The
Special Anti-Robbery Squad of the Akwa Ibom State Police Command, has arrested
one Godwin Okon, 35, from Effiat community in Mbo Local Government Area for
allegedly possessing two skulls and three locally-made guns.
The
police also linked the murder of Addax Petroleum staff to Okon and his group,
Daybam Confraternity, adding that they had been investigating the case since
2006 when the man was murdered.
The
Commissioner of Police in the state, Mr. Murtala Mani, said on Tuesday that
Okon had confessed to the 2006 murder of Addax employee, who died in their
custody after he was kidnapped by the group.
Mani,
who said this through the Police Public Relations Officer in the state,
Cordelia Nwawe, said the suspect admitted before the police that the two skulls
in his possession were that of a man and a woman, who died in their custody.
The
commissioner stated that Okon had swindled people of large sums of money,
adding that it was the investigation in the acts that led to the discovery of
other incriminating acts.
“The
police have since 2006 been investigating a case of a man who died from Addax
Petroleum field in Effiat, Mbo LGA. We had been looking for the young men who
actually kidnapped that man, fortunately for us we have been able to find a
particular man whose name is Godwin Okon from Effiat.
“During
interrogation, the suspect confessed to being the head of Daybam Confraternity
in Akwa Ibom State and further confessed to the kidnapping of Addax staff in
2006 that died in their custody, after collecting the sum of N2m from the
company.
“During
a search in his house, two human skulls were recovered, one of which he
confessed killing the victim one Esther Effiong ‘f’ at Urueoffong Uruko LGA.
Also recovered were three locally-made pistols,” he said.
He
said that the group headquarters was in Oron, but they operated from Effiat, a
riverine community in Mbo LGA.
“As
for the Addax staff, we were not the ones that caused his death; it was the
community thing. We were here in Uyo to hold a meeting with the company, where
the DSS said we were too few to take major decisions that would affect the
entire community.
“And
when we got back home, we learnt that the man had died of thirst. His corpse
was taken away by the director of the DSS and the Eastern Naval Command from
Calabar.”
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