It turned out an easy venture. It was too simple a task that in
the excitement that followed, they forgot their weapon—a loaded AK 47
rifle. It happened in Calabar, the Cross River State capital, where a
gang of armed robbers, apparently working on insider information, launched an
attack on a politician in whose car was a bag containing N2 million.
The attack was said to have taken
place at a building construction site at Ekorinim, in the outskirts of
Calabar metropolis, last weekend.
The politician, the owner of the
building under construction, was said to have parked his car at one end of the
site and walked towards where the workers were working. He was said to have
even walked further to a slope at one end of the site giving directives to the
workers on what to be done and how the job should be done.
While he continued his supervision of
the work, his attention was said to have been diverted from his sport utility
vehicle (SUV) wherein he had kept the N2 million. Unknown to him, the robbers
who had earlier laid siege for him, simply walked to where the vehicle was
parked, used a master key to open one of its doors and, quickly, they carted
away the cash.
The victim who preferred anonymity,
had brought the sum to the site so he could pay the workers on site as well as
pay for services of a bulldozer, which was grading and levelling the slope in
the site.
In narrating his loss, he said: “When I arrived at the plot, I securely locked the doors of my car after I had alighted and walked down to the slope where the bulldozer was piling sand but after some time when I went to the car, it was open and the money was no more there.”
In narrating his loss, he said: “When I arrived at the plot, I securely locked the doors of my car after I had alighted and walked down to the slope where the bulldozer was piling sand but after some time when I went to the car, it was open and the money was no more there.”
He said that while he was passing
instructions to the workers who were some distance away, the hoodlums,
“apparently acting on information, swooped on the car, used a master key and
unlocked the vehicle and carted away my money.”
He was so shocked at the swiftness of
the robbery that he initially suspected that some of the workers on site might
have been responsible for the theft
He therefore mobilised the entire
workforce at the site and they began to comb the surrounding bushes in search
of the thieves. It was while the search was going on that one of the
workers discovered one AK 47 rifle, loaded with a magazine where the
bandits had laid ambush.
The plan may have been to strike at
the point of payment of the workers. And that was why they laid ambush in wait
for the auspicious time. But the “abandonment” of the car containing the cash
may have forced the robbers to activate their ‘Plan B,’ which necessitated the
use of a master key to open the locked car. And it worked. They ended up firing
no bullet, got all there was to get and in the process, they forgot their tool
of trade.
The politician said he had
since reported the matter to the police at the Diamond Hill Police
Station from where a team of policemen was despatched to the scene of the
crime. He added that the policemen, during their preliminary investigation,
recovered the AK47 rifle.
The spokesman for the Cross River
State Police Command, Mr. John Umoh, a Deputy Superintendent of Police
(DSP), who confirmed the story, added that the police were already
carrying out investigation to fish out the robbers.
None of the workers was arrested yet. But part of the investigation may require questioning some or all of them. There is a belief that the robbers must have worked in concert with some of the site workers who knew that the owner of the project would not only come to site on the day in question, but would also bring along a huge amount of money.
None of the workers was arrested yet. But part of the investigation may require questioning some or all of them. There is a belief that the robbers must have worked in concert with some of the site workers who knew that the owner of the project would not only come to site on the day in question, but would also bring along a huge amount of money.
A source told THISDAY, “that kind of
operation cannot be that successfully executed without accurate information.
And such information could come from the workers, or the family or even driver
of the politician,” adding that the police “must stretch the dragnet of their
investigation to cover all possible clues.”
The success of the robbery drums home
the importance of the cashless economy campaign launched by the Central Bank of
Nigeria (CBN) last year. The incident also exposes the constraint in the
policy. How else, for instance, would casual workers who do not have bank
accounts, be paid, if not in cash? However, the volume of money involved is
seemingly more than enough to pay the so-called casual workers.
Source: Thisday
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