Police Discover House Used For Human Sacrifice
A DEN where people are killed for ritual purposes was yesterday uncovered in Ogun State by men of the Police Command.
The den, which was said to have been operated for over a year by a middle-aged man simply known as Gbenga, is located under an overhead bridge on the Abeokuta-Lagos road at a spot near Iyana Egbado Village in Ewekoro Local Council Area.
Things discovered by armed policemen when they stormed the den included fresh human parts sliced into pieces, human intestines, plastic containers filled with human blood, ladies’ pants, braziers, ladies and men shoes, blood-stained dresses, knives and duvet. Other items discovered at the gory site were electronics parts and assorted soft drinks, suggesting that the suspect and probably other collaborators live under the bridge.
At the time of his arrest, the suspect was said to be carrying a bag containing human intestines.
Luck was said to have run out on the suspect believed to be in his 30s yesterday morning when his attempt to kidnap a woman was frustrated by a passerby.
The suspect, an eyewitness, Samuel Oladele, told The Guardian at the scene “was chasing a woman whose loud cry attracted a passerby who managed to overpower the suspect.
“The man, who rescued the woman, became suspicious of the cellophane bag the suspect was holding and, therefore, forcefully tore it only to discover that the contents were human parts already sliced into pieces”.
Oladele immediately raised the alarm, which attracted a crowd from the nearby Ewekoro cement factory, as well as the Egbado Village who mobbed the suspect and attempted to lynch him, but he pleaded with the crowd not to kill him, saying: “I will confess, I will confess.”
According to Oladele, the suspect thereafter brought out his cell phone and made a call to some people.
Oladele explained that the suspect told the mob that he belonged to a five-man syndicate, among them a woman, whom he alleged, has been operating in the Ewekoro axis since the past nine months.
The mob was still interrogating Gbenga, the suspect, when policemen from the nearby Itori Police Station arrived and whisked him away.
Attempt to see the suspect at the Ifo Divisional Police headquarters where he was being detained failed as the police turned down all entreaties by newsmen to enable them gain access to him. The policemen referred journalists to the command’s headquarters at Eleweran, Abeokuta, the state capital, to speak to the Spokesman, Mr. Muyiwa Adejobi.
But when journalists contacted Adejobi on phone, he told them it was too early to determine whether the suspect is a ritualist or not. He, however, assured that the police would carry out a thorough investigation after which he would give their findings to them (journalists).
The den, which was said to have been operated for over a year by a middle-aged man simply known as Gbenga, is located under an overhead bridge on the Abeokuta-Lagos road at a spot near Iyana Egbado Village in Ewekoro Local Council Area.
Things discovered by armed policemen when they stormed the den included fresh human parts sliced into pieces, human intestines, plastic containers filled with human blood, ladies’ pants, braziers, ladies and men shoes, blood-stained dresses, knives and duvet. Other items discovered at the gory site were electronics parts and assorted soft drinks, suggesting that the suspect and probably other collaborators live under the bridge.
At the time of his arrest, the suspect was said to be carrying a bag containing human intestines.
Luck was said to have run out on the suspect believed to be in his 30s yesterday morning when his attempt to kidnap a woman was frustrated by a passerby.
The suspect, an eyewitness, Samuel Oladele, told The Guardian at the scene “was chasing a woman whose loud cry attracted a passerby who managed to overpower the suspect.
“The man, who rescued the woman, became suspicious of the cellophane bag the suspect was holding and, therefore, forcefully tore it only to discover that the contents were human parts already sliced into pieces”.
Oladele immediately raised the alarm, which attracted a crowd from the nearby Ewekoro cement factory, as well as the Egbado Village who mobbed the suspect and attempted to lynch him, but he pleaded with the crowd not to kill him, saying: “I will confess, I will confess.”
According to Oladele, the suspect thereafter brought out his cell phone and made a call to some people.
Oladele explained that the suspect told the mob that he belonged to a five-man syndicate, among them a woman, whom he alleged, has been operating in the Ewekoro axis since the past nine months.
The mob was still interrogating Gbenga, the suspect, when policemen from the nearby Itori Police Station arrived and whisked him away.
Attempt to see the suspect at the Ifo Divisional Police headquarters where he was being detained failed as the police turned down all entreaties by newsmen to enable them gain access to him. The policemen referred journalists to the command’s headquarters at Eleweran, Abeokuta, the state capital, to speak to the Spokesman, Mr. Muyiwa Adejobi.
But when journalists contacted Adejobi on phone, he told them it was too early to determine whether the suspect is a ritualist or not. He, however, assured that the police would carry out a thorough investigation after which he would give their findings to them (journalists).
why is the world so bad?
ReplyDeletePeople are just mean and with no heart at all.
ReplyDelete