After burning an accused lady in Abule Ebgba, Lagos on the 6th of May , 2014.
An angry
crowd of young people yet again beat and burned a man suspected of being a kidnapper in
Akure, Ondo State capital yesterday according to witnesses.
A person
with knowledge of the attack said the young people came from Ayedun quarters in
Akure, and had been monitoring the man before they dragged him to Adegbola
Junction, hit and beat him, and set him on fire.
Akura
division policemen tried to intervene but were beaten off by the youths, and
people who witnessed the attack shouted they had lost hope in local police to
prevent other attacks. Others threw rocks at the van of security agents.
Adegbola
Junction is the mid section for Oba Adesida and Oyemekun roads in the Akure,
and is a popular gathering place newspaper and magazine correspondents and
journalists.
In a related
incident, a woman was also grabbed and almost burned by residents of Owode in
Akure.
According to
a person with knowledge of the assault, the incident began when a fetish item
fell out of the woman's bag. When people
alerted the woman, she refused to return to pick up the item which raised
suspicion among people on the street.
Youths grabbed the woman, beat her and she confessed that 15 people were
sent from Ede in Osun state to carry out kidnappings. She said they regularly report their
movements and details on their kidnappings to a sponsor and godfather in Ede.
The youths
then poured petrol on the woman's body but before they could set her on fire
Ondo State Police Officers intervened. To break up the crowd, police shot
canisters of teargas and threatened to arrest anyone who approached the woman.
The woman,
60, who refused to give her name, had tribal marks on her checks and said she
was a trader at Oja timi'in Ede town, Osun State. She was dressed in rags with fetish items in
her bag which included: paper containing lists of peoples' mobile number, money
in various denominations, sponge and local soap (Oose dudu), white sheets
containing Yoruba incantations, traditional rings and a white rosary. She refused to say who her sponsor was who
gave her to orders to kidnap school children.
The State
Police Public Relations Officer (PPRO), Wole Ogodo, confirmed the incidents but
implored the public to avoid engaging in jungle justice and warned anyone who
was caught breaking the law would be punished.
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