A
member of the National Youth Service Corps along with some other
travelers, have been plunged into serious chaos after gunmen waylaid
them.
File photo used only for illustrative purpose
Becky Godfrey, a member of the National Youth Service Corps, and
three other travellers were abducted on Monday by some gunmen, Punch
Metro reports.
The victims were reportedly on a bus travelling to Bayelsa State when the kidnappers lay in ambush for them on Okene-Auchi Road.
It was learnt that Becky, who is serving in the Sagbama Local
Government Area of Bayelsa State, was travelling back to her place of
primary assignment to sign a clearance form for her monthly allowance
when the incident happened.
Punch Metro reports that one of the assailants, who was in a police
uniform, had flagged down the bus. As the driver stopped, other members
of the gang came out of a bush and seized the corps member.
They were said to have picked three other passengers, while other
occupants, including the driver, were freed before the gunmen
disappeared into the bush with their victims.
It was gathered that the driver reported the incident at the Okene Police Division.
A few hours after the abduction, the assailants contacted Becky’s
father, Braima Godfrey, on the phone, and demanded N5m in ransom.
Braima, who spoke with our correspondent on the telephone, said
efforts to negotiate with the kidnappers were futile, adding that the
police eventually rescued Becky and other victims around 12pm on
Tuesday.
He said, “They said I should bring N5m. I bargained with them
on Monday, but they did not agree. I called them more than 20 times, but
they insisted on N5m. I called them again this morning (Tuesday), they
were adamant.
“My daughter told me on the phone that some of her abductors
wore masks and that three other passengers were kidnapped. She graduated
last year from Auchi Polytechnic, Edo State, where she studied
Marketing. She will finish her service in May.
“When I got to the Okene Police Division on Tuesday, I was told
that the Area Commander and some officers had gone to the scene of the
incident.
“Around 12pm, my daughter and the three others were rescued and one of the suspects was arrested.”
Thirty-year-old Becky, who spoke to our correspondent on the phone
shortly after she was rescued, described her experience in the
kidnappers’ den as traumatic.
She said was awoke all night without being given food, adding that
the abductors offered them dirty water when they complained of thirst.
She said, “As we were travelling, an armed man in a police
uniform stopped our bus. We were 11 on that bus. Our driver thought he
was a policeman and stopped for him. He suddenly fired his gun and some
men came out of the bush.
“They collected our money and phones and took four of us with
them into the bush. Some of them were Fulani. They beat me up and forced
me to disclose my father’s phone number.
“My experience in the bush was terrible. They didn’t give us
any food. Later, they gave us dirty water to quench our thirst. The
water was smelly. None of us drank it. I was the only female; the three
other victims were males.”
The Kogi State Police Public Relations Officer, William Aya, said
two persons were arrested and had been transferred to the State Criminal
Investigation and Intelligence Department.
He said, “The Area Commander led a team to the bush and rescued
the four victims. One of them is a corps member. We were able to arrest
two suspects and efforts are ongoing to arrest fleeing members of the
gang.”

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