THE SLAIN IGWES AND BABEL OF POLICE INVESTIGATIONS
Police authorities in Abuja, Nigeria’s capital, recently announced the
arrest of yet a new suspect in the gruesome murder of Barnabas and
Blessing Igwe, a couple, in the commercial city of Onitsha, Anambra
state of Nigeria. The new suspect, known as Odogwu Anam and described as
a dreaded underworld kingpin, was arrested by the police in Asaba, Delta
state capital. The so-called Odogwu Anam reportedly pulled the trigger
that killed the Igwes. Police authorities added that this suspect was
arrested shortly after the gruesome killing, but surprisingly granted
bail.
Barnabas and Blessing (Amaka) Igwe, both lawyers were brutally murdered
in Onitsha town on September 1, 2002. They were on a visit to a family
friend on the fateful day when assassins trailed and mindlessly hacked
them down. The killers dealt machete blows on the Bar chairman, shooting
him three times. Blessing, his pregnant wife, was given machete cuts on
her waist, almost severing it from the knee region, separating the upper
torso from the lower one. The attack, among other things, left a deep
wide gash on her waist from her backside. And, apparently to ensure that
the couple did not survive the attack, the assailants ran their vehicles
over them and fled. Even Blessing’s cries that she was pregnant, and
that her unborn baby should be spared, did not touch the stone hearts of
the murderers, as they went ahead with their murderous assignment. Police high command, a couple of days ago, claimed that the arrested
Odogwu Anam was a member of the gang that killed the couple, and had,
shortly after he was granted bail, fled overseas only to return when he
thought the matter had been forgotten.
What a strange story! Where does this novel development leave concerned
Nigerians in tracking down the killers of the Igwes? And what impression
does this incessant volte-face in this murder probe create about the
Nigeria police? This latest so-called break-through in arresting Odogwu
Anam by the police is like a story told by an idiot, full of sound and
fury.
For six whole years, the police had been floundering, arresting and
clamping into detention camps numerous alleged killers of the Igwes. The
duo, it will be recalled, were murdered during the regime of Chinwoke
Mbadinuju as governor of Anambra state. While his wife died on the spot,
Barnabas died later at the hospital, but not until after reportedly
making a dying declaration linking Mbadinuju to the attack. The dying
Barnabas was said to have mentioned Ken Emeakayi, Mbadinuju’s works
commissioner, as the leader of the gang that attacked him and his wife.
This dying declaration was in spite of Mbadinuju’s alibi that he was
attending a world Igbo congress in far away Houston, U.S.A, as at the
time of the incident. It is noteworthy that Barnabas leadership in
Onitsha Bar was so critical of Mbadinuju government in Anambra state
before they were slain. In fact, at a point in the rift, the Bar
declared war against Mbadinuju regarding his protracted indebtedness to
the state’s workforce, and, subsequently, declared Anambra a failed state.
Understandably, following Barnabas’ dying declaration, coupled with the
efforts of the leadership of Chuka Obele Chuka, Barnabas replacement,
the police, first, arrested and severally arraigned Emeakayi. Emeakayi,
in charge of the dreaded Anambra State Vigilante Service (alias Bakassi
Boys), stood trial alongside other suspects in the murder for several
months before their eventual acquittal.
After the arraignment of Emeakayi and scores of his co-accused, the
police turned their prosecution searchlight in the direction of former
Governor Mbadinuju, who just returned to Nigeria after holidaying
overseas for months after the expiration of his tenure in May 2003.
Mbadinuju, subsequently, faced a high profile murder trial in both Abuja
and Anambra state in 2006. He was slammed with a three-count charge of
conspiracy to murder the Igwes before an Onitsha Chief Magistrate court
presided over by Mabel Mbakwe. According to the charges numbered
MO/1c/2006, Mbadinuju was accused, alongside others still at large, “of
conspiring with one another to commit murder and thereby committing an
offence punishable under section 494 of the criminal code cap 36 vol. II
revised laws of Anambra State Nigeria, 1999”.
Mbadinuju’s Onitsha trial was preceded by yet another one in Abuja. The
Abuja Chief Magistrate court, presided over by Usman Shuaibu, had
earlier commenced similar proceedings against him and one Daniel Anyiego
for ‘criminal conspiracy, abatement of offence of culpable homicide
punishable with death’. Mbadinuju was alleged to have given false
information with intent to mislead public servants, causing
disappearance of evidence and giving false information to shield persons
who committed the offence from legal punishment.
But recently, Mbadinuju was discharged and acquitted by Justice D.O.C
Amaechina of Onitsha Hgh Court following an application he brought
before it for a judicial review of the murder charges against him. The
implication of Mbadinuju’s discharge and acquittal, as well as that of
Emeakayi and his co-accused, is that the police made a mistake in
arraigning them in court in the first instance. That is, they were
prosecuted for the murder of the Igwes in error. On a general note, the
implication is the Mbadinuju government (that is, Mbadinuju and all that
served in his administration) has been given a clean bill of health in
the couple’s murder.
While not passing comments on the propriety or otherwise of Mbadinuju’s
discharge and acquittal by Justice Amaechina, I am of the opinion that
the Nigerian police do not deserve any pat on the back for their
so-called latest break-through in nabbing Odogwu Anam, whom they
claimed, was one of the killers of the Onitsha couple lawyers. Is it,
rather, not a shame on the police force that it could not pull through
any of the trials it initiated over the cold-blooded murder of the
lawyers for the past six years? This development, in deed, exposes the
crass inexperience of our police force in cracking and curbing crime. For six years, Nigerian police had adopted the tactic of ‘trial and
error’ in tracking down killers of the Igwes, whose brutal murder had
plunged their three little kids, Somadina, Chijindu and Nnenna into
penury and misery. Is it not a shame that the police has continued with
this macabre dance without end? Who is sure that the on-going celebrated
arrest and planned trial Odogwu Anam is not another foray into a fool’s
paradise? Who is sure that the eventual prosecution will not go the way
of others, inexplicably end in discharge and acquittal of the accused?
If the police could not successfully prosecute Mbadinuju and his
officials, who were implicated in the assassination of the couple by the
Onitsha Bar, what is the guarantee that the latest euphoria over the
nabbing of yet another suspect is not part of a plot to continue to
deceive and hoodwink the public into believing that the Nigerian police
can still live out its name? What Babel of investigations into a murder
too many? What a confused nation?
BY: UBA AHAM (ubaaham@yahoo.com) 08033217953
Uba Aham is a veteran journalist based in Enugu, Nigeria