A MUSLIM YORUBA LADY WRITES TO THE WORLD. Horror in the kidnappers’ den

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Abraham Madu

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Jun 3, 2019, 1:19:52 AM6/3/19
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KIDNAPPED IN NIGERIA BY FULANI HOODLUMS, A MUSLIM YORUBA LADY WRITES TO THE WORLD.

Horror in the kidnappers’ den
It took me a long time of reflections to put this piece together. First, let me thank my husband for the emotional support, the counselling and for his belief in the creator of heaven and earth which we call God or Allah.
The journey began in Auchi. We had travelled to Akure on a Monday, stayed with my husband’s relations in the outskirt of this ancient town. In the evening of Monday, we visited the palace for dinner, my husband being a close friend to son of the King.
On Tuesday, we left for Ibadan, via the Akure-Ilesa road. Our plan was that after attending the wedding in Auchi, we would travel with (my husband) to Lagos, stay for few weeks before returning abroad where I had lived with my husband and children for more than a decade. We were in the car of a close family friend, an accountant who gave his time and energy for our comfort.

We were five in the car, myself, my husband, our daughter, a lady who is my husband’s niece who had joined us in Akure with the hope of travelling with us to Lagos.
The driver accountant maintained a normal speed. He drove professionally. That gave me a lot of comfort and I felt I could find time to sleep a bit. My daughter was next to me, just 9. She was coming to Nigeria with me for the second time.
Shortly after the Ijare junction, the driver felt the wagon’s tires ruptured and decided to pack the car with the hope of changing the tires.

It was like a film. In a jiffy, motley crowd of armed men in military uniform came out of the bush. They fired at the boot of the car. Ahead of us, five of them came out of the bush, another two came from the rear. My daughter screamed: “Mummy, daddy, what’s going on”. There was no time to say a word. They marched us through into the bush, firing into the sky. They hit me on my chest, hit my daughter on her head, blood oozed. At this time, it was better to kill me. I shouted at one of the armed men. His response was hell. He went straight for my private part, tore my dress with his gun. The others ripped my dresses. I was left with my undies. My husband and my daughter started crying. Two of them dug their teeth into my breasts.
While attending a secondary school in Adamawa, I had lived with some Fulani, so I understand a few Fulani words. I started pleading, at least for my daughter. To my shock, at gun point, they removed the dress of my little girl, one of them carried her on his head as my baby struggled, shouting “Daddy, mummy, what’s going on. Help me.”

I could not help myself. We were marched for 9 hours. I was half naked. My daughter was totally naked. A felt her tears was like a stream of blood on her cheek. Our phones had been seized. We ended up in an ungoverned region in the thick of the forest. We met a well organized group.
There were some kidnapped victims, I saw two women, two ladies and three men. There were some people with their legs chained to trees. They were as if half dead. We were separated. I was separated from my husband. My daughter was taken away. I only heard her scream intermittently. I did not know what they were doing to her. 
These men, now about two dozen had a full kitchen, they had a huge camp and a traditional medical team. But the camps appear isolated from each other. We heard noises afar indicating it might be nuclear settlements of camps. Right in my presence, I saw them pack the remains of a woman. They took her and buried her few meters away from us. She had tribal marks.
I cannot describe the agony of 6 days in captivity in this little piece. I cannot talk about how they asked my husband to choose between myself being raped or that his daughter be raped. My husband broke down in uncontrollable tears. One of them hit him saying “Yoruba bastard, you dey cry. Idiot.” 
They now gave him the option that he should be raped by one homosexual among them. My husband is a devout Muslim. He told them homosexual and rape of any kind was against Islam. They hit him with the butt of AK 47: “What do you know about Islam?”
You can imagine, you are being asked to choose between being raped by a homosexual, your daughter, just nine years old, or your wife being raped? They gave the forth option, if you fail to choose, they would rape my daughter, rape my husband and rape me.
I made myself the sacrificial lamb. My husband begged, saying they should name their price. One of them asked him to bend down. Three beastly criminals sat on his back, jumping until he was too weak to stand. I was not allowed to put on any additional cloth on my body for 24 hours. The rain fell once. I became the relic and a sexual museum for the armed men who in turn addressed me and asked questions about my financial standing. New Fulani men joined the camp. They organized military training for the new Fulani men that came, teaching them how to shoot and walk through circles of glowing fire.
We were not released until after 6 days. We had to walk the same zik-zag journey back to the main road, our eyes blindfolded. During the negotiation to pay, they said the money was not for them alone that they had to settle “those who send us”. For me, I see a thriving, organized crime supported by powerful political interests.
Now, I do not think we were released to freedom after paying a whopping 8 million naira. I do not think we can ever be free, we can never be free, from the anguish, the psychological trauma, the nightmares we suffered, the occasional fits of our daughter, her waking up midnight behaving strangely, her asking the same question over and over: “Mummy, mummy, why?. Why.?” I do not have any answer.
In my life, I have never passed through a torture chamber like this. I do not think any society should let this happen. I do not know the fate of those we met, and about 7 other people brought during the 6 days we were in captivity. What I saw was a nation that has collapsed but pretends she lives, a people on life support. Crime is not restricted to Fulani people alone. We have Yoruba criminals. But I don’t Yoruba criminals are not as beastly. These elements are savages. I can’t imagine Yoruba thieves going to Sokoto or Maiduguri to kidnap Fulani people and keep them in their own bushes. It gives me mental torture that this is happening and some fools are even trying to justify or look for excuses. 
Well, as a devout Muslim, myself and my family have taken solace in Allah, not the Nigerian police, not the Army, not the governments. We have taken our faith the way it came. I thank God that we have successfully returned to where we live, thousands of miles from Nigeria. We thank God that we have made a vow: Never shall me, any of my children or husband in our lifetime visit Nigeria. Our remains any time we die, will also not be buried in Nigeria. It was a suggestion by my daughter which we all adopted.
I pity the country. I pity her people who continuously walk like the living dead. I pity those who parade themselves as leaders, because they know nothing about what is going on and the abyss the country sunk already.

I pity Yoruba people, oh, I pity you. I pity my people. For me the issue is not about President Buhari. Democracy can produce anything, even the worst in the society.

What I worry about is the conspiracy of silence by the people themselves, the ignorance, the treachery and the illusion that one day, things will get better through another election.

Since I was born in Nigeria, each year had led from bad to worse and on and on. I do not have a solution to what is going on, but I think very soon, hell will let loose upon the earth as long as there is no law and order and anarchy and the rule of brutes is the order of the day. 
Once again, there cannot be anything more comforting than my husband who saw what I went through but has been able to encourage me and even encouraged me to write this little piece after months of agony and sociological imbalance. Good night Nigerians.

Copied from a forum of Nigerian Women in Diaspora.


Wale Adedayo

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Jun 3, 2019, 10:18:01 AM6/3/19
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It is a propaganda piece meant to goad activist Yoruba youths into rash action. While it is true kidnappers are having a field day in some of the places mentioned, this particular one is false. Very false too!

Wale Adedayo

Publisher, Uhuru Times (http://www.uhurutimes.com)
Alternate email: wale.a...@uhurutimes.com
Tel: 08133878568
bb pin: 2ABB2682
Skype: wale.adedayo
Twitter: @waleadedayo


On Mon, 3 Jun 2019 at 06:19, Abraham Madu abraha...@yahoo.com [NaijaObserver] <NaijaO...@yahoogroups.com> wrote:

KIDNAPPED IN NIGERIA BY FULANI HOODLUMS, A MUSLIM YORUBA LADY WRITES TO THE WORLD.

Horror in the kidnappers’ den
It took me a long time of reflections to put this piece together. First, let me thank my husband for the emotional support, the counselling and for his belief in the creator of heaven and earth which we call God or Allah.
The journey began in Auchi. We had travelled to Akure on a Monday, stayed with my husband’s relations in the outskirt of this ancient town. In the evening of Monday, we visited the palace for dinner, my husband being a close friend to son of the King.

On Tuesday, we left for Ibadan, via the Akure-Ilesa road. Our plan was that after attending the wedding in Auchi, we would travel with (my husband) to Lagos, stay for few weeks before returning abroad where I had lived with my husband and children for more than a decade. We were in the car of a close family friend, an accountant who gave his time and energy for our comfort..

We were five in the car, myself, my husband, our daughter, a lady who is my husband’s niece who had joined us in Akure with the hope of travelling with us to Lagos.
The driver accountant maintained a normal speed. He drove professionally. That gave me a lot of comfort and I felt I could find time to sleep a bit. My daughter was next to me, just 9. She was coming to Nigeria with me for the second time.
Shortly after the Ijare junction, the driver felt the wagon’s tires ruptured and decided to pack the car with the hope of changing the tires.

It was like a film. In a jiffy, motley crowd of armed men in military uniform came out of the bush. They fired at the boot of the car. Ahead of us, five of them came out of the bush, another two came from the rear. My daughter screamed: “Mummy, daddy, what’s going on”. There was no time to say a word. They marched us through into the bush, firing into the sky. They hit me on my chest, hit my daughter on her head, blood oozed. At this time, it was better to kill me. I shouted at one of the armed men. His response was hell. He went straight for my private part, tore my dress with his gun. The others ripped my dresses. I was left with my undies. My husband and my daughter started crying. Two of them dug their teeth into my breasts.
While attending a secondary school in Adamawa, I had lived with some Fulani, so I understand a few Fulani words. I started pleading, at least for my daughter. To my shock, at gun point, they removed the dress of my little girl, one of them carried her on his head as my baby struggled, shouting “Daddy, mummy, what’s going on. Help me.”

I could not help myself. We were marched for 9 hours. I was half naked. My daughter was totally naked. A felt her tears was like a stream of blood on her cheek. Our phones had been seized. We ended up in an ungoverned region in the thick of the forest. We met a well organized group.
There were some kidnapped victims, I saw two women, two ladies and three men. There were some people with their legs chained to trees. They were as if half dead. We were separated. I was separated from my husband. My daughter was taken away. I only heard her scream intermittently. I did not know what they were doing to her. 
These men, now about two dozen had a full kitchen, they had a huge camp and a traditional medical team. But the camps appear isolated from each other. We heard noises afar indicating it might be nuclear settlements of camps. Right in my presence, I saw them pack the remains of a woman. They took her and buried her few meters away from us. She had tribal marks.
I cannot describe the agony of 6 days in captivity in this little piece. I cannot talk about how they asked my husband to choose between myself being raped or that his daughter be raped. My husband broke down in uncontrollable tears. One of them hit him saying “Yoruba bastard, you dey cry. Idiot.” 
They now gave him the option that he should be raped by one homosexual among them. My husband is a devout Muslim. He told them homosexual and rape of any kind was against Islam. They hit him with the butt of AK 47: “What do you know about Islam?”
You can imagine, you are being asked to choose between being raped by a homosexual, your daughter, just nine years old, or your wife being raped? They gave the forth option, if you fail to choose, they would rape my daughter, rape my husband and rape me.
I made myself the sacrificial lamb. My husband begged, saying they should name their price. One of them asked him to bend down. Three beastly criminals sat on his back, jumping until he was too weak to stand. I was not allowed to put on any additional cloth on my body for 24 hours. The rain fell once. I became the relic and a sexual museum for the armed men who in turn addressed me and asked questions about my financial standing. New Fulani men joined the camp. They organized military training for the new Fulani men that came, teaching them how to shoot and walk through circles of glowing fire.
We were not released until after 6 days. We had to walk the same zik-zag journey back to the main road, our eyes blindfolded. During the negotiation to pay, they said the money was not for them alone that they had to settle “those who send us”. For me, I see a thriving, organized crime supported by powerful political interests.
Now, I do not think we were released to freedom after paying a whopping 8 million naira. I do not think we can ever be free, we can never be free, from the anguish, the psychological trauma, the nightmares we suffered, the occasional fits of our daughter, her waking up midnight behaving strangely, her asking the same question over and over: “Mummy, mummy, why?. Why.?” I do not have any answer.
In my life, I have never passed through a torture chamber like this. I do not think any society should let this happen. I do not know the fate of those we met, and about 7 other people brought during the 6 days we were in captivity. What I saw was a nation that has collapsed but pretends she lives, a people on life support. Crime is not restricted to Fulani people alone. We have Yoruba criminals. But I don’t Yoruba criminals are not as beastly. These elements are savages. I can’t imagine Yoruba thieves going to Sokoto or Maiduguri to kidnap Fulani people and keep them in their own bushes. It gives me mental torture that this is happening and some fools are even trying to justify or look for excuses. 
Well, as a devout Muslim, myself and my family have taken solace in Allah, not the Nigerian police, not the Army, not the governments. We have taken our faith the way it came. I thank God that we have successfully returned to where we live, thousands of miles from Nigeria. We thank God that we have made a vow: Never shall me, any of my children or husband in our lifetime visit Nigeria. Our remains any time we die, will also not be buried in Nigeria. It was a suggestion by my daughter which we all adopted.
I pity the country. I pity her people who continuously walk like the living dead. I pity those who parade themselves as leaders, because they know nothing about what is going on and the abyss the country sunk already.

I pity Yoruba people, oh, I pity you. I pity my people. For me the issue is not about President Buhari. Democracy can produce anything, even the worst in the society.

What I worry about is the conspiracy of silence by the people themselves, the ignorance, the treachery and the illusion that one day, things will get better through another election.

Since I was born in Nigeria, each year had led from bad to worse and on and on. I do not have a solution to what is going on, but I think very soon, hell will let loose upon the earth as long as there is no law and order and anarchy and the rule of brutes is the order of the day. 
Once again, there cannot be anything more comforting than my husband who saw what I went through but has been able to encourage me and even encouraged me to write this little piece after months of agony and sociological imbalance. Good night Nigerians.

Copied from a forum of Nigerian Women in Diaspora.


__,_._,___

Maxima1757 maxima1757

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Jun 3, 2019, 12:59:43 PM6/3/19
to Abraham Madu, TAJUDEEN RAJI, Zik Project, TalkNaija, Yahoo Groups, Nebukadineze Adiele, Ayo Ojutalayo, Roth Fash, Talkhard, Topcrest Topcrest, Afis 'Deinde, Ola Kassim, Google Inc., Chuhwuemeka Okala, Vincent Modebelu, Joe Igbokwe, Obi Nwakama, Philip Achusim, Yahoo! Inc., Naija Observer, Daniel Akusobi, G. Ukaegbu, Dr. KC Prince Asagwara, Ishola Williams, Imperial Merchant Trust Ltd, Ibukunolu Alao Babajide, Politics Naija, ALUKO Mobolaji, Yahoo Groups, Google Inc., Chukwuma S. Agwunobi, Nebukadineze Adiele' via NaijaEvent, Mgbajala Eziokwu, Vin Otuonye, Salihu Mustafa, BUSKA OLADOSU, Baduba54, Wharf Snake, Ishola Williams, Tony Eluemunor, Leye Ige, Yahoogroups, Collins Ezebuihe, Ozodi Osuji, Zubbie Ekwueme, Charles Maduka, Dr. Humphrey Ihejirikah, Zubbie Ekwueme, Africa Today, Chido Nwangwu, M.D. Okenwa R. Nwosu, Nnanta Uwadineke, Stephen Uche, Johnson Anyadike, Wilson Iguade, Igbo Basics, M.D.' via LOWER NIGER CONGRESS Okenwa R. Nwosu, Facebook Groups, Chidi Igwe, Rex Marinus, Fubara David-West, Okey Dike, Kingsley Nnabuagha, Ken Asagwara, Naija Talks, N. H. Ibanga, CELESTINE ALARIBE, SE. PE. Jerome Niang Yakubu, Evelyn Joe, Ozodi Osuji, Ibukunolu Alao Babajide, Agu1950, Maigoro A. Jos, Ocapharm420, Chiwuikem Ihediwa, Africanherald, JEROME NIANG, Aginam O., Talkhard, Nigeria World, Afis Deinde, Igbo Radio, Jerome Niang Yakubu S.E P.E, Naijaintellects, Adeniran Adeboye, Ugo Harris Ukandu, Dan Obi, Ayotade Ojutalayo, Talkhard, Chuckwuma S. Agwunobi, ALEN IGHEDOSA, Festus Okere, Ozodi Osuji, Joseph Igietseme, Abraham Madu

May the God that we all worship make what the liar who wrote the article happen to him or her exactly as he or she wrote it - ase wa! 

Anyone who read the story and believes it can come and buy a bridge, Brooklyn bridge, I have for sale.


The usual taqiyyah.
 
Lying in the face of truth to cover crime and illusion. A mandatory religious lying in one of their books of abrahamic abominations. Just as one of them denied their master when he was caught to be crucified. The purpose is to kill to cover a lie. Just as all of the abrahamic abominations are by nature.

First, the word "ALL" worshiping these insecure "gods" is a lie in itself, for majority of humanity does not and will eventually not worship such falsehood.
Second, who is the "liar"? The one recounting what people are experiencing or the one denying the reality of what is happening?
Third, what is the need for threatening others with death and violence if you are speaking the truth? 
Fourth, there is no "ase" in falsehood, so insisting on taqiyya will only lead to your own extinction. 

Where these false abominations are spreading from, they can't count on these their tribal "gods" to protect them from each other's genocidal hatred even though they profess to be worshiping the same "god", and, what is more, they profess to be children of the same herder father. Instead, they are stockpiling nuclear bombs, guns, and other weapons of mass death, bombing themselves with planes and rockets, beheading people and killing, spreading desolation all over their lands and the planet, to propagate the demonic lies of this their "god". 

What is to worship in a "god" whose "message" (message of what?) can only be spread through desolation, death and fear, by ignorant and criminal messengers? What an insecure "god" is that? 

A "god" that cannot protect them from themselves will certainly not protect you from them, when they bring their herder abomination to kill you and take your land. If they are collecting weapons and bombing all over the place instead of just "praying" to this their "almighty" god to protect them, why are you praying to the same lie?

Because religion is a human contraption, it will go into extinction, when it generates the opposite of the propose for which it was set up by humans.

Religions that spread by destruction (if it is not jihad, it is crusade) and hate (especially of the genocidal type - just hear them talk about wiping each other off the face of the earth, especially when they profess to be children of the same father?? Wow!!) are marked for extinction. Regardless of the lies they use to present it otherwise, these run counter to the purpose of humans to live in harmony (symbiosis) with themselves and their world, not by monoclonal (cancerous) parasitic spread.

If you are human, be aware that your intellect has been suborned and suffused with the illusion and falsehood of an "all powerful" "god". That "god" needs "weak," insecure and parasitic people (mostly pseudo-human and neanderthal) to spread word of its "goodness" by killing, beheading, burning and looting, which they turn around and call jihad/crusade.

Wake up, Human. Your so-called "salvation" is NOT in the hands of these false "gods" Rather, your salvation is in your hands. Make no mistake about it. 


Human know thyself ...

Those who have ears ...

O.E.


On Monday, June 3, 2019, 8:20:53 AM EDT, TAJUDEEN RAJI tr...@aol.com [NigerianID] <NigerianI...@yahoogroups.com> wrote:


 

May the God that we all worship make what the liar who wrote the article happen to him or her exactly as he or she wrote it - ase wa! 


Anyone who read the story and believes it can come and buy a bridge, Brooklyn bridge, I have for sale.

Thanks,
Tajudeen Raji 

Sent from my iPhone

On Jun 3, 2019, at 1:19 AM, Abraham Madu <abraha...@yahoo.com> wrote:

KIDNAPPED IN NIGERIA BY FULANI HOODLUMS, A MUSLIM YORUBA LADY WRITES TO THE WORLD.

Horror in the kidnappers’ den
It took me a long time of reflections to put this piece together. First, let me thank my husband for the emotional support, the counselling and for his belief in the creator of heaven and earth which we call God or Allah.
The journey began in Auchi. We had travelled to Akure on a Monday, stayed with my husband’s relations in the outskirt of this ancient town. In the evening of Monday, we visited the palace for dinner, my husband being a close friend to son of the King.
On Tuesday, we left for Ibadan, via the Akure-Ilesa road. Our plan was that after attending the wedding in Auchi, we would travel with (my husband) to Lagos, stay for few weeks before returning abroad where I had lived with my husband and children for more than a decade. We were in the car of a close family friend, an accountant who gave his time and energy for our comfort.

We were five in the car, myself, my husband, our daughter, a lady who is my husband’s niece who had joined us in Akure with the hope of travelling with us to Lagos.
The driver accountant maintained a normal speed. He drove professionally. That gave me a lot of comfort and I felt I could find time to sleep a bit. My daughter was next to me, just 9. She was coming to Nigeria with me for the second time.
Shortly after the Ijare junction, the driver felt the wagon’s tires ruptured and decided to pack the car with the hope of changing the tires.

It was like a film. In a jiffy, motley crowd of armed men in military uniform came out of the bush.. They fired at the boot of the car. Ahead of us, five of them came out of the bush, another two came from the rear. My daughter screamed: “Mummy, daddy, what’s going on”. There was no time to say a word. They marched us through into the bush, firing into the sky. They hit me on my chest, hit my daughter on her head, blood oozed. At this time, it was better to kill me. I shouted at one of the armed men. His response was hell. He went straight for my private part, tore my dress with his gun. The others ripped my dresses. I was left with my undies. My husband and my daughter started crying. Two of them dug their teeth into my breasts.
While attending a secondary school in Adamawa, I had lived with some Fulani, so I understand a few Fulani words. I started pleading, at least for my daughter.. To my shock, at gun point, they removed the dress of my little girl, one of them carried her on his head as my baby struggled, shouting “Daddy, mummy, what’s going on. Help me.”

I could not help myself. We were marched for 9 hours. I was half naked. My daughter was totally naked. A felt her tears was like a stream of blood on her cheek. Our phones had been seized. We ended up in an ungoverned region in the thick of the forest. We met a well organized group..


There were some kidnapped victims, I saw two women, two ladies and three men. There were some people with their legs chained to trees. They were as if half dead. We were separated. I was separated from my husband. My daughter was taken away. I only heard her scream intermittently. I did not know what they were doing to her. 
These men, now about two dozen had a full kitchen, they had a huge camp and a traditional medical team. But the camps appear isolated from each other. We heard noises afar indicating it might be nuclear settlements of camps. Right in my presence, I saw them pack the remains of a woman. They took her and buried her few meters away from us. She had tribal marks.
I cannot describe the agony of 6 days in captivity in this little piece. I cannot talk about how they asked my husband to choose between myself being raped or that his daughter be raped. My husband broke down in uncontrollable tears. One of them hit him saying “Yoruba bastard, you dey cry. Idiot.” 
They now gave him the option that he should be raped by one homosexual among them. My husband is a devout Muslim. He told them homosexual and rape of any kind was against Islam. They hit him with the butt of AK 47: “What do you know about Islam?”
You can imagine, you are being asked to choose between being raped by a homosexual, your daughter, just nine years old, or your wife being raped? They gave the forth option, if you fail to choose, they would rape my daughter, rape my husband and rape me.
I made myself the sacrificial lamb. My husband begged, saying they should name their price. One of them asked him to bend down. Three beastly criminals sat on his back, jumping until he was too weak to stand. I was not allowed to put on any additional cloth on my body for 24 hours. The rain fell once. I became the relic and a sexual museum for the armed men who in turn addressed me and asked questions about my financial standing. New Fulani men joined the camp. They organized military training for the new Fulani men that came, teaching them how to shoot and walk through circles of glowing fire.
We were not released until after 6 days. We had to walk the same zik-zag journey back to the main road, our eyes blindfolded. During the negotiation to pay, they said the money was not for them alone that they had to settle “those who send us”. For me, I see a thriving, organized crime supported by powerful political interests.
Now, I do not think we were released to freedom after paying a whopping 8 million naira. I do not think we can ever be free, we can never be free, from the anguish, the psychological trauma, the nightmares we suffered, the occasional fits of our daughter, her waking up midnight behaving strangely, her asking the same question over and over: “Mummy, mummy, why?. Why.?” I do not have any answer.
In my life, I have never passed through a torture chamber like this. I do not think any society should let this happen. I do not know the fate of those we met, and about 7 other people brought during the 6 days we were in captivity. What I saw was a nation that has collapsed but pretends she lives, a people on life support. Crime is not restricted to Fulani people alone. We have Yoruba criminals. But I don’t Yoruba criminals are not as beastly. These elements are savages. I can’t imagine Yoruba thieves going to Sokoto or Maiduguri to kidnap Fulani people and keep them in their own bushes. It gives me mental torture that this is happening and some fools are even trying to justify or look for excuses. 
Well, as a devout Muslim, myself and my family have taken solace in Allah, not the Nigerian police, not the Army, not the governments. We have taken our faith the way it came. I thank God that we have successfully returned to where we live, thousands of miles from Nigeria. We thank God that we have made a vow: Never shall me, any of my children or husband in our lifetime visit Nigeria. Our remains any time we die, will also not be buried in Nigeria. It was a suggestion by my daughter which we all adopted.
I pity the country. I pity her people who continuously walk like the living dead. I pity those who parade themselves as leaders, because they know nothing about what is going on and the abyss the country sunk already.

I pity Yoruba people, oh, I pity you. I pity my people. For me the issue is not about President Buhari. Democracy can produce anything, even the worst in the society.

What I worry about is the conspiracy of silence by the people themselves, the ignorance, the treachery and the illusion that one day, things will get better through another election.

Since I was born in Nigeria, each year had led from bad to worse and on and on. I do not have a solution to what is going on, but I think very soon, hell will let loose upon the earth as long as there is no law and order and anarchy and the rule of brutes is the order of the day. 

Once again, there cannot be anything more comforting than my husband who saw what I went through but has been able to encourage me and even encouraged me to write this little piece after months of agony and sociological imbalance. Good night Nigerians..

Copied from a forum of Nigerian Women in Diaspora.


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unread,
Jun 4, 2019, 1:55:18 AM6/4/19
to Ezeana Igirigi Achusim, afis 'Deinde, Ogedi Ohajekwe, africanw...@googlegroups.com, nigeria obser nigerobser, Zik Project, TalkNaija, Nebukadineze Adiele, Ayo Ojutalayo, Roth Fash, Talkhard, Topcrest Topcrest, Ola Kassim, Chuhwuemeka Okala, Vincent Modebelu, Joe Igbokwe, Obi Nwakama, Yahoo! Inc., Naija Observer, Daniel Akusobi, G. Ukaegbu, Dr. KC Prince Asagwara, Ishola Williams, Imperial Merchant Trust Ltd, Tajudeen Raji, Ibukunolu Alao Babajide, Politics Naija, ALUKO Mobolaji, Yahoo Groups, Google Inc., Chukwuma S. Agwunobi, Nebukadineze Adiele' via NaijaEvent, Mgbajala Eziokwu, Vin Otuonye, Salihu Mustafa, BUSKA OLADOSU, Baduba54, Wharf Snake, Ishola Williams, Tony Eluemunor, Leye Ige, Yahoogroups, Collins Ezebuihe, Ozodi Osuji, Zubbie Ekwueme, Charles Maduka, Dr. Humphrey Ihejirikah, Zubbie Ekwueme, Africa Today, Chido Nwangwu, M.D. Okenwa R. Nwosu, Nnanta Uwadineke, Stephen Uche, Johnson Anyadike, Wilson Iguade, Igbo Basics, M.D.' via LOWER NIGER CONGRESS Okenwa R. Nwosu, Facebook Groups, Chidi Igwe, Rex Marinus, Fubara David-West, Okey Dike, Kingsley Nnabuagha, Ken Asagwara, Naija Talks, N. H. Ibanga, CELESTINE ALARIBE, SE. PE. Jerome Niang Yakubu, Evelyn Joe, Ozodi Osuji, Ibukunolu Alao Babajide, Agu1950, Maigoro A. Jos, Ocapharm420, Chiwuikem Ihediwa, Africanherald, JEROME NIANG, Aginam O., Talkhard, Nigeria World, Afis Deinde, Igbo Radio, Jerome Niang Yakubu S.E P.E, Naijaintellects, Adeniran Adeboye, Ugo Harris Ukandu, Dan Obi, Ayotade Ojutalayo, Talkhard, Chuckwuma S. Agwunobi, ALEN IGHEDOSA, Festus Okere, Ozodi Osuji, Joseph Igietseme
It is true kidnappers are having a field day in some of the places mentioned.

Wale Adedayo


On Monday, June 3, 2019, 9:20:18 PM CDT, afis 'Deinde <odide...@gmail.com> wrote:


Ezeana, why don’t you exhume your dead daddy to go fight?
Omo Inyanminrin jatijati.
Afis
Sent from my iPhone

On Jun 3, 2019, at 9:49 PM, Ezeana Igirigi Achusim <eze...@yahoo.com> wrote:

Fakes news is not this detailed. I understand the Fulani herdsmen paid Falae another visit. Is that fake news? 

And I am

Ezeana Igirigi Achusim
Odi-Isaa
Nwa Dim Orioha AkA Onyeukwu 

Sent from my iPhone

On Jun 3, 2019, at 7:52 PM, Ogedi Ohajekwe <ged...@gmail.com> wrote:


It is very possible that it is fake news, however, ’can you put more meat on the bone’ so we can assess how you came to that conclusion. This is because I first read the story Saturday June 1st on a Whattsapp group. About 60 to 70% of the participants are from western Nigeria an live in the West mainly in Ife, Ilesha, Oshogbo and Lagos.
My comment upon reading it was:
Is this real or just fake news?

Answer
’Not fake Ogedi. Ask your people back home in the East too, the story will not be different’

A number of other participants were rather not happy (from their comments) that I asked that question(we are still good I believe)

My last word on the discussion: 
”You are right Y---a, the story sounds particularly gory. 
I was just hoping it could be fake news”

Ogedi 

On Jun 3, 2019, at 10:17 AM, Wale Adedayo <adeda...@gmail.com> wrote:

It is a propaganda piece meant to goad activist Yoruba youths into rash action. While it is true kidnappers are having a field day in some of the places mentioned, this particular one is false. Very false too!

Wale Adedayo

Publisher, Uhuru Times (http://www.uhurutimes.com)
Alternate email: wale.a...@uhurutimes.com
Tel: 08133878568
bb pin: 2ABB2682
Skype: wale.adedayo
Twitter: @waleadedayo


On Mon, 3 Jun 2019 at 06:19, Abraham Madu abraha...@yahoo.com [NaijaObserver] <NaijaO...@yahoogroups.com> wrote:

KIDNAPPED IN NIGERIA BY FULANI HOODLUMS, A MUSLIM YORUBA LADY WRITES TO THE WORLD.

Horror in the kidnappers’ den
It took me a long time of reflections to put this piece together. First, let me thank my husband for the emotional support, the counselling and for his belief in the creator of heaven and earth which we call God or Allah.
The journey began in Auchi. We had travelled to Akure on a Monday, stayed with my husband’s relations in the outskirt of this ancient town. In the evening of Monday, we visited the palace for dinner, my husband being a close friend to son of the King.

On Tuesday, we left for Ibadan, via the Akure-Ilesa road. Our plan was that after attending the wedding in Auchi, we would travel with (my husband) to Lagos, stay for few weeks before returning abroad where I had lived with my husband and children for more than a decade. We were in the car of a close family friend, an accountant who gave his time and energy for our comfort..

We were five in the car, myself, my husband, our daughter, a lady who is my husband’s niece who had joined us in Akure with the hope of travelling with us to Lagos.
The driver accountant maintained a normal speed. He drove professionally. That gave me a lot of comfort and I felt I could find time to sleep a bit. My daughter was next to me, just 9. She was coming to Nigeria with me for the second time.
Shortly after the Ijare junction, the driver felt the wagon’s tires ruptured and decided to pack the car with the hope of changing the tires.

It was like a film. In a jiffy, motley crowd of armed men in military uniform came out of the bush. They fired at the boot of the car. Ahead of us, five of them came out of the bush, another two came from the rear. My daughter screamed: “Mummy, daddy, what’s going on”. There was no time to say a word. They marched us through into the bush, firing into the sky. They hit me on my chest, hit my daughter on her head, blood oozed. At this time, it was better to kill me. I shouted at one of the armed men. His response was hell. He went straight for my private part, tore my dress with his gun. The others ripped my dresses. I was left with my undies. My husband and my daughter started crying. Two of them dug their teeth into my breasts.
While attending a secondary school in Adamawa, I had lived with some Fulani, so I understand a few Fulani words. I started pleading, at least for my daughter. To my shock, at gun point, they removed the dress of my little girl, one of them carried her on his head as my baby struggled, shouting “Daddy, mummy, what’s going on. Help me.”

I could not help myself. We were marched for 9 hours. I was half naked. My daughter was totally naked. A felt her tears was like a stream of blood on her cheek. Our phones had been seized. We ended up in an ungoverned region in the thick of the forest. We met a well organized group.

There were some kidnapped victims, I saw two women, two ladies and three men. There were some people with their legs chained to trees. They were as if half dead. We were separated. I was separated from my husband. My daughter was taken away. I only heard her scream intermittently. I did not know what they were doing to her. 
These men, now about two dozen had a full kitchen, they had a huge camp and a traditional medical team. But the camps appear isolated from each other. We heard noises afar indicating it might be nuclear settlements of camps. Right in my presence, I saw them pack the remains of a woman. They took her and buried her few meters away from us. She had tribal marks.
I cannot describe the agony of 6 days in captivity in this little piece. I cannot talk about how they asked my husband to choose between myself being raped or that his daughter be raped. My husband broke down in uncontrollable tears. One of them hit him saying “Yoruba bastard, you dey cry. Idiot.” 
They now gave him the option that he should be raped by one homosexual among them. My husband is a devout Muslim. He told them homosexual and rape of any kind was against Islam. They hit him with the butt of AK 47: “What do you know about Islam?”
You can imagine, you are being asked to choose between being raped by a homosexual, your daughter, just nine years old, or your wife being raped? They gave the forth option, if you fail to choose, they would rape my daughter, rape my husband and rape me.
I made myself the sacrificial lamb. My husband begged, saying they should name their price. One of them asked him to bend down. Three beastly criminals sat on his back, jumping until he was too weak to stand. I was not allowed to put on any additional cloth on my body for 24 hours. The rain fell once. I became the relic and a sexual museum for the armed men who in turn addressed me and asked questions about my financial standing. New Fulani men joined the camp. They organized military training for the new Fulani men that came, teaching them how to shoot and walk through circles of glowing fire.
We were not released until after 6 days. We had to walk the same zik-zag journey back to the main road, our eyes blindfolded. During the negotiation to pay, they said the money was not for them alone that they had to settle “those who send us”. For me, I see a thriving, organized crime supported by powerful political interests.
Now, I do not think we were released to freedom after paying a whopping 8 million naira. I do not think we can ever be free, we can never be free, from the anguish, the psychological trauma, the nightmares we suffered, the occasional fits of our daughter, her waking up midnight behaving strangely, her asking the same question over and over: “Mummy, mummy, why?. Why.?” I do not have any answer.
In my life, I have never passed through a torture chamber like this. I do not think any society should let this happen. I do not know the fate of those we met, and about 7 other people brought during the 6 days we were in captivity. What I saw was a nation that has collapsed but pretends she lives, a people on life support. Crime is not restricted to Fulani people alone. We have Yoruba criminals. But I don’t Yoruba criminals are not as beastly. These elements are savages. I can’t imagine Yoruba thieves going to Sokoto or Maiduguri to kidnap Fulani people and keep them in their own bushes. It gives me mental torture that this is happening and some fools are even trying to justify or look for excuses. 
Well, as a devout Muslim, myself and my family have taken solace in Allah, not the Nigerian police, not the Army, not the governments. We have taken our faith the way it came. I thank God that we have successfully returned to where we live, thousands of miles from Nigeria. We thank God that we have made a vow: Never shall me, any of my children or husband in our lifetime visit Nigeria. Our remains any time we die, will also not be buried in Nigeria. It was a suggestion by my daughter which we all adopted.
I pity the country. I pity her people who continuously walk like the living dead. I pity those who parade themselves as leaders, because they know nothing about what is going on and the abyss the country sunk already.

I pity Yoruba people, oh, I pity you. I pity my people. For me the issue is not about President Buhari. Democracy can produce anything, even the worst in the society.

What I worry about is the conspiracy of silence by the people themselves, the ignorance, the treachery and the illusion that one day, things will get better through another election.

Since I was born in Nigeria, each year had led from bad to worse and on and on. I do not have a solution to what is going on, but I think very soon, hell will let loose upon the earth as long as there is no law and order and anarchy and the rule of brutes is the order of the day. 
Once again, there cannot be anything more comforting than my husband who saw what I went through but has been able to encourage me and even encouraged me to write this little piece after months of agony and sociological imbalance. Good night Nigerians.

Copied from a forum of Nigerian Women in Diaspora.


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Posted by: Abraham Madu <abraha...@yahoo.com>
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Jun 5, 2019, 3:18:19 PM6/5/19
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It is very possible that it is fake news, however, ’can you put more meat on the bone’ so we can assess how you came to that conclusion. This is because I first read the story Saturday June 1st on a Whattsapp group. About 60 to 70% of the participants are from western Nigeria an live in the West mainly in Ife, Ilesha, Oshogbo and Lagos.
My comment upon reading it was:
Is this real or just fake news?

Answer
’Not fake Ogedi. Ask your people back home in the East too, the story will not be different’

A number of other participants were rather not happy (from their comments) that I asked that question(we are still good I believe)

My last word on the discussion: 
”You are right Y---a, the story sounds particularly gory. 
I was just hoping it could be fake news”

Ogedi 

On Jun 3, 2019, at 10:17 AM, Wale Adedayo <adeda...@gmail.com> wrote:

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