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The Four Plane Hijackers Of Nigeria by Abiyamo: 7:09am On Jun 29, 2013
INTRODUCTION

Should I call them Nigeria's bravest boys or the most deluded youths of this Federation? Or place them in between? I really don't know but I am hoping that by the time you finish reading this, you will help me out. On the 25th of October, 1993, there was a fantastic drama high up in the skies of Nigeria. 30,000 feet above sea level, a commotion was in play. Four young Nigerian men (one of whom was a teenager) had hijacked an aircraft belonging to the Nigerian Airways with a toy gun, four litres of petrol and knives. The nation was spellbound and the entire world shifted its focus on the West African behemoth in a matter of minutes. The New York Times ran away with the news spreading the buzz of the four men while the Nigerian press went gaga. Rumour mongers had a field day spinning all sorts of tales. Coming at a time when there was a lot of political tension and social chaos in the land, many Nigerians were simply stunned while others stayed glued to their black-and-white TV sets, staring in disbelief. In no time, the hijackers had taken control of the aircraft, contacted the control tower, made confidently grand demands, held every single passenger on board hostage and threatened to set the aircraft on fire. No be shereshere o! But what actually happened on that Monday and what led to it? Let's go there...terror in the Nigerian skies, the scintillating story of the four hijackers.


THE AIRCRAFT
It was a big bird -an Airbus A310-200, a twin-engined widebody jet airliner (see pictures).

THE FLIGHT AND PASSENGERS
The exact number of the passengers varies slightly depending on your source. But according to the New York Times, there were 159 passengers on board. Some other records indicated there were between 135-137 passengers inside the plane. The plane's flight was supposed to be from Lagos to Abuja, the Federal Capital Territory, a distance of about 509 kilometres. Inside the plane were top Nigerian government functionaries and businessmen off to Abuja for very important deals.

THE HIJACKERS

-RICHARD 'Richie' AJIBOLA OGUNDERU
In an interview with the Nation newspaper, Ogunderu revealed the intent behind their action and narrated their experience. He stated that the boys were 'meaningfully desperate' and they were truly frustrated by the annulment of the June 12 elections. He said that it seemed the nation was drifting towards the cliff of another civil war and he and his group had to do something to ‘send jitters down the spine of those in power.' to show that 'Nigerians were not everlasting dummies'. Well, I am not sure Governor Rotimi Chibuike Amaechi of Rivers State will agree with that last statement...lol! Hear Ogunderu:

‘We wanted change. Our action confirmed that when a system is inhuman, it could produce the extreme in all of us. A system that cares not, a system that does not listen to our cries and our woes, a system that wants to exterminate us does not deserve a day of existence’. He also stated that he was not afraid when the commandoes stormed the aircraft: We were on a mission, we wanted to show the evil regime that young people were prepared to go the extra length to free Nigerians from the yoke of military dictatorship. We were not afraid, at that moment, death meant nothing to us. They stormed the place and we were alarmed, we didn’t shoot, we tried to perfect our safety and the safety of the passenger.’ Ogunderu was the one in charge of the coordination of the hijack and was responsible for delegating to each of the hijackers, their duties and the steps to be taken during the hijack. He said: ‘We wanted freedom, freedom to choose our leaders. We were pushed to the extreme and we reacted in an extreme manner.'

Richard had just finished high school from Ondo State at that time and he was the one who got up first as the plane climbed and he approached the cockpit where he gave orders to the pilot and the co-pilot. You know, like a boss...lol! His father was arrested and detained by Abacha after the hijack and interrogated. Interestingly, Ogunderu was the youngest then, he was just 19.

-KABIR ADENUGA
The second of the hijackers, Adenuga said they carried out the hijack ‘to show the resentment against annulment of the June 12 election.’ He is still sad that today, the system has not changed. Were their actions in vain? He was 22 years old.

-BENNETH OLUWADAISI OSOSANYA
He was 24 years of age at that time.

-KENNY RASAQ-LAWAL
He was 23 at that time.

For the four hijackers, they were obviously inexperienced with the dangerous art of hijacking and for some of them, that was the first time they would fly in a plane.


THE HIJACK

Just as the bird was up in the sky, settling for the cruise phase, the pilot announced that passengers could unlatch their seatbelts. At that moment, the four young men gave signals to each other by blinking and in a flash, they took over the craft. They were armed with guns and knives. Ogunderu led the hijack team and he recalled: : ‘I walked into the cockpit and seized the process, and then the others followed me. Two of us stood in the plane to intimidate the passengers. We took over the plane and asked the pilot to head for another country.’

From the microphone, the leader of the strike team thundered:

‘Ladies and gentlemen, this plane has been taken over by the Movement for the Advancement of Democracy, remain calm, we will not harm you. You will be told where the plane will land you.’

According to Ogunderu, one of the four hijackers, the air hostesses were visibly frozen with fear and the terror in the faces was clearly palpable. O’boy, if na you too nko…lol! Ta lo ma ri iku to ma ping? LOL! They were threatened and told not to move if they do not want to be killed. One of the passengers who was inside the aircraft lavatory kuku decided to stay locked inside until Ogunderu went inside and pulled him out of the toilet….lmao!


LANDING IN NIGER REPUBLIC AND DEMANDS

Before landing in Niger, the aircraft made attempts to land in Ndjamena, the capital of Chad, and then head for Germany but were unsuccessful. Upon being diverted to Diori Hamani International Airport, Niamey, Niger Republic where they arrived in less than two hours later for refuelling. As they were landing in Niamey, Nigerien commandoes armed to the teeth were already on ground waiting for them and they could see them from the aircraft windows.

It is amazing to know that some of those released were the Vice President of China, Rong Yiren. Then the hijackers dropped the bombshell: they would burn down the aircraft within 72 hours should the Nigerian authorities refuse to accede to their demands. Una see sey e don tey wey FG don dey enter kasala. But what were their demand(s)?

-That the Interim National Government (which they termed ‘illegal’) of Chief Ernest Shonekan (read all about Shonekan here>>>http://.com/ernest-shonekan-nigerias-most-fugacious-leader/) should be dissolved with the abrogation of the Decree 61 that formed it and Bashorun Moshood Kashimawo Olawale Abiola be declared the President of Nigeria. They called for the ‘the trial of all those who collaborated with the military regime‘ and the dissolution of the present government.”

-They also demanded that press freedom in Nigeria be guaranteed and that General Ibrahim Babangida be prosecuted on corruption charges.

-That ‘looters’ of the economy which “included 3,000 government officials who stashed away $33 billion in Swiss accounts” be fished out and all prosecuted.

In Niger Republic, the hostages then demanded that they be given enough fuel with which the aircraft be flown to Frankfurt, Germany. But why Germany? No one knows…lol! After their release, Ogunderu later revealed that they intended to also achieve the following goals with their action:

-The probe of the September 26, 1992 mysterious crash of the Nigerian Air Force C-130 Hercules transport plane in Ejigbo, Lagos where an entire batch of some of Nigeria’s most intelligent military officers perished.

-Full probe into the death of Dele Giwa, Nigeria’s foremost journalist who was blown to smithereens in October 1986 in Nigeria’s first parcel bomb attack.

You know the most interesting thing? The questions remain unanswered even decades after the events.

HOSTAGES

Kept inside the aircraft to witness all the horror as it played out were six officials of the Nigerian government and the six terrified crew members.


STORMING THE AIRCRAFT

On the 27th of October, the National Assembly called an emergency meeting and on the 28th, the Nigerian government gave orders for the aircraft to be stormed. Gegeun! Aptor and Bossi! LOL! In the dead of the night, Nigerien commandoes, assuming the hijackers would be asleep stormed the Nigerian Airways aircraft. It was not funny. They bombarded the plane, fired at the hijackers and successfully captured the four of them, their arms were flung to their backs, shiny handcuffs were produced and they would start their long journey into captivity. But it would not come cheap. In the ensuing fracas, one person died (the co-pilot was killed during the operation), a member of the crew, five other passengers and one of the hijackers were all injured. At the end of the operation, all the four hijackers were captured. Lobatan. Later on, the hijackers would say that they were not afraid when forces stormed the aircraft.

After days of negotiation, the gunmen freed all the passengers -except 39 who were kept as hostages after two hours of negotiating with government officials. The government of Niger Republic had to take it slow and steady as they were not too sure of how well-armed the hijackers were, whether they had explosives on board and the rest. They baited the hijackers promising them freedom if they do not harm any of the passengers but at the same time, secret meetings were being held by Niger’s security chiefs on how to storm the aircraft and even kill the hijackers if need be.


ABOUT MAD

MAD was formed in 1992 and the hijackers refused to name their sponsors (if any) or reveal the exact details of the hijack or their modus operandi. But they all claimed to have been motivated by the events of June 12. MAD was led by Mallam Jerry Yusuf from Offa, Kwara State. He was 42 at that time but today, he seems to have disappeared from the radar. Before the hijack in 1993, MAD was already organizing protests against the brutal regime of Nigeria’s military president, General Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida. They organized seminars and conferences at the National Theater, Iganmu, Lagos where they lashed out against the IBB regime. After the hijack, Mallam Yusuf, the leader of MAD said that they did so to ‘terrorize the few people who have terrorized us politically and economically, to recover the money stolen from us.’ Yusuf was born in Offa, Kwara State in 1952 and lived in Germany between 1973 and 1977, during which he was believed to have learnt German. He studied fundamental Islam and was also a businessman dealing in the sale of cocoa. After the hijack, he was picked up on the streets of Ilorin by secret operatives on his trail and handed over secretly to the Nigerien authorities even without any extradition request. Then, he was clamped into jail and throughout 1995, he was in Kollo with the four hijackers, his followers. Yusuf once stated that he had the ‘antidote to coups’. He embarked on hunger strike to protest his ‘arbitary detention’ in Niger. Now, that’s some mad stuff!

LOCAL AND INTERNATIONAL REACTIONS
Although the hijackers were acting to restore MKO’s mandate, Abiola condemned the action. Abiola described their action as being barbaric, he said: We should do nothing that will be interpreted as a resort to the law of the jungle. I appeal to them (the hijackers) to end the hijacking.”


AFTERMATH

After the four hijackers were arrested, they were taken to the Kollo-Zarma Prison, 30 kilometres south of Niamey. In a desert nation like Niger, daytime temperature was unbearable as searing heat could reach 55oC. Ogunderu recalled their nasty experience: ‘We were poorly fed. We could neither speak Hausa nor French and nobody spoke English to us.’ Mahamane Ousmane, then the President of Niger had to go on TV to announce to his flabbergasted citizens that the situation was under control. Then Abacha took over and just three days after he came to office, the hunt started for the leader of MAD, Mallam Jerry Yusuff, the mastermind of the whole hijacking operation. Secret security agencies and outfits across Nigeria were tipped. Not long after, he was abducted on the streets of Ilorin and whisked away. He was told that he would be bundled to Abuja for interrogation, only for him to open his eyes and meet himself in Niamey, Niger…lol! His abduction was a clandestine operation planned and executed by the governments of Nigeria and Niger. In Niger Republic, the President slipped while meeting with Association Nigerienne Por La Defense Des Droits Dehomme, a human rights group that had visited the Nigerien President on behalf of the hijackers and mistakenly revealed that Yusuff was already detained in Niamey, thus causing a major legal tussle in the arid West African nation. Some argued that Yusuff committed no crime in Niger and should be held in the territory. As the legal fireworks continued, Yusuff and his cohorts languished in jail.

While in prison, they had to contend with hunger atimes, heat, death threats, total lack of communication with their relatives and a culture that is totally alien to theirs. For nine long years and four months. But you know the interesting part? They never gave up. Richard took to learning French which he now speaks fluently but he said he is frustrated that he cannot find a job in Nigeria after his release (that was as at 2011).

In May 2000, a suit was filed exparte by Festus Keyamo before a Lagos Federal High Court, asking for an order of mandamus (judicial remedy) which would compel the Attorney-General of the Federation and the Foreign Affairs Minister to call for the extradition of Mallam Jerry Yusuf and others held in Nigerien prison. After their release and finally landing in Nigeria, just a handful of family relatives and friends were on hand at the airport to receive them. No high-sounding celebrations. No trumpets were blown. No bugle was sounded. Many did not even notice their return despite the fact that they had wasted away in a desert jail for almost 10 years…

…. Adenuga on his own part, sharpened his artistic skills of drawing while in prison while Rasaq-Lawal, a talented fashion designer kept on practicing. For Adenuga and Rasaq-Lawal, they had to return to Niamey since they could not find a job in Nigeria but Rasaq-Lawal later came back home. In Niamey, they found some jobs with some fair income, at least sometin to hold body and soul togeda noni. As for Richard, he still remains hopeful and undaunted. He even attended Alliance Francaise (I did too…lol!) where he perfected his French and even bagged a diploma. But he still hopes that one day, he will get a decent job, and wait for this: his dreams of becoming Nigeria’s President remains intact even if he has accepted that he cannot be a pilot again. Of late, he has been as a social worker with the Pro-National Conference Organizations (PRONACO). But there are times when he ironically misses the country where he was jailed. Richard said: “I’m already missing Niger Republic. During our stay, there was no light-out, water ran for 24 hours. We had a good diet while in prison. We also studied French while in jail”. Hmmm…

During an anniversary to celebrate the founding of MAD, the hijackers apologised to all Nigerians. Ogunderu, leader of the hijackers said before an international press conference in Lagos: Our intention was not to harm anybody and that they were not terrorist neither were they sponsored by any foeign body, but were energetic young men,full of ideas and burning with the desire to save millions of Nigerians from the trauma that the annullment of June 12 election had foist, a decison to decisively intervene with the view to bringing the crisis to an end.” During the event, he also blasted the Nigerian airport security officials who did not detect a thing while they all boarded like innocent passengers with all their weapons. He stated that they never made any material demands from the passengers. They were released from prison in Niamey on the 2nd of January, 2002.

CONCLUSION

Dear Esteemed Reader, I have a few questions for you: do you consider the Four Hijackers of Nigeria well-meaning heroes or ganja-inspired terrorists? Were they heroes ahead of their time or some misguided youngsters high on zealotry? Is it not better to die a martyr than to live as a slave under an oppressor? Should they be warmly celebrated or downrightly condemned? Are Nigerian youths of today this bold, courageous or coordinated? Are we going to ever get the Nigeria of our dreams? How? When? Think about these. Many Nigerians today keep shouting revolution (I don’t know if they mean revolution on Twirra…lol!), talk talk and no action and will definitely shudder after reading this story. I may not have labelled them the bravest in Nigeria’s history but for doing something (the correctness or moral bent is another issue entirely) and voicing out their frustration against tyrannical rulers bent on sinking the ship of the nation, they have my lasting respect. And remember that either we act or not, a nation will always get the kind of leadership it deserves. Yes, a nation of sheep will always be led by wolves. By the way, I just stumbled on this old song, it was very popular in those days, we used to gbadun it as the ‘national anthem’ then and I thorougly enjoyed it while penning this. It is titled Everybody Gyrate by Tony One Week (enjoy here>>>
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AIpf8qhzuJQ ). Everybody gyrate, ja ja, gyrate…lol! #SigningOutToEnjoyTheWeekend!

THANKS FOR YOUR TIME AND ENJOY YOUR WEEKEND!.



SOURCE: http://.com/the-four-plane-hijackers-of-nigeria/

24 Likes

Re: The Four Plane Hijackers Of Nigeria by martyns303(m): 7:36am On Jun 29, 2013
This is the first time am hearing about this. 19-24yr olds could take such decision at a millitary regime, and we have grown men who just sit and do nothing as the country is being wasted by civilians in Nigeria of today.

47 Likes

Re: The Four Plane Hijackers Of Nigeria by kkkp: 7:41am On Jun 29, 2013
Men dem!!

1 Like

Re: The Four Plane Hijackers Of Nigeria by ckkris: 7:48am On Jun 29, 2013
If you're suggesting to anyone to challenge the Federal Govt of Nigeria, please know that the kind of Security Forces in Nigeria today is far more sophisticated. A trial will convince you.
Re: The Four Plane Hijackers Of Nigeria by ckkris: 7:54am On Jun 29, 2013
martyns303: This is the first time am hearing about this. 19-24yr olds could take such decision at a millitary regime, and we have grown men who just sit and do nothing as the country is being wasted by civilians in Nigeria of today.
Don't try the Security Forces. You will regret it. You can call President Jonathan whatever you like, but don't challenge his Authority, or you will discover the difference between what is legal and what is legitimate.

6 Likes

Re: The Four Plane Hijackers Of Nigeria by gunuvi(m): 8:00am On Jun 29, 2013
Those guys are heroes.

4 Likes

Re: The Four Plane Hijackers Of Nigeria by martyns303(m): 8:05am On Jun 29, 2013
ckkris: If you're suggesting to anyone to challenge the Federal Govt of Nigeria, please know that the kind of Security Forces in Nigeria today is far more sophisticated. A trial will convince you.
Yes! "Challenge" and u don't have to take over a plane to do that.

1 Like

Re: The Four Plane Hijackers Of Nigeria by martyns303(m): 8:09am On Jun 29, 2013
ckkris: Don't try the Security Forces. You will regret it. You can call President Jonathan whatever you like, but don't challenge his Authority, or you will discover the difference between what is legal and what is legitimate.
Everything is political with u guys, who's talking about Jonathan or any individual? Tomorrow it will be an igbo man as president and someone like u won't want to do anytin cos he's also igbo, u see where Nigeria is now?

8 Likes

Re: The Four Plane Hijackers Of Nigeria by KINGwax(m): 8:12am On Jun 29, 2013
Good one boys. Now tell me, do u knw how to get to jonathan's bedroom?

I am also desperate

2 Likes

Re: The Four Plane Hijackers Of Nigeria by Nobody: 8:19am On Jun 29, 2013
ckkris: If you're suggesting to anyone to challenge the Federal Govt of Nigeria, please know that the kind of Security Forces in Nigeria today is far more sophisticated. A trial will convince you.
Talking sophistication. The same sophistication that made oil pipeline vandalism a highly lucrative business,kidnapping and blackmail. The mbatse cult mass killing of security operatives, the Niger delta warmongering threats and the Boko haram terror thrives. Please can they be more sophisticated? Boko boys kill our soldiers and you say sophisticated. Go ask U.S.A and China who has all that,yet they sleep with an eye opened 24/7

11 Likes

Re: The Four Plane Hijackers Of Nigeria by ckkris: 8:22am On Jun 29, 2013
martyns303:
Yes! "Challenge" and u don't have to take over a plane to do that. U see what Amaechi is doing?
There's a subtle difference between what is legal and what is legitimate. Experience is the best teacher.
Re: The Four Plane Hijackers Of Nigeria by Hadeyeancah(m): 8:28am On Jun 29, 2013
These people get liver,they hijacked with just toy gun,knive and keg of petrol..Well they are brave bt dat it's stupidity of highest order...But I salute their courage
Re: The Four Plane Hijackers Of Nigeria by chidexy(m): 8:32am On Jun 29, 2013
gunuvi: Those guys are heroes.

They are terrorist. Don't try to justify their action because they are your kinsmen. I didn't know they are still alive. I thought they were decapitated.

2 Likes

Re: The Four Plane Hijackers Of Nigeria by martyns303(m): 8:47am On Jun 29, 2013
ckkris: There's a subtle difference between what is legal and what is legitimate. Experience is the best teacher.
All men dream: but not equally. Those who dream by night in the dusty recesses of their minds wake in the day to find that it was vanity: but the dreamers of the day are dangerous men, for they may act their dreams with open eyes, to make it possible.

7 Likes

Re: The Four Plane Hijackers Of Nigeria by gunuvi(m): 8:50am On Jun 29, 2013
chidexy:

They are terrorist. Don't try to justify their action because they are your kinsmen. I didn't know they are still alive. I thought they were decapitated.
Ki lele yi nso na?

4 Likes

Re: The Four Plane Hijackers Of Nigeria by bloggernaija: 9:01am On Jun 29, 2013
’m already missing Niger Republic. During our stay, there was no light-out, water ran for 24 hours. We had a good diet while in prison. We also studied French while in jail”. Hmmm…

1 Like

Re: The Four Plane Hijackers Of Nigeria by kutchs: 9:09am On Jun 29, 2013
KINGwax: Good one boys. Now tell me, do u knw how to get to jonathan's bedroom?

I am also desperate
It doesn‘t have to be Jonathan, you could start with Fashola or Amosun or even Okorocha‘s bedrooms. At least those ones are closer to you than Jonathan is.

1 Like

Re: The Four Plane Hijackers Of Nigeria by AbuMikey(m): 9:11am On Jun 29, 2013
Reserved!!
Re: The Four Plane Hijackers Of Nigeria by naptu2: 9:15am On Jun 29, 2013
I remember this. It sounded crazy to us. . . .hijacking? In Nigeria? Some also felt that it was a disgrace that the hijackers were caught by Nigerien forces ( "where are our special forces?" ).
Re: The Four Plane Hijackers Of Nigeria by Aringarosa(m): 9:20am On Jun 29, 2013
For them to carry out that daring feat as at that time that the military junta was in power, then i'll say they were brave and courageous.

But my question is, what were they trying to achieve...? Was one of Abacha henchmen in the plane they hijacked? Did they give ultimatum to Abacha to install Abiola or the plane will be blown to smithereens? Or where they trying to fly the plane into Aso rock?

If the answer is one or all or one of the above, will the military junta as of then have acceded to their demand?
Re: The Four Plane Hijackers Of Nigeria by ckkris: 9:21am On Jun 29, 2013
gunuvi:
Ki lele yi nso na?
Him talk say if they catch any persin wey de plan coup make no bastard cry say na phantom coup. Simple. You no go fit chop your turn come chop another persin own. God go punish devil.
You de mad?
Re: The Four Plane Hijackers Of Nigeria by dolphinife: 9:32am On Jun 29, 2013
The hijackers wanted to divert the plane to libya so dat dey can take the passengers hostage. But because of their inexperience, the pilot diverted the plane to Niger republic where the passengers spent over 3 days with no sign of rescue.

The Nigerian military government sent man-hunt search for these passengers and the kidnappers with no abate. The control tower couldn't locate the exact location of the aircraft neither. The thinkin was maybe it has crashed somewhere along the mediterranean sea. Fortuantely, the military search and rescue were able to locate the kidnapped passengers. In the course of freeing the passengers, a cabin crew lost his life, and no other person was harmed.

Prior to this time, the security screening and awareness at our airports are nothing to write home about. The screening machine could only screen passengers frm head to knee thereby leaving other places in d body unchecked. This scenario of hijacking led to the resignation of the pilot in command cos he was so depressed and he nearly run mad.

That's wht I knw...true or not...I dnt knw...lol
Re: The Four Plane Hijackers Of Nigeria by HolyHolla(m): 10:00am On Jun 29, 2013
Hadeyeancah: These people get liver,they hijacked with just toy gun,knive and keg of petrol..Well they are brave bt dat it's stupidity of highest order...But I salute their courage

I remember these brave boys. I still have a very high regard for them irrespective of their childishness and foolishness. They named their group, MAD (Movement for Actualization of Democracy). It's such citizens that should be graced with National Honors. They were ready to die for what they believed in. But such are extint species in a Nigeria where even the Human and Labor Rights organizations can no longer fight to retain fuel prices without compromise. I miss people like Pa Imoudu... the last breed of the true soldiers.

1 Like

Re: The Four Plane Hijackers Of Nigeria by buoye1(m): 10:22am On Jun 29, 2013
K

1 Like

Re: The Four Plane Hijackers Of Nigeria by ichommy(m): 10:22am On Jun 29, 2013
martyns303: This is the first time am hearing about this. 19-24yr olds could take such decision at a millitary regime, and we have grown men who just sit and do nothing as the country is being wasted by civilians in Nigeria of today.
Re: The Four Plane Hijackers Of Nigeria by Linoversace: 10:23am On Jun 29, 2013
Are they still alive? undecided
Re: The Four Plane Hijackers Of Nigeria by martin1772(m): 10:24am On Jun 29, 2013
We need the spirit of those guys

2 Likes

Re: The Four Plane Hijackers Of Nigeria by gbadexy(m): 10:25am On Jun 29, 2013
Those guys are heroes! I wonder why we didn't hear of them before now and why they aren't celebrated.
One joker is calling them terrorists and condemning the poster calling them heroes simply because they are south westerners! No be swear but its this type of selfish, bigoted reasoning that nigeria is still backward! When someone can't be objective but think with tribal sentiment.
Irrespective of the outcome of their plan, in •̸Ϟ•̸y opinion it was successful. I doubt if even they at that age would be naïve to think abacha would simply step down.
They wanted to make a statement and they did. I'm sure they knew they weren't going to walk free from the beginning.
These guys are the true champion of democracy willing to take drastic measures to effect real change despite the consequence and at that young age of 19-24 years!
The anonymous poster calling them terrorist should be ashamed what these kids did to try and make change. People like you would only sit behind your computer abi na techno phone and complain online or condemn others.

19 Likes

Re: The Four Plane Hijackers Of Nigeria by Reyspin(m): 10:25am On Jun 29, 2013
I read about dem one time like dat... Are they still alive
Re: The Four Plane Hijackers Of Nigeria by Nobody: 10:26am On Jun 29, 2013
You can imagine someone trying it today.. Hahahaha your last goodbye to your family would most likely be d last for the next 10yrs.

Plus dey aint teenagers
Re: The Four Plane Hijackers Of Nigeria by omanifrank(m): 10:26am On Jun 29, 2013
boys in action i say
Re: The Four Plane Hijackers Of Nigeria by sage2(m): 10:26am On Jun 29, 2013
I am a fan, advocate and practitioner of successful operations. This wasn't one.

1 Like

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