THE
police in Bayelsa State on Tuesday recovered 10 decomposing bodies said
to be those of the policemen killed in an ambush on Saturday night.
Twelve policemen on escort duty were murdered in the attack along the
Azuzama waterways of Southern Ijaw Local Government Area of the state
which the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta had already
claimed responsibility for.
The recovered bodies were brought to the Federal Medical Centre,
Yenagoa, on Tuesday evening by policemen who barricaded the mortuary
area of the hospital. The policemen kept journalists at bay and seized
cameras of newsmen who attempted capturing the scene.
Commissioner of Police in the state, Mr. Kingsley Omire, was not at
the scene to receive the bodies and there were speculations that the
bodies had been dismembered with some of them burnt.
A statement by Governor Seriake Dickson said a combined team of security operatives recovered the 10 bodies along the creeks.
The statement, which was signed by Dickson’s Chief Press Secretary,
Mr. Daniel Iworiso-Markson, also quoted Omire as saying that it took the
combined efforts of men of the Joint Security Task Force to ensure the
recovery of the corpses.
But some of the recovered bodies were reportedly burnt beyond recognition and mutilated by their killers.
The victims were also reportedly stripped of their uniforms and rifles after the attack.
After waiting for a long time at the Governmen Jetty in Yenagoa, some
of the bereaved families were denied access to the bodies when they
were finally brought ashore at 6:45pm.
Our correspondent observed that the jetty was protected by armed
policemen, including the operatives of the state security outfit,
codenamed Operation Door Akpo.
One of the owners of the boats in which the dead policemen were
attacked told our correspondent that the gunmen took away the bodies of
their victims, dismembered them and burnt some of them.
He said the bodies were not recovered from the river by divers but at a point in the creek where the gunmen mutilated them.
“That was why it took a long time to see their bodies,” he said.
He also insisted that the uniforms and rifles of the victims were taken away by the bandits.
He countered the statement of the Commissioner of Police, Mr.
Kingsley Omire, that the victims were attacked after their boat
developed a fault.
Omire had said that his men succumbed to attack when the boat in which they were travelling became faulty.
But the source who pleaded anonymity said the boat was in motion when the bandits launched the attack.
“The boat was moving at a slow pace because of the capacity of its engine when their occupants were attacked,” he said.
Dickson said on Tuesday that the recovery of the bodies was contrary
to media reports that the killers went away with the bodies of the dead
policemen.
He also debunked the claim by MEND that it was responsible for the attack.
“The recent development has put paid to the fact that the attack was
carried out by a group of disgruntled ex-militants who have issues to
settle among themselves, but have clearly overstepped their bounds by
their action”, he said.
Restating his administration’s stance on zero tolerance for
criminality, the governor assured the bereaved families and the entire
people of the state that the security operatives would arrest the
perpetrators.
He also told the families of the 12 policemen killed in the attack
that their deaths would not be in vain as the government “is determined
more than ever before to bring the perpetrators to book.”
MEND on Sunday claimed that its fighters killed the 12 policemen
whose boat was ambushed in Azuzama on Saturday and that their deaths
were to teach the security forces a lesson for scorning its warning.
The militant group had last week announced that it would resume
attacks in the oil rich Niger Delta by Friday to avenge alleged
collaboration between the Federal Government and South Africa to jail
its former leader, Henry Okah.
Security agencies had dismissed the threat and said they were ready
for MEND which tagged its promised resurgence of attacks, “Hurricane
Exodus.”
No comments:
Post a Comment