Commissioner of Police, Umar Manko, said
the suspects, Olatunji Olatubosun, and Abdulazeez Amao, were arrested
following investigations by SARS men.
Manko said the investigations revealed
that one of the suspects, Amao, brought in guns from Mali through
Burkina Faso and Benin Republic into Nigeria.
The police boss said Amao was able to beat security checks along the routes by concealing the guns in yam flour sacks.
Amao, it was learnt, was arrested with 10 AK-47 rifles and 19 AK-47 magazines fully loaded with 30 rounds of ammunition.
He said, “On March 10, 2014, around 3am,
I received information that armed robbers were operating in the Subaru
area of Ikorodu. I ordered the Officer-in-Charge of SARS, Abba Kyari, to
deploy his men in the area and one notorious armed robber, Olatunji
Olatubosun, was arrested with one AK-47 rifle.
“Olatubosun said during interrogation
that one Abdulazeez Amao, based in Oyo State, was his gun supplier. A
team of SARS detectives traced Amao to Ibadan and 10 AK-47 rifles were
recovered from his house. He also confessed to have sold several weapons
to people in Oyo, Lagos and Anambra states.
“Amao confessed that he packaged the
guns in yam flour sack and brought them from Mali through Ougadogou,
Burkina Faso, Cotonou and then into Nigeria.”
Manko said based on the dimension the
investigation took, the command might work in conjunction with INTERPOL
to bring the syndicate to justice.
Amao, however, denied links to
terrorists or armed robbers. He said he only sold guns to militants in
the Niger Delta and the South- Eastern part of the country.
He said, “I am 35-years-old. I am from
Saki in Oyo State. I have two wives and three children and I am a
responsible man. I am a smuggler and my entire family knows this is what
I do. I used to smuggle sacks of rice and second hand clothes and sell
to traders in the South-East. In 2012, I met one Gbenga Olusegun who
told me about gun smuggling.
“Olusegun introduced me to Zakari Watara
who is based in Burkina Faso. Olusegun said he would help me get
customers if I could smuggle guns successfully and that was how I
started.”
Amao said he purchased each gun at the cost of N200, 000 and sold them at N300, 000.
He said customs officials hardly intercepted his goods because he knew how to conceal them properly.
He said, “Watara brings in the goods
from Mali and I meet him at Wayalga Market in Ougadogou, Burkina Faso,
where I conceal the guns in milk cartons. I then smuggle the goods to
Benin Republic where I packaged the guns into sacks of elubo (yam flour) and take the goods through the Oyo State border.
“I try as much as possible not to
smuggle too many guns at once so that in the event that customs
officials intercept my goods, I will not lose too much money.
“I regret taking to crime, but I made
sure I never sold to Boko Haram or armed robbers, I only sold to
militants in oil regions.”
The second suspect, Tunbosun, confessed to have bought guns from Amao, but denied being an armed robber.
Tunbosun said he was a licenced hunter, but he bought guns from Amao so as to sell to land speculators.
No comments:
Post a Comment