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Kidnapped Lagos Council Chairman Relives Ordeal - Politics - Nairaland

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Kidnapped Lagos Council Chairman Relives Ordeal by Slyr0x: 10:32am On Apr 22, 2013
For about 30 seconds yesterday, Kehinde Bamigbetan, the chairman of Ejigbo Local Council Development Area (LCDA), closed his eyes, muttering: “We thank God”.

When he opened his eyes, he began to cry. He spoke in a slow but steady voice that conveyed deep sadness, despite the joyous occasion. He would stop and cry again.

A small crowd gathered to celebrate his safe return from the den of his kidnappers. Many comforting hands touched him. Intermittently, there were songs of praise to God for the safe return of the chairman who was abducted on his Ona Iwa Mimo Street, Ejigbo, last Monday.

Outside, some well wishers gathered in groups. The celebration of his return began early for them. Wine bottles were opened and at the sound of the cork, a shout of “KOK”, Bamigbetan’s nickname, rented the air.

On Friday, the kidnappers told their victim they were satisfied with him. That was when the news of his release filtered out. But he was not allowed to go until 9:30 pm on Saturday. At around 9: pm, they took him, blindfolded, into a car and drove towards a check point. He was asked to drive the car and drop it at a particular point where they would take over.

“They asked me if I could drive a manual car and I took charge of the car at 9:30 pm. They said I should not look sideways. So, I obeyed. The first thing I did was to start singing ‘Great is thy faithfulness’,” Bamigbetan said.

The car is a navy blue Peugeot 406 with Anambra registration number NKK 553 AH.

Bamigbetan’s family was full of gratitude. The mood inside the green duplex on the lowly Eni Iwa Mimo Street was boisterous. The long faces were gone; so were the meetings. But the singing, dancing and the prayers remained.

Rev. Bisi Bamigbetan, the eldest sibling of the chairman who had led the prayers, said: “We thank God. We prayed and fasted and God heard us. Thank God for everyone that stood by us. We nearly lost hope, I said ‘let your fear be replaced with faith’. I went upstairs to shower when I heard the shout of joy. I rushed out naked; I was not conscious.”

Bamigbetan’s twin sister, Mrs. Taiwo Jacobs, remarked: “I am so happy because we have been expecting him since Wednesday. It got to a stage we were all crying, trying to reach people who can help us. God has remembered us. It is the favour of God that brought him back. “

Another sister of his, Mrs. Funmi Adenuga, said the family thought the kidnap would not last more than two days but the kidnappers kept the family in suspense up till the last minute.

Bamigbetan had a premonition that evil was lurking around that day because he woke up trembling with fear, he told The Nation yesterday. “I tried to find out where the fear was coming from but I couldn’t. I didn’t want to go to work that day but for two events that I had to attend. After that, I went to see our leader, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu. I had wanted to stay the night on the island but I didn’t. I even changed my usual route. I came through Ikotun while the kidnappers came through Isolo. They saw my Sport Utility Vehicle and overtook us, and then I remembered all the premonitions and fear that I had that day.”

A shot from an Ak-47 was fired to stop Abiodun Olayiwola, Bamigbetan’s driver. Sensing danger, he tried to reverse and escape but missed his way and hit an electricity pole, forcing the car to a stop. Several shots were fired into the engine missing Olayiwola by whiskers. Then he opened the car and ran, shouting to his boss to do the same.

“Why didn’t you stop? Why are you running away? Did you do anything wrong? Next time always stop and don’t run ok?” the kidnappers told Bamigbetan immediately he alighted from his vehicle. They bundled him into their own car, put a tight blindfold over his eyes and forced him into the car. Then they kicked out a man who had been taken before him and drove on high speed towards Badagry. It was then they informed him that someone had paid for his life.

“The blindfold was very tight and I could not even raise my eyebrows; so, I didn’t know where we were going ,” he said. But immediately his brain kicked into action and he engaged his captors. He told them they got the wrong person and all his life he had worked for the cause of the poor, both as student and labour activist. He pleaded that as Chairman of a local council, he had provided free medicare for the elderly and free education for children. The men remained silent. When they got to their destination, they brought him down from the vehicle and pushed him into a dark house.

Bamigbetan did not know the exact location of the house he was taken to but said it was around Badagry.

He said: “When you are kidnapped, you are put down so you can just hear the movement; you can’t see. The only thing you know is the point where you are picked up and dropped. The place was dark; you are put on the carpet, laid onto the carpet blindfolded.”

He lived in this darkness for two days.

That same night a phone call was put through to his wife Fatima. “Madam, we have your husband. Somebody has paid for his life, but we will not kill him if you can bail him out. Don’t call the police, rally round your friends and get the money. Then they demanded for $1m” Fatima said yesterday.


Back in their hide-out they began to question Bamigbetan on his activities. To authenticate his story, they dispatched a group to the council secretariat to verify his claims at the break of dawn. The spies went to the council secretariat and mixed with the group of sympathizers, asking questions. Nobody suspected them; they looked just normal.

“Interestingly, the second day they dispatched a group of their boys to the council to go and research and the result of that changed their attitude towards me because they said everywhere they went people said that I helped the poor and I was a nice person. They became much more realistic about what they wanted,” Bamigbetan said.

Bamigbetan said he was tied face down in the flat for the first two days. To reduce the risk of having to relieve his bowels, he began to drink water and coke. “One day, I will drink water, the next coke,” he said. In the dark room where he was kept, he could only lie on the floor. “There were AK-47 rifles everywhere and I knew it is only God that can save me through grace.”

The kidnappers were tracking the news report and soon the profile of their high calibre victim began to emerge. But the news reports almost ended the kidnap incident in a fatality. A national newspaper –not The Nation- had reported that council chairmen in the state were contributing N1, 000,000 each for his release. The kidnappers brought the paper to him and demanded an outrageous sum for his release, based on that report.

“I was able to debunk that story as a lie, that it was not true and that settled it,” said Bamigbetan. Unknown to him, however, another group involved in the negotiation for his release had told his family the same outrageous ransom. They kept pestering his wife for the money until Saturday night.

“They were still calling me up to the last minute asking for money. They said I should prepare to become a widow and that they will tell me where to pick his body. I was tired and afraid. I began to beg them. But I thank God he is back and alive,” Mrs Bamigbetan said.

According to Bamigbetan, the kidnappers were seven and they divided themselves into two categories. One group was hardened; it was responsible for the threat and abuse while the other group was more humane. “After the younger guys took over, things became easy; they gave me a mattress to sleep on, cooked indomie for me, bought me fruits, washed my clothes themselves and forced me to eat and take my bath.”

The kidnappers seemed to have been forced into criminality by the social circumstances in the country.

“The guys involved made a very clear point, many of them were graduates, have not been in jobs for years, and many of them have gone to take that risk, according to them, because they cannot match the millions and the billions that we talk about with what comes into their own pockets. They cannot understand why we budget billions of naira and graduates cannot get jobs so they have come to take their anger against the system. In that circumstance, one was just a victim of circumstance, it is clear no one is safe. It can happen to anybody at any time, but I don’t think we are prepared to handle this,” Bamigbetan said.

The kidnappers would not release him, until he had made a promise to take a very strong message to the government. “They asked me to take this message to the government – that they are angry. They said how can an engineering graduate not have a job for eight years and the government is budgeting billions annually. They said as the elections are coming, they too will be doing their elections with their guns.

“The boys said they just wanted to take their own share of the national cake, which has been denied them.” Bamigbetan sees this as another evidence of the rot of Nigeria under the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) -led government.

“It’s a social question; the need to redistribute wealth in favour of the poor and the working class has become such a very imperative necessity, if Nigeria is going to move forward. That is the message they asked me to pass on – to let people know that they are not happy having to carry AK 47 around town at the risk to their own lives. Some of them are Human Resources graduates; some of them are Engineering graduates and this is what they have to do to survive. It’s a sad commentary on how the PDP government has been able to run this country. It shows you very clearly that no sane Nigerian seeing the challenges that we have should ever allow this party continue in power. The PDP government is really exposing us to danger.”

But there was still the issue of a ransom, some online news platforms claimed N15m was paid to secure his release. Bamigbetan would not confirm if such money was paid.

He said: “All of us are still exposed; there is no protection. There could be reprisals. Who is going to protect me against reprisals? I don’t want to be too salacious with information. I may not be able to control the consequences. It is not the issue of ransom, but safety. Former Anambra Deputy Governor paid a ransom and he was still killed.”

Bamigbetan seemed to have become a changed person after his ordeal. He has rededicated his life to the service of his people and to God. He also called for a special status for Lagos State to be able to cater for the millions of residents and migrants from other states. But he insisted he would not use a police security detail.

“I don’t use security details; I have never used security details. I am not too sure if it will change now. I believe in God’s protection, I work for the poor and believe that the prayers of those people will save me. I made my mind that if I work for the people they will pray for me. It is a stronger power.”

http://thenationonlineng.net/new/news/kidnapped-lagos-council-chairman-relives-ordeal/
Re: Kidnapped Lagos Council Chairman Relives Ordeal by jigawatts(m): 11:00am On Apr 22, 2013
Thank God for his life.

NO ONE IS SAFE

BUT boys get mind sha undecided
Re: Kidnapped Lagos Council Chairman Relives Ordeal by Akpaife(m): 11:01am On Apr 22, 2013
@op u 4 not leave any space 4 us

1 Like

Re: Kidnapped Lagos Council Chairman Relives Ordeal by greall1: 11:01am On Apr 22, 2013
.
Re: Kidnapped Lagos Council Chairman Relives Ordeal by Akpaife(m): 11:03am On Apr 22, 2013
And 1 mumu person will come n quote d whole story

1 Like

Re: Kidnapped Lagos Council Chairman Relives Ordeal by Basic(m): 11:06am On Apr 22, 2013
Akpa ife: And 1 mumu person will come n quote d whole story
Exactly, only to add a one-line comment.

1 Like

Re: Kidnapped Lagos Council Chairman Relives Ordeal by iamswizz(m): 11:11am On Apr 22, 2013
jigawatts: For about 30 seconds yesterday, Kehinde Bamigbetan, the chairman of Ejigbo Local Council Development Area (LCDA), closed his eyes, muttering: “We thank God”.

When he opened his eyes, he began to cry. He spoke in a slow but steady voice that conveyed deep sadness, despite the joyous occasion. He would stop and cry again.

A small crowd gathered to celebrate his safe return from the den of his kidnappers. Many comforting hands touched him. Intermittently, there were songs of praise to God for the safe return of the chairman who was abducted on his Ona Iwa Mimo Street, Ejigbo, last Monday.

Outside, some well wishers gathered in groups. The celebration of his return began early for them. Wine bottles were opened and at the sound of the cork, a shout of “KOK”, Bamigbetan’s nickname, rented the air.

On Friday, the kidnappers told their victim they were satisfied with him. That was when the news of his release filtered out. But he was not allowed to go until 9:30 pm on Saturday. At around 9: pm, they took him, blindfolded, into a car and drove towards a check point. He was asked to drive the car and drop it at a particular point where they would take over.

“They asked me if I could drive a manual car and I took charge of the car at 9:30 pm. They said I should not look sideways. So, I obeyed. The first thing I did was to start singing ‘Great is thy faithfulness’,” Bamigbetan said.

The car is a navy blue Peugeot 406 with Anambra registration number NKK 553 AH.

Bamigbetan’s family was full of gratitude. The mood inside the green duplex on the lowly Eni Iwa Mimo Street was boisterous. The long faces were gone; so were the meetings. But the singing, dancing and the prayers remained.

Rev. Bisi Bamigbetan, the eldest sibling of the chairman who had led the prayers, said: “We thank God. We prayed and fasted and God heard us. Thank God for everyone that stood by us. We nearly lost hope, I said ‘let your fear be replaced with faith’. I went upstairs to shower when I heard the shout of joy. I rushed out Unclad; I was not conscious.”

Bamigbetan’s twin sister, Mrs. Taiwo Jacobs, remarked: “I am so happy because we have been expecting him since Wednesday. It got to a stage we were all crying, trying to reach people who can help us. God has remembered us. It is the favour of God that brought him back. “

Another sister of his, Mrs. Funmi Adenuga, said the family thought the kidnap would not last more than two days but the kidnappers kept the family in suspense up till the last minute.

Bamigbetan had a premonition that evil was lurking around that day because he woke up trembling with fear, he told The Nation yesterday. “I tried to find out where the fear was coming from but I couldn’t. I didn’t want to go to work that day but for two events that I had to attend. After that, I went to see our leader, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu. I had wanted to stay the night on the island but I didn’t. I even changed my usual route. I came through Ikotun while the kidnappers came through Isolo. They saw my Sport Utility Vehicle and overtook us, and then I remembered all the premonitions and fear that I had that day.”

A shot from an Ak-47 was fired to stop Abiodun Olayiwola, Bamigbetan’s driver. Sensing danger, he tried to reverse and escape but missed his way and hit an electricity pole, forcing the car to a stop. Several shots were fired into the engine missing Olayiwola by whiskers. Then he opened the car and ran, shouting to his boss to do the same.

“Why didn’t you stop? Why are you running away? Did you do anything wrong? Next time always stop and don’t run ok?” the kidnappers told Bamigbetan immediately he alighted from his vehicle. They bundled him into their own car, put a tight blindfold over his eyes and forced him into the car. Then they kicked out a man who had been taken before him and drove on high speed towards Badagry. It was then they informed him that someone had paid for his life.

“The blindfold was very tight and I could not even raise my eyebrows; so, I didn’t know where we were going ,” he said. But immediately his brain kicked into action and he engaged his captors. He told them they got the wrong person and all his life he had worked for the cause of the poor, both as student and labour activist. He pleaded that as Chairman of a local council, he had provided free medicare for the elderly and free education for children. The men remained silent. When they got to their destination, they brought him down from the vehicle and pushed him into a dark house.

Bamigbetan did not know the exact location of the house he was taken to but said it was around Badagry.

He said: “When you are kidnapped, you are put down so you can just hear the movement; you can’t see. The only thing you know is the point where you are picked up and dropped. The place was dark; you are put on the carpet, laid onto the carpet blindfolded.”

He lived in this darkness for two days.

That same night a phone call was put through to his wife Fatima. “Madam, we have your husband. Somebody has paid for his life, but we will not kill him if you can bail him out. Don’t call the police, rally round your friends and get the money. Then they demanded for $1m” Fatima said yesterday.

Back in their hide-out they began to question Bamigbetan on his activities. To authenticate his story, they dispatched a group to the council secretariat to verify his claims at the break of dawn. The spies went to the council secretariat and mixed with the group of sympathizers, asking questions. Nobody suspected them; they looked just normal.

“Interestingly, the second day they dispatched a group of their boys to the council to go and research and the result of that changed their attitude towards me because they said everywhere they went people said that I helped the poor and I was a nice person. They became much more realistic about what they wanted,” Bamigbetan said.

Bamigbetan said he was tied face down in the flat for the first two days. To reduce the risk of having to relieve his bowels, he began to drink water and coke. “One day, I will drink water, the next coke,” he said. In the dark room where he was kept, he could only lie on the floor. “There were AK-47 rifles everywhere and I knew it is only God that can save me through grace.”

The kidnappers were tracking the news report and soon the profile of their high calibre victim began to emerge. But the news reports almost ended the kidnap incident in a fatality. A national newspaper –not The Nation- had reported that council chairmen in the state were contributing N1, 000,000 each for his release. The kidnappers brought the paper to him and demanded an outrageous sum for his release, based on that report.

“I was able to debunk that story as a lie, that it was not true and that settled it,” said Bamigbetan. Unknown to him, however, another group involved in the negotiation for his release had told his family the same outrageous ransom. They kept pestering his wife for the money until Saturday night.

“They were still calling me up to the last minute asking for money. They said I should prepare to become a widow and that they will tell me where to pick his body. I was tired and afraid. I began to beg them. But I thank God he is back and alive,” Mrs Bamigbetan said.

According to Bamigbetan, the kidnappers were seven and they divided themselves into two categories. One group was hardened; it was responsible for the threat and abuse while the other group was more humane. “After the younger guys took over, things became easy; they gave me a mattress to sleep on, cooked indomie for me, bought me fruits, washed my clothes themselves and forced me to eat and take my bath.”

The kidnappers seemed to have been forced into criminality by the social circumstances in the country.

“The guys involved made a very clear point, many of them were graduates, have not been in jobs for years, and many of them have gone to take that risk, according to them, because they cannot match the millions and the billions that we talk about with what comes into their own pockets. They cannot understand why we budget billions of naira and graduates cannot get jobs so they have come to take their anger against the system. In that circumstance, one was just a victim of circumstance, it is clear no one is safe. It can happen to anybody at any time, but I don’t think we are prepared to handle this,” Bamigbetan said.

The kidnappers would not release him, until he had made a promise to take a very strong message to the government. “They asked me to take this message to the government – that they are angry. They said how can an engineering graduate not have a job for eight years and the government is budgeting billions annually. They said as the elections are coming, they too will be doing their elections with their guns.

“The boys said they just wanted to take their own share of the national cake, which has been denied them.” Bamigbetan sees this as another evidence of the rot of Nigeria under the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) -led government.

“It’s a social question; the need to redistribute wealth in favour of the poor and the working class has become such a very imperative necessity, if Nigeria is going to move forward. That is the message they asked me to pass on – to let people know that they are not happy having to carry AK 47 around town at the risk to their own lives. Some of them are Human Resources graduates; some of them are Engineering graduates and this is what they have to do to survive. It’s a sad commentary on how the PDP government has been able to run this country. It shows you very clearly that no sane Nigerian seeing the challenges that we have should ever allow this party continue in power. The PDP government is really exposing us to danger.”

But there was still the issue of a ransom, some online news platforms claimed N15m was paid to secure his release. Bamigbetan would not confirm if such money was paid.

He said: “All of us are still exposed; there is no protection. There could be reprisals. Who is going to protect me against reprisals? I don’t want to be too salacious with information. I may not be able to control the consequences. It is not the issue of ransom, but safety. Former Anambra Deputy Governor paid a ransom and he was still killed.”

Bamigbetan seemed to have become a changed person after his ordeal. He has rededicated his life to the service of his people and to God. He also called for a special status for Lagos State to be able to cater for the millions of residents and migrants from other states. But he insisted he would not use a police security detail.

“I don’t use security details; I have never used security details. I am not too sure if it will change now. I believe in God’s protection, I work for the poor and believe that the prayers of those people will save me. I made my mind that if I work for the people they will pray for me. It is a stronger power.” undecided



I AM THAT MUMU PERSON

37 Likes

Re: Kidnapped Lagos Council Chairman Relives Ordeal by Kzinne: 11:11am On Apr 22, 2013
Re: Kidnapped Lagos Council Chairman Relives Ordeal by Nightshift(m): 11:12am On Apr 22, 2013
If only more and more corrupt Nigerian politicians are kidnapped, Nigeria's future will be better. It's like delivering social justice.... The thieving political class have destroyed the lives of millions of Nigerians. It's time to fight back by all means!

1 Like

Re: Kidnapped Lagos Council Chairman Relives Ordeal by 76Naira(m): 11:12am On Apr 22, 2013
You still have the presence of mind to point political fingers. Be it PDP or AC or non partisan office holders, we need to fix Nigeria.
It's just a shame what Nigeria has turned into.

1 Like

Re: Kidnapped Lagos Council Chairman Relives Ordeal by hrmkz: 11:14am On Apr 22, 2013
Guys dey colect there share of the national cake.

make them just limit am to dis group of people, to serve as wake up call.
Re: Kidnapped Lagos Council Chairman Relives Ordeal by emmanuel4758(m): 11:14am On Apr 22, 2013
Akpa ife: And 1 mumu person will come n quote d whole story
let juju priest develope technology as been don in american so we can use it to capture terorist kidnapers nt only usin der power to kil tufiakwa to african can we ever do tangible tin just watch usa dey capture boston bomber wit cctv spyware but here in nigerian can we develope such i believe dat african can develope technology but we think abnormal
Re: Kidnapped Lagos Council Chairman Relives Ordeal by Akpaife(m): 11:15am On Apr 22, 2013
iamswizz:



I AM THAT MUMU PERSON
Keep fooling ur self
Re: Kidnapped Lagos Council Chairman Relives Ordeal by lankspex(m): 11:16am On Apr 22, 2013
Thank God for his return,looks like the poor have started eating the rich

1 Like

Re: Kidnapped Lagos Council Chairman Relives Ordeal by wellmax(m): 11:16am On Apr 22, 2013
hmmm, May God redeem this nation.
Re: Kidnapped Lagos Council Chairman Relives Ordeal by ednut1(m): 11:25am On Apr 22, 2013
i lived in ejigbo from 1994 to 2005, my papa house still dey der, dat area has rarely seen govt impact since, bad roads, shitty schools,DONT BE DECEIVED THIS LOOKS LIKE A PLANNED STUNT, AIMED AT GETTIN PUBLIC SYMPATHY AND DISSIN PDD AND PREPARING HIM FOR HIS NEXT POST, WICH IS EIDA COMMISIONER OR SENATOR, i know dis dude and he is damn cunny, dats how dey gave him best chairman in lag, ejigbo of 1994 is still d same no development, YEYE ROLLING

8 Likes

Re: Kidnapped Lagos Council Chairman Relives Ordeal by softangel(m): 11:29am On Apr 22, 2013
Thank you Lord for rescuing him from the den of lions. Hmmmmmm!. While we pray for everyone's provision and protection.
Re: Kidnapped Lagos Council Chairman Relives Ordeal by igomen: 11:32am On Apr 22, 2013
The kidnappers seemed to have been forced into criminality by the social circumstances in the country.
There is always a reason to go into crime, but there are better reasons to discover your true potentials....its hardship and ingenuity that brought out the best in some sport stars and celebrities we celebrate today.

2 Likes

Re: Kidnapped Lagos Council Chairman Relives Ordeal by GenOrumov: 11:34am On Apr 22, 2013
iamswizz:



I AM THAT MUMU PERSON
A goat will always remain a goat.
Re: Kidnapped Lagos Council Chairman Relives Ordeal by ninja4life(m): 11:34am On Apr 22, 2013
I'm happy for him hope he learnt his lesson dat boys are not smiling its only a matter of WHEN and not IF there will be reprisal against all those politicians in power today.politicians sha using every oppurtunity to politicise everyting wat has pdp alone got to do with dis d fault is with ALL of dem stealing nigerians money and mortgaging our future

1 Like

Re: Kidnapped Lagos Council Chairman Relives Ordeal by femi4: 11:41am On Apr 22, 2013
jigawatts: Thank God for his life.

NO ONE IS SAFE

BUT boys get mind sha undecided
How far with your Dad, any news about him? has he be found? Its almost a year now
Re: Kidnapped Lagos Council Chairman Relives Ordeal by ifyalways(f): 11:44am On Apr 22, 2013
Thank God for his life.
Many have gone. . .be careful.
Re: Kidnapped Lagos Council Chairman Relives Ordeal by yuzedo: 11:52am On Apr 22, 2013
iamswizz:



I AM THAT MUMU PERSON
grin grin grin

1 Like

Re: Kidnapped Lagos Council Chairman Relives Ordeal by alpamo6: 12:05pm On Apr 22, 2013
I sincerely thank GOD for his life, but I hope is not arranged kidnapping to rubbish PDP govt. Naija anything is possible.

1 Like

Re: Kidnapped Lagos Council Chairman Relives Ordeal by meglith(m): 12:05pm On Apr 22, 2013
u are not mumu but a stupid idiot
Re: Kidnapped Lagos Council Chairman Relives Ordeal by creativemusic: 12:07pm On Apr 22, 2013
cheesy cheesy cheesy cheesy cheesy cheesy cheesy cheesy cheesy cheesy wink
Re: Kidnapped Lagos Council Chairman Relives Ordeal by basadenet: 12:17pm On Apr 22, 2013
Slyr0x:

http://thenationonlineng.net/new/news/kidnapped-lagos-council-chairman-relives-ordeal/
The story is touchy and i sympathize with Mr bambgetan and his family for this unwarranted ordeal but the problem is not that of PDP alone but all the parties in power which include ACN, CPC, ANPP, LP and others.
Re: Kidnapped Lagos Council Chairman Relives Ordeal by mkoabiola: 12:24pm On Apr 22, 2013
Do dey av a course in kidnapping. because ds guys ar xpert and it is lik dey ar trained for kidnapping alone.
Hw do dey collect d cash?
Dem dey try ooooo.
Bt d chairman no try for ejigbo LG,he is jus adding salt and pepper to d story.

1 Like

Re: Kidnapped Lagos Council Chairman Relives Ordeal by Afam4eva(m): 12:28pm On Apr 22, 2013
This story seems like a farce to me. It seems like something that was orchestrated by a certain party to make the other party look bad. Instead of him to be thanking God for his life, he's playing politics with the situation. Btw, this is the by far the best kidnapping script that i've read. I hope the movie is released soonest.

4 Likes

Re: Kidnapped Lagos Council Chairman Relives Ordeal by farem: 12:30pm On Apr 22, 2013
ednut1: i lived in ejigbo from 1994 to 2005, my papa house still dey der, dat area has rarely seen govt impact since, bad roads, shitty schools,DONT BE DECEIVED THIS LOOKS LIKE A PLANNED STUNT, AIMED AT GETTIN PUBLIC SYMPATHY AND DISSIN PDD AND PREPARING HIM FOR HIS NEXT POST, WICH IS EIDA COMMISIONER OR SENATOR, i know dis dude and he is damn cunny, dats how dey gave him best chairman in lag, ejigbo of 1994 is still d same no development, YEYE ROLLING
[color=#990000][/color]
EVEN WHEN ONE OF YOUR BROTHER-KIDNAPPERS JUMPED TO HIS DEATH, YOU STILL BELIEVE IT'S STAGE-MANAGED. IS IT UNTIL YOU DIE THAT YOU WILL BELIEVE THIS GLARING EVENT?
Re: Kidnapped Lagos Council Chairman Relives Ordeal by Fishout(m): 12:30pm On Apr 22, 2013
l'm not blame those guys,lt is our leaders fault. UNEMPLOYMENT

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