Seven months after he was released from prison custody in Port
Harcourt, Rivers State over kidnapping, Sorbari Apollolos has found his
way back to the place for the same offence, Punch Metro reports.
Popularly known as Blackie among his gang members, Apollolos was
recently arrested by the police for kidnapping a 67-year-old
businesswoman identified only as Obianuju.
Apollolos and three other suspects, Daniel Johngbo, Harridon
Barryira and Lebara Tobia, were apprehended at several locations in the
state.
It was learnt that Obianuju was returning home from a church in a
Toyota Sienna on February 7, 2019, when the gun-wielding kidnappers
ambushed her some metres away from her Rumuobiakani residence.
The suspects, some of whom were reportedly dressed in military camouflage, whisked the woman away in her vehicle.
They allegedly held her hostage in a forest for six days and collected millions of naira in ransom before she was released.
Punch Metro reports that the woman petitioned the acting
Inspector-General of Police, Mohammed Adamu, who directed the
Intelligence Response Team of the Force to find the perpetrators of the
crime.
IRT operatives tracked down Apollolos at his hideout in Kono-Bowe community in the Khana Local Government Area of Rivers State.
He was said to have confessed to the crime and given the police
team information that led to the arrest of the three other members of
the gang.
Speaking with City Round during the week, Apollolos noted that
Obianuju’s kidnap was coordinated by one Gbenena, who is still at large,
adding that he (Apollolos) got a share of N350,000 from the ransom.
Apollolos, who said he was in prison for offences bordering on
kidnapping and cult-related activities, told our correspondent that he
took to the crime again to raise money to settle a lawyer who
facilitated his release from the prison.
He stated, “I am a member of De-Gbam cult. I was initiated in
2011 by one of my friends known as Tambake Tax, who is the unit head of
the confraternity in my community. I was introduced to kidnapping by one
Ayapsi, alias Gbenena, and one Gboma. We were all involved in the
kidnapping of Mrs Obianuju. I did that ‘job’ because I needed money to
balance my lawyer who helped to secure my release from the prison in
September 2018. I was held for engaging in cult-related activities and
kidnapping in March 2016.
“I approached Gbenena for financial assistance and offered him
my farmland in exchange for the money but he refused. He said he had a
kidnapping job that would be more profitable for me. On February 5,
2019, one of Gbenena’s friends, who had been monitoring our target
(Obianuju), came to his house and told us that it was time to strike.
Gbenena also informed us that he had made arrangements for an army
uniform that would be used by the driver of our vehicle, Barriyra, to
beat security checkpoints.
“On February 7, 2019, Gbenena invited me to his house and when I
got there, I met Barriyra and Gboma’s brother, who was holding an army
uniform. I also saw a Toyota Corolla, and two AK-47 rifles. Gbenena
prayed for us at his shrine and we headed for Port Harcourt. I took one
of the AK-47 rifles, while Gboma’s brother with the army uniform was
armed with an English pistol.”
Apollolos said ransom negotiation and collection were carried out
by Gbenena, noting that a resident of the area where Obianuju resides
gave the “job” to the gang.
Recalling his kidnapping escapades, the 28-year-old man stated that
he took to the crime in 2015 and participated in two operations before
he was arrested in March 2016.
He said he got N150,000 share from N800,000 ransom they collected
from the relatives of one of their victims whom they kidnapped in
Nyorkwe community.
He added, “My gang members and I also did another kidnapping
job in March 2016 at Ogboro village. We were four that went for the
operation. We kidnapped the man from his pharmacy. He jumped out of the
vehicle as we were approaching traffic around Wimpey Junction. All my
gang members jumped out of the vehicle, but I was not lucky. Police
arrested me and recovered an AK-47 rifle from me.
“I was taken to Kala Police Station before I was transferred to
the Special Anti-Robbery Squad, where I spent six months. I was charged
to court and was in prison from March 2016 to September 2018, when my
lawyer secured my release. My boss’ name is Solomon. He controls over
200 boys in his camp. He has over 30 AK-47 rifles and ammunition in his
camp.”
In his confession, 20-year-old Johngbo said Gbenena engaged him to take care of Obianuju during her stay in captivity.
He said Obianuju prayed for him before she was freed and advised him to turn a new leaf.
He said, “I didn’t go out with the gang on the day they
kidnapped the woman. The wife of our gang leader (Gbenena) gave me
N1,500 to buy fried rice and chicken and Gbenena took me on his
motorcycle to give the food to the woman in the camp. I spent the night
there and the next day, Gbenena gave me N3,000 to buy an asthmatic drug
for the woman.
“When I came back, the woman told me that my gang members had
been beating her. Out of pity, I decided to stay in the camp so that
they wouldn’t beat her again. On the third day, the woman prayed for me
and promised to send me to school. She gave me the address of her church
at Rumuomasi Market Junction and advised me to give my life to Jesus
Christ.”
The driver, Barriyra, 33, said he met Apollolos and Gboma in
January 2019 at Kono-Bowe community when he visited his wife, who hails
from the village.
“We became friends afterwards. On February 7, 2019, they called
to invite me for a job. Few days after the woman was kidnapped, Gbenena
gave me N500,000 as my share of the ransom. He told me that N6m was
paid as ransom,” he added.
Narrating her ordeal, Obianuju, said the kidnappers initially
demanded N80m in ransom and subjected her to series of torture. She
said the abductors told her they had been paid N40m to kill her.
Obianunju recalled, “After I was abducted, the kidnappers
slapped me several times. They told me that they had been trailing me
since 2008. The beating persisted and I almost suffocated. They took me
to the forest where they resumed the beating. They flogged me several
times. One of them hit me on the forehead with a hammer. At that point, I
informed them that my family could raise the N80m ransom they demanded
and they opened negotiations with them.”
Going back to a crime u were just released from is very bad
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