• How IPOB members killed Gulak

From Godwin Tsa, Abuja

The trial of the detained leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), Nnamdi Kanu, resumed at the Abuja division of the Federal High Court with revelations of how between 170 and 200 security agents in the South East lost their lives due to the activities of the Eastern Security Network (ESN), the armed wing of the Indigenous People of Biafra.

Besides, the witness gave graphic details of how the late political adviser to former President Goodluck Jonathan, Ahmed Gulak, was killed by IPOB members.

The court was told by the Department of State Services (DSS) that the National Broadcasting Commission (NBC) did not issue a licence to the detained self-acclaimed IPOB leader, Nnamdi Kanu, to import the radio transmitter he allegedly smuggled into the country to operate Radio Biafra.

A prosecution witness and a personnel of the DSS, code-named PWDDD, in his testimony told Justice James Omotosho how one ESN member, identified as Uzuoma Benjamin, aka Onye Army, spoke about how they allegedly received directives from Kanu to kill security agents and ensure that a deceased member of the group, Ikonso, was buried with 2000 human heads. The witness, who testified as the fourth prosecution witness (PW4), was led in evidence by the lead prosecution counsel, Chief Adegboyega Awomolo (SAN). In his evidence, PWDDD said further investigation revealed that of the 2000 human heads sought to bury Ikonso, only 30 were eventually sourced.

He also gave details of how the late former aide to ex-President Goodluck Jonathan, Ahmed Gulak, was killed on Sunday, May 30, 2021, in Owerri, Imo State.

PWDDD read where the said Onye Army claimed that he and other members of his group used the heads of 10 girls to prepare charms for their protection.

He told the court that investigation into the invasion of Owerri prison by IPOB members revealed that it was directed by Kanu in one of his broadcasts for his followers to attack and kill security operatives of the Federal Government of Nigeria. It was equally his evidence-in-chief that shortly after he and members of his team recovered the transmitter from a premises in Ubuluisiuzor, Anambra State, and brought it to Abuja, the DSS wrote to the NBC to inspect it.

He said on Monday, November 9, 2015, the NBC sent an engineer who inspected the transmitter and wrote a report.

At this juncture, the prosecution counsel, Awomolo, tendered a certified true copy of the provisional assessment of radio transmitter report submitted by the NBC.

Thereafter, the witness was asked to read a portion of the report, which he did. He said the report indicated that the transmitter was German-made and that it was indeed a radio transmitter made for use on FM frequency.

The witness said the report also stated that such a transmitter could only be procured and installed after being issued a licence and that the NBC has not licensed Radio Biafra to broadcast in Nigeria.

The DSS official added that investigation by his team revealed that for one to operate a radio station in the country, one must apply to a regulator, who will issue a licence after due clearance by relevant security agencies.

The witness said: “In this case (Kanu’s case), there was no application from the defendant; he brought the transmitter in illegally without approval.”

He also said investigation confirmed that the defendant is the owner of the transmitter, which he kept in the premises of one Benjamin Madubugwu.

The witness said Kanu later came into the country and inspected the transmitter and made a video to satisfy members of the IPOB, who contributed money for the purchase of the transmitter.

He also read from some publications of the Vanguard newspaper, where it was reported that an arrested commander of ESN confessed to the activities of his group.

He said when the DSS requested from the police to access Onye Army, the police claimed he had escaped from custody.

He said during one of DSS agents’ raids of ESN members’ hideout, “we saw some ESN members, about seven, with human heads and some eating human flesh, which they said was for spiritual fortification.

“We could not find Onye Army. The police said he had escaped from custody.”

He said there are records about the number of security agents allegedly killed in the South East and that the number stands between 170 and 200.

The witness, who said two DSS officials, including his driver, were among the victims, said they cut across all security agencies.

Testifying on how the ESN members operate, the witness said they are combatants who carry arms and attacked homes of prominent individuals and traditional rulers in the region.

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He said because they lacked sufficient operational tools, they sometimes set up roadblocks during which they hijack vehicles for their operations.

The witness identified some public property which he said IPOB and ESN members attacked and destroyed in the South East, including police stations.

On how Gulak died, the witness said he was among the first responders to the scene where the late chieftain of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) was killed and his corpse recovered.

He said on Sunday, May 30, 2021, there was a total breakdown of law and order as a result of the stay-at-home order declared by the defendant through one of his broadcasts.

The witness said later that day one of his officers informed him that a prominent politician was killed around Obiagwu and that when they got to the spot, they saw what happened.

He said the Divisional Police Officer (DPO) in the area told him that Gulak was in a hired cab when he was killed by some IPOB members.

The witness said the driver told him that they were heading to the airport from Owerri town when they saw a checkpoint mounted by men of the Nigerian Air Force who were preventing people from accessing the airport but decided to take another route where they ran into a checkpoint by IPOB members.

He added that the driver further said the IPOB members ordered the three of them in the car to disembark and demanded to know their tribes.

He said the driver told him he introduced himself as an Igbo person and that Gulak also said he was an Igbo man. But that while he (the driver) could speak the Igbo language when they were asked to speak in Igbo, Gulak could not, following which they asked him to remove his cap and saw a Muslim prayer mark on his forehead.

The witness said the driver added that upon seeing the prayer mark, one of the IPOB members said, “he is one of them,” following which they shot and killed him.

The DSS official, who said he served in Imo State between 2019 and 2023, told the court that the deceased’s corpse was evacuated from the spot where he was killed in his (the witness’) car.

Under cross-examination by defence lawyer, Onyechi Ikpeazu (SAN), the witness said there is no record of the importation of the transmitter said to have been smuggled into the country by Kanu.

He said he could not say when the transmitter was brought into the country, but that he was among those who located where it was kept in Anambra State and brought it to the DSS headquarters in Abuja.

On how they were able to locate the transmitter, the witness said his team used some equipment to analyse a video (showing Kanu inspecting the transmitter) to ascertain the location of the transmitter in Anambra.

He said he did not come across the names Benka Clearing and Forwarding and Chief Isaac Maduka in the course of investigation. He also said he was not aware that Benka cleared the transmitter, as claimed by Ikpeazu.

When asked if he was aware that Radio Biafra was registered in London and broadcast from there, the witness said when Kanu was arrested in Lagos in 2016, he was arrested with his broadcast equipment.

He said he was not present when the defendant was arrested in Lagos and that all he said about his arrest in Lagos was what was relayed to him.

The witness said the two guns he said they found were not recovered in the container in which the transmitter was kept, but under the mattress of Benjamin Madubugwu, who lived in the premises.

He added that Madubugwu was later charged with unlawful possession of firearms. The witness said the container was brought into the country by one Igwe Anyiba, who was later found to be living outside the country.

The witness said he was not aware that the Imo State Government issued a statement to the effect that Gulak’s killing was political.

Meanwhile, further hearing continues on Thursday by the court after the conclusion of the cross-examination of the witness, who was consequently discharged by the court.