Photos: How gun-totting young men stormed Benue community; killed four, razed houses, bundled a retired Major into his car and set him ablaze
Gun-totting young men stormed the towns of Ogobia and Ondo
in Ugboju, Otukpo Local Government Area of Benue State last week
Wednesday and Thursday last week and by the time they left, four
persons including a retired Major, Lawrence Ugboh, lay dead.
Some houses, vehicles were also set ablaze in the attack
said to have been masterminded by two brothers, over disagreements
arising from land sales royalties.
In the case of Major Ugboh, a former state Chairman of the
Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), his
assailants, after hacking him to
death, hauled him into his car, poured fuel on the vehicle and then set
it ablaze, thereby reducing his corpse to ashes. His house in Ogobia
Town and three other cars in his compound were also set on fire.
Another family that was grossly affected by the crisis is
the Ujah family. The breadwinner, Mr. Christopher Uja, was killed, his
seven-year-old son shot while their house was also set ablaze in Ondo
town.
Uja’s son was recuperating at St. Daniel’s Hospital, Otukpo, alongside two other victims, who were also shot in the fracas.
Meanwhile, his widow, Mrs. Christiana Uja, who is still
nursing a nine-month-old baby, could not respond to questions put to
her. She continued to weep uncontrollably all through.
A neighbour, who had accompanied her to the hospital said
that her husband, a retired policeman, was killed and their son was shot
and taken for dead by the attackers.
Others who also had hot lead pumped into their bodies are
Adakole Pius and Inalegwu Joseph (13). They are currently being treated
at the St. Daniel’s Hospital, Otukpo.
Also affected by the invasion is another ex-serviceman,
Tony Ochela, whose four-bedroom bungalow, as well as all his life’s
investment, was set ablaze by the attackers.
Narrating his ordeal, Ochela, a father of seven in his sixties, said he woke up with his wife at about 6am on Wednesday and ere about having their morning prayers when he suddenly heard gunshots close to his house.
“As soon as I heard the first gunshot, I listened very well. Then another shot resonated through the air, and then another. It was then I told my wife that the sound I was hearing was that of an automatic rifle and that we must leave the area and run into hiding.
“Immediately, we took our children and ran into the bush under the cover of the morning. By the time the gunshots stopped and we came back into town, I was shocked to discover that my house, my whole life’s savings, had been reduced to rubble by these attackers.”
Ochela said he did not know who could have done the havoc
to him. He said since he wasn’t around when the incident happened, he
didn’t know who carried out the burning of his house.
He said after his retirement from the Army in 2006, he came
home and built the house in 2007 and had since been staying there
peacefully with his family.
“When I told my colleagues that I was coming back home to my fatherland to settle down after my disengagement from the military, they advised me against that decision but I insisted I was coming home. Now, they have been proven right that anyone who retires should rather settle elsewhere instead of coming back home to his people,” he lamented.
The retired soldier said he never had any problems with
anyone since he returned home in 2007 and expressed surprise that anyone
could ever think of carrying out such a dastardly act.
“Whoever has done this had stripped me naked in the open.
This is all that I have. This is all I brought back after my meritorious
service to my country and now, I have nothing to lay claim to anymore.
Whoever partook in committing this crime has not done me well at all,”
he lamented.
The mayhem was allegedly traced to two brothers, Ijachi
Udeh and Benjamin Udeh. Ijachi is a member of the All Progressives
Congress (APC) and was at a time, the Caretaker Chairman of Otukpo Local
Government Area for one year while his brother, Benjamin, is said to be
a staunch member of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).
Each of these brothers wields great influence in Ugboju,
controlling each half of the area. It is also alleged that each of them
also has supporters in the area.
On the fateful Wednesday,
Ijachi was said to have driven into town in a Hilux vehicle with his
supporters and in no time, began to shoot sporadically everywhere. At
the end of the shooting, three persons were allegedly killed with others
injured.
This development, sources said, did not go down well with
his brother, Benjamin, who was said to have mobilised his group the next
day and stormed the area, killing, injuring and burning houses too.
Following the development, residents of the two
neighbouring towns have deserted the area and are now taking refuge in
adjoining communities, including Obotu, Adoka and Otukpo.
Spokesperson for the Benue State Police Command, ASP Moses
Yamu, who confirmed the incident said four persons were killed in the
mayhem.
Yamu also confirmed that one of the alleged masterminds of
the crisis, Benjamin, had been arrested while his brother, Ijachi was
still on the run. He promised that the police would not rest until the
two brothers were made to face justice.
The state governor, Samuel Ortom, vowed that all those
fingered in the mayhem would not go unpunished. He has ordered the
security agencies in the state to fish out the fleeing Ijachi.
Ortom visited the two communities on last Friday, along with his deputy, Benson Abounu, an engineer, and other members of his cabinet just as the remains of the slain Ugboh were being interred.
Ortom visited the two communities on last Friday, along with his deputy, Benson Abounu, an engineer, and other members of his cabinet just as the remains of the slain Ugboh were being interred.
The governor described Major Ugboh as a very peaceful man, who couldn’t hurt a fly.
“When democracy came, Ugboh was the state chairman of PDP
and I was the secretary. I saw many missed calls from Major Ugboh
recently but could not return those calls. Maybe, he was trying to share
some thoughts with me. He was a great man and for him to have died in
this manner is unfortunate," sad Ortom.
“If he went into the military and came back alive, he
shouldn’t have died in this manner. I knew he was very sick at a point
but he came out of it only to be treated in the manner these people did.
We are leaving everything to God, as Christians but as a government, we
have the responsibility to protect lives and property. So, we will not
allow this to go free.
“If they have been going free in the past, I am assuring
you that under my watch, they are going to be apprehended to serve as a
deterrent to others. However, I am praying that this is the last time
that such would happen in this community. Whatever foundation that was
laid for this crisis, let this be the end. I pray that Ugboh’s death
should bring peace to this community,” the governor added.
-Additional reporting: The Sun
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