Parents of the abducted pupils and teachers of the Apostolic Faith Group of Schools, Emure-Ekiti, have narrated how they secured the release of the hostages.
Osun Defender recalls that gunmen had last Monday ambushed the school bus conveying the pupils and staff to Eporo-Ekiti and whisked away five pupils and four members of staff, including the driver, to the forest.
The kidnappers later reached out to the families of the victims and demanded a ransom of N100 million for their release, but after much pleading, they reduced their demand to N15 million on Thursday.
While speaking on Sunday, relatives of the victims said that the hostages were released in a forest between Owo and Oba-Akoko in Ondo State at about 1:30 am on Sunday.
One of the parents of the victims, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, disclosed that members of the community and other indigenes, both at home and abroad, contributed to the ransom.
He explained that the kidnappers asked the family to bring the ransom, along with other items such as fried rice, drinks, and tramadol, to the forest to secure the release of the eight victims.
He disclosed that the driver was killed by the kidnappers after he was said to have reneged on dropping the telephone numbers of his relatives to call for ransom.
Another Parent who also spoke on condition of anonymity said, “We have to thank God for the safe return of our children and wives from the forest after they were kidnapped on Monday.
“The kidnappers insisted on collecting N15 million on Saturday, and we rallied the communities, including our people outside the country, to raise the ransom. They even collected a cartoon of tin milk, Black Bullet, fried rice with chicken, soft and energy drinks, and tramadol from us.
“We were asked to take the money and the items to a bush in Ondo State, a farmstead called Ago Paanu at about 7 pm. It is between Oba Akoko and Owo. Before they could release them, they confirmed the money and those items. We walked through the bush till around 1 am when we saw the victims.”
While speaking on why the driver was killed by the gunmen, the family source said: “The children told us that when they (kidnappers) were asking for the telephone number of relatives to call from each of them in the forest, the driver told them he didn’t know that of his wife and the school proprietor’s offhand. This made them angry, and they hit him with their gun.
“For five days, he was said to be having issues after the injury he sustained, and was shot dead on Saturday morning. The most painful was that his corpse was burnt in the bush, according to what the pupils told us.
“It was a bitter experience for the victims, especially looking at how the driver was killed. We appreciate the efforts of the state government and the security agencies.”
Recounting how they retrieved the victims in the bush, a parent who spoke at the premises of the hospital said: “The kidnappers were calling persistently that we should hurry up. They said we should meet them at Ikare Junction. I wondered how come Ikare junction when they kidnap the children at Eporo.
“When we got to Ikare Junction, he said we should buy food, so we went to buy rice and meat. When we were about to get to Waterworks, he told us that we should turn back. Then the kidnapper described a road that only big vehicles could pass. We decided that all of us should not go there so that they would not think that we came with policemen, and that could make them injure the abductees with them.
“When we told them we were on the path, he said only two persons should come. He threatened to waste the kidnapped persons if more than two persons came. Only two continued while the rest of us sat on the road there. The driver of the vehicle and one person continued far into the forest and drove back. So, they now used a motorcycle to trace the kidnappers to drop the money and the food.
“On collecting the money and food, he released the kidnapped persons. They used a motorcycle to bring the kidnapped persons to the road; that was when they called us to bring the vehicle to convey them. The kidnappers collected N15 million. We (parents and families) contributed N4 million, people came to our aid by contributing the rest. Even in the markets, they contributed so that they would be rescued.”
Sodiq Lawal is a passionate and dedicated journalist with a knack for uncovering captivating stories in the bustling metropolis of Osun State and Nigeria at large. He has a versatile reporting style, covering a wide range of topics, from politics , campus, and social issues to arts and culture, seeking impact in all facets of the society.
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