The Koreans and a Nigerian kidnapped in Bayelsa
State by eight gunmen said on Saturday that their assailants fed them with
noodles, tea and banana while in captivity.
The victims, who were released on Friday night after
spending five days in the kidnappers’ den located in a mangrove, said the
captors set them free after branding them “bad market.”
Jong Ken, Hi Kim, Doo Lee, Joon Chae and a Nigerian,
Austin Giwa, who are employees of the Hyundai Fabrication Company at Okpoama,
Brass Local Government Area, were whisked away by gunmen who raided the firm on
December 17.
“They told us that we were bad market and allowed us
to go,” Giwa told PUNCH Metro.
Giwa, who spoke with our correspondent at the
headquarters of the state police command in Yenagoa, said the bandits had
demanded N200m ransom from the company’s management in Lagos.
But Giwa said the company was reluctant to negotiate
with the kidnappers as it continually told them that the state government was
handling the matter. Continue after the cut...
He said the gunmen shot sporadically into the air
before kidnapping them on the fateful day.
He added that the company’s speedboat operator
employed within the community was also kidnapped but was released by the gunmen
30 minutes after the incident.
Giwa, who said the gunmen tortured them before
whisking them away, added that the bandits moved them to different locations in
the mangrove.
He said they were handed over to different groups of
people who watched over them till the day they were set free.
Narrating how they were abducted, he said, “On
December 17 by 3pm, I saw seven gunmen. They came to our site. I was in the
office when I heard gunshots.
When l came out I saw my officers, four Koreans held
by the neck. When they saw me, they also held me and dragged me by the neck.
“They also held one of our speedboats operators.
They used their guns to hit us and order us to enter the boat. They asked us to
keep our eyes down. After about 30 minutes’ sailing, they dropped the speedboat
operator.
“They took us to the mangrove and handed us over to
some men to guard us. They went back to their speedboat. At about 7pm, they
came back and took us to another place after sailing for one hour. They kept us
there till the day we were released.”
On the day they regained their freedom, Giwa said
there was a mild drama among the kidnappers which suggested that they had a
disagreement.
He said, “On that day, they came and pointed the gun
at my head and asked me why my company didn’t want to give them the money.
“It is like our manager was explaining to them that
the government was taking care of the matter and that there was no way he could
release money to them. That was when they concluded that ‘this one is a bad
market’. We were there till about 4pm.
“They sailed away and later came back. Their leader
called commander ordered that we should be put in the boat. We didn’t know
where we were going until we got to the waterside. They showed us a track and
said we should follow it.”
The Commissioner of Police in the state, Mr.
Kingsley Omire, said the police found the victims at Azikoro Village in
Yenagoa.
Omire said, “From the brief that I have, there was a
disagreement among the kidnappers who decided to release their victims.
“They brought them to Azikoro Village and I directed
Operation Doo-Akpor to go and pick them up. They were not released by any
security agency.”
Omire said two persons had been arrested in
connection with the incident, adding that investigations were ongoing to arrest
the perpetrators.
He said the police held a meeting with the
management of the company and resolved to provide security for the firm and
residence of the expatriates.
He said the company acknowledged that its inability
to provide security for the workers was one of the managerial lapses that led
to the kidnapping.
Via Punch news
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