Some of the Abducted Journalist |
THE accepted rule of engagement
between journalists in the Warri flank of Niger-Delta and ex-militants in
Gbaramatu Kingdom, Warri South-West Local Government Area, Delta State, was
shattered, Sunday, when the violent youths abducted 14 journalists and six
other persons, including Itsekiri youth leaders.
The journalists, among them, this
reporter, Sola Adebayo, Regional Editor, Leadership, Shola O’Neil,
Regional Editor, Niger-Delta, The Nation and Olu Philips, Energy
Reporter, Channels Television, were ambushed on the waterways at 1.p.m.
while returning from a press conference, addressed by the Itsekiri community of
Ugborodo, moments after they left Ogidigben. Other newshounds were Publisher of
Warri-based Fresh Angle Newspaper, Anthony Ebule, Bolaji Ogundele,
Reporter, The Nation, Warri, Emma Arubi, Senior Correspondent, Daily
Independent Newspaper, Warri, and Awoso Harry, Delta Broadcasting
Service, DBS, Warri, Paulinus Odedey, Camera man, Channels, Omoniyi
Alex and Osaro Sado, AIT.
Groundbreaking of $16bn Delta gas
city project
Journalists in Warri, Delta State
and the country at large are seething with rage over the treatment meted to
their colleagues. At the press conference by Itsekiri leaders, led by Chief
Ayiri Emami, Pa Maku Uteyin, John Anderson, Madam Mercy Olowu and Itse Wilkie,
who read the communique, the Ogidigben people called on President Goodluck
Jonathan to fix a new date for the groundbreaking of the $16 billion Delta Gas
City project, saying the facility was on their land.
Ambush: From nowhere, the speedboat conveying them and six other
persons, including an Itsekiri youth leader, Kiki, whose father was understood
to be an Ijaw chief in Oporoza, was double-crossed by Ijaw youths in about six
speedboats. They demanded for the video cameras of the journalists, saying they
had been monitoring them since Sunday morning while they went around with Chief
Emami, video-taping their community.
As expected, no journalist would
willingly surrender his working tools to hooligans, which was the picture the
Ijaw youths presented of themselves. They kept quiet and were praying for the
intervention of security agents since the point of ambush was not too far from
an oil installation with military presence, but no help came. The fierce youths
hopped into the journalists speedboat uninvited and started ransacking their
belongings. They saw the cameras and pounced on the cameramen, especially on
Paulinus Odedey of Channels for refusing to admit that he was with a
camera when he was initially asked. Harry of DBS was also dealt some blows for
the same offence.
There was hot argument with Kiky, the
Itsekiri youth leader who was with the journalists for between five to 10
minutes. He was asked to leave the boat and enter another, which he objected
to. But he was eventually overpowered and everybody was shepherded like
captured hostages to their den in Oporoza. The journalists’ boat was earlier
demobilized in a struggle between the ex-militants and the driver and this led
to the whisking away of the journalists in one of the ex-militants’speedboats.
Agony in the lion’s den
At the lair where we were held for
approximately six hours, one of the journalists, Emma Arubi, and six other
community guides, including the boat driver, was brutalized. Arubi’s case was
special and that is because he is of the Itsekiri ethnic stock. It was apparent
from the outburst of the Ijaw youths that there was no a no-love lost between
them and Itsekiri. They said the land the project is sited belongs to the
Gbaramatu-Ijaw and Ayiri Emami had brought the press to film the community and
twist the truth.
Immediately the journalists stepped
into their den, they forcefully collected the cameras, telephones, tape
recorders; communique issued at the press conference, wristwatches and every
other thing, except money and took them somewhere to delete the recordings.
Though some of the items were later handed over after the memory cards were
removed, my digital tape recorder and that of Arubi were intentionally
withheld. Thirty minutes after we were whisked to their hideaway, the
ex-militants, who were cheered by some local chiefs and villagers, claimed that
a pistol was found in one of the bags they seized. In their den, their word is
law; you cannot argue or contest their allegation and untruth can be made to be
real under such circumstance.
Warri South-West chairman’s
intervention: The newly-elected chairman of Warri
South-West Local Government Area, Mr. George Ekpemupolo, called our abductors
and asked the chairman on ground to hand over his phone to me about 40 minutes
or so into our ordeal. This was after an Ijaw youth leader had spoken to one of
the journalists, Shola O’Neil, who told him the names of the prominent
journalists that were abducted, including me, thinking that that could elicit
an immediate order for release.
The Warri South-West chair assured
me that everything was being done to secure the journalists freedom and that
they would be handed over to the military. The driver of the boat and the
Itsekiri youths denied knowledge of the weapons alleged to have been found in
the boat.
But after they were brutally
tortured, the boat driver said one of occupants was the person that brought a
wrapped object, which he did not know the content into the boat. It was at this
point that ex-militant leader, Chief Government Ekpemupolo, alias Tompolo, who
spoke to the leader on ground, also asked to speak to this reporter and I
explained what happened. I told him we were abducted and our working tools and
phones confiscated. He said his information was that guns were found in our
boat. I told him we are journalists and not gun-runners. But that as he was
speaking, the driver of the boat had already said that he saw somebody put a
wrapped object inside his boat.
He assured that everybody would be
handed over to the army, but there was need for us to tell the security
operatives the whole truth about what transpired. On our confiscated phones, he
said he would ask and find out who collected them. Tompolo also repeated that
we would all be handed over to the army and I handed the phone back to the
‘leader’.
Punishment continues: Despite what I thought was his intervention, the
ex-militants continued drubbing the Itsekiri indigenes among the six that were
asked to lie face down. It was not the entire six, however, that were Itsekiri.
One said he was a staff of the Delta State Oil Producing Areas Development
Commission, DESOPADEC, while the other said he was Urhobo from Agbasa.
One of the ex-militants took delight
in flogging those lying on the ground, including an Itsekiri chief. If there
was any reservation that the episode was a setup, the decision of the
ex-militants to force Arubi, the Independent Correspondent, to hold the AK 47,
which they alleged was found in our boat and took photograph of him, then
uploaded it on the social media, while we were still in their custody, gave
them away.
You‘re all criminals – Abductors
They abused the journalists and
accused them of promoting the Itsekiri agenda with their writings, maintaining
that we were all lawbreakers since the weapons with which the Itsekiri want to
kill them was found in our boat.
Enemy within: From what transpired within the six hours we were held
against our will in the den, it was evident that the Itsekiri ethnic group has
saboteurs in their midst, who were giving information to the Ijaw on the
movement of Chief Ayiri Emami, who was the main target. One of the
ex-militants, who said he knew this reporter, described vividly to me how many
of them wore life-jackets in our speedboats, how they monitored our movement
that Sunday morning and when we took off for the return journey back to Warri.
In fact, the ex-militants swore that if Chief Emami was caught with us that
Sunday, he would have been dismembered. They said the Itsekiri ethnic group was
too small to drag land with Ijaw people and vowed to deal with them sooner or
later.
Back to Warri: We arrived Naval Base, Warri, the next day, Monday, at about
11.00 am due to some mechanical problem with the gunboats that escorted the
journalists, one of which was towed by our speedboat to Warri. The other could
not make the journey.
Uduaghan’s negotiation
It was understood that the governor,
Dr. Emmanuel Uduaghan, made efforts to free us on the day of the incident, but
it was on Monday that he spoke severally with this reporter, asking what the
true situation was on ground. And from the point he established contact; he was
in constant communication until our eventual release from naval custody at 4.00
pm. The navy officials in Warri said they had to clear from their superiors in
Abuja after obtaining statements from the journalists due to the dimension the
matter had taken.
Preliminary investigations obviously
indicated that the journalists were not gunrunners and that the six persons
held with them could be innocent of the allegation from available information,
hence all of them were also released. But, some Ijaw youth leaders, who called
to apologize for the nightmare this writer and others went through in the hands
of the youths, maintained that the whole thing was ill-fated. One, however,
said, “Truly, our boys did not plant the weapons; we got information that there
is weapon in one of the boats from our Itsekiri informant, who is not in Chief
Ayiri Emami camp. It is unfortunate that you (journalists) were in that very
boat. But from the way things are going, the Ijaw and Itsekiri are going to
fight again, if it is not now, it will be tomorrow, but quote me, the Ijaw will
never leave that EPZ land for the Itsekri, it is not for them, they should stop
parading fraudulent court papers to say that we are their tenants, we are not
their tenants.”
THE
accepted rule of engagement between journalists in the Warri flank of
Niger-Delta and ex-militants in Gbaramatu Kingdom, Warri South-West
Local Government Area, Delta State, was shattered, Sunday, when the
violent youths abducted 14 journalists and six other persons, including
Itsekiri youth leaders.
The journalists, among them, this reporter, Sola Adebayo, Regional Editor, Leadership, Shola O’Neil, Regional Editor, Niger-Delta, The Nation and Olu Philips, Energy Reporter, Channels Television, were ambushed on the waterways at 1.p.m. while returning from a press conference, addressed by the Itsekiri community of Ugborodo, moments after they left Ogidigben. Other newshounds were Publisher of Warri-based Fresh Angle Newspaper, Anthony Ebule, Bolaji Ogundele, Reporter, The Nation, Warri, Emma Arubi, Senior Correspondent, Daily Independent Newspaper, Warri, and Awoso Harry, Delta Broadcasting Service, DBS, Warri, Paulinus Odedey, Camera man, Channels, Omoniyi Alex and Osaro Sado, AIT.
Groundbreaking of $16bn Delta gas city project
Journalists in Warri, Delta State and the country at large are seething with rage over the treatment meted to their colleagues. At the press conference by Itsekiri leaders, led by Chief Ayiri Emami, Pa Maku Uteyin, John Anderson, Madam Mercy Olowu and Itse Wilkie, who read the communique, the Ogidigben people called on President Goodluck Jonathan to fix a new date for the groundbreaking of the $16 billion Delta Gas City project, saying the facility was on their land.
- See more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2014/11/untold-story-14-journalists-abducted/#sthash.XtHxubwS.dpuf
The journalists, among them, this reporter, Sola Adebayo, Regional Editor, Leadership, Shola O’Neil, Regional Editor, Niger-Delta, The Nation and Olu Philips, Energy Reporter, Channels Television, were ambushed on the waterways at 1.p.m. while returning from a press conference, addressed by the Itsekiri community of Ugborodo, moments after they left Ogidigben. Other newshounds were Publisher of Warri-based Fresh Angle Newspaper, Anthony Ebule, Bolaji Ogundele, Reporter, The Nation, Warri, Emma Arubi, Senior Correspondent, Daily Independent Newspaper, Warri, and Awoso Harry, Delta Broadcasting Service, DBS, Warri, Paulinus Odedey, Camera man, Channels, Omoniyi Alex and Osaro Sado, AIT.
Groundbreaking of $16bn Delta gas city project
Journalists in Warri, Delta State and the country at large are seething with rage over the treatment meted to their colleagues. At the press conference by Itsekiri leaders, led by Chief Ayiri Emami, Pa Maku Uteyin, John Anderson, Madam Mercy Olowu and Itse Wilkie, who read the communique, the Ogidigben people called on President Goodluck Jonathan to fix a new date for the groundbreaking of the $16 billion Delta Gas City project, saying the facility was on their land.
- See more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2014/11/untold-story-14-journalists-abducted/#sthash.XtHxubwS.dpuf
No comments:
Post a Comment