Following last weekend’s raid of the Ojodu home of a self-acclaimed
prophet, Emmanuel Adeyemi, where the police rescued 28 people, including
children, who were chained, detectives have also discovered shallow
graves in the home of the suspect.
The suspect, who is in police net, was said to have buried many of
his victims in a swamp behind the house.It was gathered that despite
claims by the suspect that all those chained up were mad, the police
were able to ascertain that many of them were of sound mind. One of the
victims is a cancer patient, who had developed sores from being chained
for a long time.
While 27 others had been taken to the Lagos State government
rehabilitation centre, one was, however, taken to the hospital, as she
was very weak and had terrible sores acquired as a result of long period
of being in chains.The Commissioner of Police, Lagos State Command, Fatai Owoseni, acting
on a tip-off, had deployed operatives at the Area ‘G’ Police Command
Headquarters, to the house located at Oyingbo Unity Estate, Olamidun
Close, Yakoyo, Oke-Ira.
Although, the initial intelligence report was that a teenager, who is
a stepson of the suspect, was chained for always stealing, subsequent
intelligence by the police however revealed that 27 others were also
locked up.
Confirming the incident to newsmen, Owoseni said they had initially
invited the suspect to the station based on a tip-off, and he claimed
his chained his stepson to cure him from the spirit of stealing.
“While we were still on that case, we got another credible tip-off
that there were other people chained in that same house. Of course, we
carried out a raid and confirmed the allegation to be true.
“His claims now that he has been arrested is that he is a herbalist,
but why didn’t he tell us that when we first invited him to the station
over locking up his stepson? He only told us that he wanted to cure his
son of stealing.”
On the allegation of shallow graves being found in the residence,
Owoseni said: “We had another tip-off that there were people he buried
in that compound and he confirmed it during interrogation. Because the
area is swampy, the suspect had allegedly buried some people in the
swamp and about three others in the house.
“When we asked him of their identities he said it was some of his
patients that were brought to his home from the hospital after they were
given up for dead. They eventually died in his care and were buried in
the swamp because their relatives refused to take them.
“When we also queried him on the claims that he used the body parts
of the deceased to sell to ritualists, he swore that he was only a
traditional healer and not a human parts seller.” Owoseni said
investigation was ongoing, as the police was working assiduously to get
to the root of the matter.


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