr.
Okonjo-Iweala as Finance Minister. This demand gives reason to suspect
that the kidnap may be politically motivated.
Delta
State Commissioner of Police, Mr. Ikechukwu Aduba, in an interview on
Wednesday in Asaba, after a meeting with his Divisional Police Officers,
expressed confidence that the detained professor would be
rescued soon.
The
CP said, “We are looking at the whole place because in any palace,
there are supposed to be palace guards – that is local security before
you talk of that of the police.
“And so, we are looking at the
obvious flaws and then, take the necessary action. We do not want to
jump the gun. In the past, we have been able to rescue about 30 people
without payment of ransom. “I am sure that the strategy we are putting
in place will yield dividends.
“We know that anything that has to
do with kidnapping, there is always an insider factor. It has always
been there, just like armed robbery.”
Aduba added that the police had extended their dragnet “within and without”.
A
source said the kidnappers decided to delay contact with the Okonjo
family as a result of heavy deployment of policemen, army and other
security operatives around the palace and the community immediately
after the kidnap
On Wednesday, it was, however, observed that the
heavy security presence in the last few days around the home of the
Okonjos in Ogbe-Ofu quarters had been relaxed.
But the policemen
refused visitors access to the compound, saying, “No visitor is wanted
here.” Traditional chiefs that make up the Obi-in-Council met behind
closed doors at the palace grounds in connection with the kidnap of the
Obi’s wife.
Undercover security operatives flooded drinking joints, markets and public places in search of useful information.
Sources
told our correspondent on Wednesday that the investigators had also
invited some domestic workers of the Okonjos for interrogation as it was
believed that some of them might have connived with the kidnapppers to
carry out the operation.
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