Some of the victims rescued from kidnappers’ den at the Soka area of
Ibadan, Oyo State, are gradually regaining fitness and mental ability.
Although they have yet to give the accounts of activities in the forest,
they could remember events leading to their departure from their normal
life.
One of them, Nafiu Shittu, who spoke at the Adeoyo State Hospital,
Yemetu, Ibadan, said that he was a native pile medicine seller with customers
in the business districts of Gate and Iwo Road.
Speaking in an almost inaudible whisper and intermittently pausing for
breath, he explained that he was at work when he was kidnapped and taken to the
forest.
He said, “I am a native of Ibadan, living in the Foko area of the city.
I sold pile medicine to people. I was doing the business on the day I was
kidnapped about four months ago.
“After going round the area where I had customers, I felt tired and
decided to rest in the Gate area. Suddenly, a bus stopped by my side and two
men came out and forced me into the back seat of the vehicle. That was all I
could remember.
“When I regained consciousness, I saw myself in a room in the forest,
chained to a wall. I was too tired to struggle and as the days passed, I became
frail because I was not given anything to eat,” he said.
Asked if he was taken there to be treated for mental illness, Nafiu
looked up sharply and protested.
“I am not a mad man. I am a normal human being. I was kidnapped and
chained in a room throughout my days in captivity.”
Nafiu said he was aware that he was not the only one in the building,
adding that what baffled him was that he heard voices of people passing outside
the building regularly.
“There were other people, including young and adult women, who cried
daily. I saw dead bodies being taken out frequently, but I don’t know if they
were killed. Maybe they died of hunger. People moved around the building, but I
don’t know if they knew we were there.”
Other victims, Wale Atoyebi from Ada in Osun State and Michael Ola could
only give their names, but Titi Dokpesi explained how she got to the forest.
She said she was 45 years, but she had the look of a woman in her 60s.
She said, “I live at Awolowo compound in Oke Bola, Ibadan. I am not mad
and I am not an old woman. Two months ago, I was in front of our house when
some men grabbed me and said I was under arrest.
“Before I could protest, I was put in a bus and driven away. We did not
go to any police station and I still don’t know how we reached the forest. I
had N10,000 with me, but they took it. I am 45 years. In the few months I spent
there, I aged quickly for lack of care. We were fed once in a week.”
Asked if she was forced to sleep with the men who abducted them and if
truly there were women who gave birth in the house, Dokpesi said she was left
alone and was too afraid to notice such activity.
“I was kept in the corner of a room, chained to the wall, so I kept to
myself. I spent most of the time praying to God. I don’t know if anyone gave
birth there, but people were dying,” she added.
Wicked world
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