A staffer of the
Department of Petroleum Resources, DPR, Mr. Jude Obi, whose 33-year-old wife,
Mrs. Grace Obi, was arraigned at a Magistrate Court, Otor-Udu, Delta State, for
allegedly masterminding her own kidnapping and collecting N1.5 million ransom
from him, has pleaded with the court to free his wife.
Mrs. Obi and
Ogbona Onu were arraigned on March 21, on a three-count charge of
conspiracy and kidnapping.
Mr. Okoye, however, told the court, “I want to go home since it is a family affair and the person involved is my wife. I do not want a broken home.”
Mr. Okoye, however, told the court, “I want to go home since it is a family affair and the person involved is my wife. I do not want a broken home.”
He said he was
the one who reported the matter in the first instance at the Ovwian Police
Station and no longer wants to prosecute the case, having forgiven the accused
persons.
The DPR staffer
also told the court that he had sworn to an affidavit to that effect, which he
submitted at Ovwian Police Station, but the police insisted on charging the
matter to court. It was learnt that the wife needed money for her business, but
her persistent plea to the husband to give her money was rebuffed, which made
her to resort to the kidnapping and extortion.
She was also
said to be pregnant and the man did not want her to go through the ordeal of
trial. Based on the formal withdrawal of the matter by the complainant against
the accused persons, Senior Magistrate Duku Tadafe discharged the accused
persons and struck out the case. Responding to the order, Commissioner of
Police, Delta State, Mr Ikechukwu Aduba, said the magistrate had no
authority to discharge and acquit a kidnap suspect and challenged her to prove
otherwise.
The magistrate
reportedly realized her error and got Mrs. Obi and Onu back to the court
on March 26 for fresh arraignment, but the police prosecutor, Corporal Godwin
Ovuefere, was said to have refused to prosecute the matter, saying
his superior, who had written the court for the formal proceedings of March 21,
directed him to steer clear.
Left with no
option, Senior Magistrate Tadafe made a fresh order, April 1, nullifying her
March 21 order that discharged and acquitted the accused persons.
National
coordinator of the Forum for Justice and Human Rights Defence, FJHD, Mr.
Oghenejabor Ikimi, whose organization conducted inquiry into the matter in conjunction
with the Centre for the Vulnerable and the Underprivileged, CENTREP, said the
police should comply with the order of the court to re-arrest and re-arraign
the accused persons, rather than castigating the magistrate.
Tags
Society