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Inside Job: 'We paid soldiers to provide us with protection' - Suspected oil vandals tell police

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The suspected oil vandals

Some suspected oil vandals arrested in Lagos say they had settled soldiers to provide protection for them.

Three suspected oil vandals who were arrested by the Lagos State Command of the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps, for engaging in oil bunkering around the creeks in the FESTAC Town area of the state, have told the operatives that they had paid some money to soldiers to provide cover for them and that they had been assured that nothing would go wrong during the operation, Punch reports.

Also Read: "NSCDC: Agency arrests 2 suspected oil pipeline vandals in Delta"

The suspects, Johnson Igadu, 25, Daniel Poku, 25, and Sterling Longlife, 26, who were paraded by the NSCDC at the Command headquarters in Ikeja, said their leader identified only as Soji, who is still at large, had concluded the arrangements with the soldiers who assured them that they would be covered.

The vandals, it was gathered, were, on May 21, 2016, engaged by Soji to convey 10 barrels of fuel in a boat from 7th Avenue, FESTAC Town, to a place called Ghana village, telling them that he had settled the military men monitoring the waterways in the area.

The gang had allegedly scaled through with the fuel at two checkpoints manned by soldiers before luck ran out on them.

Igadu, an indigene of Delta State, said he could not tell why the operation went wrong as his friend, Poku, had allegedly spoken with a soldier on the phone who assured them of safety.

“I came to Lagos two months ago. Soji called us to bring 10 barrels of fuel from a creek on 7th Avenue, FESTAC Town. We went there to carry the fuel to Ghana village. We knew there were soldiers in the area, but he said he had already paid them and that we should not be afraid.

He sent Poku’s number to one of the soldiers to call us when it was safe to get the fuel. The soldier called Poku and said we should come to carry the fuel. That was why we got the confidence to move.

We carried the fuel around 12.30am and left in their presence. We passed the first two checkpoints. The soldiers there checked the fuel and told us to go.

When we got to the third checkpoint, we heard gunshots. We fled the boat and escaped through the waterways. We ran to a man and begged him to allow us pass the night at his house.

But he alerted the vigilantes around the area who handed us over to the police. The police handed us over to the army and we were later transferred to the NSCDC.”

Poku, also an indigene of Delta State, said he had declined to embark on the deal but Soji persuaded him.

"I am a businessman. I came to Lagos to hustle. I later met Soji. He engaged the three of us to carry the fuel to Ghana village and promised to give us N10,000 each. I told him soldiers were around the area and he said he had settled them.

The soldiers at the checkpoints knew we were carrying fuel but they did not stop us. It was at the third checkpoint that some of them started shooting. Maybe Soji didn’t settle those soldiers.”

Also Read: "In Lagos: Navy intercepts boat carrying 27 Jerry cans of stolen petrol"

However, the Public Relations Officer of the 81 Division, Lt.-Col. Kingsley Samuel, refuted the allegations of the suspects, saying they could have mistaken the officers of other forces for soldiers.

“That is an allegation from suspects; it is spurious. Can they identify the soldiers? The Nigerian Army, the Air Force and the Navy wear the same camouflage. There is uniformity in the camouflage, so you can’t tell who is a soldier, an air force officer or a naval officer.

Operation MESSA is not made up of soldiers alone. We cannot speak on the allegation now because we don’t know those paraded and we were not informed of the parade.”



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