The bullet-ridden bodies of the
three missing engineers of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), was
recovered by JTF four weeks after they were attacked by oil pipeline vandals in
Arepo village, Ogun State.
The slain NNPC officials were identified as a deputy manager in
charge of Pipelines Right of Way (PROW) and two other engineers deployed to effect
repairs on a vandalised pipeline in Arepo on September 5.
According to Assistant Commissioner of Police (ACP), Friday
Ibadin, who heads the Inspector-General of Police Special Task Force on
Anti-Pipeline Vandalism, officers who were using speedboats and helicopters to
comb the creeks near Arepo dug up the bodies in two shallow graves across a
river.
Ibadin said: “We found, in a decomposing state, bullet-ridden
bodies of the three victims. We learnt that the body of the local security
guard employed by NNPC, Taye, a.k.a Dead Man, was cut into pieces and disposed
off.”
Authorities in NNPC had blamed the ongoing fuel shortage in some
parts of the country on the shutdown of the damaged System 2B pipeline, at
Arepo, which carries one third of the nation’s daily fuel needs.
The acting Group General Manager, Group Public Affairs Division of
NNPC, Mr. Fidel Pepple, had said that the major pipeline was evacuating about
nine to 11 million litres of fuel from Lagos to Ibadan, Ilorin and the North.
Pepple said that a team of engineers and technicians of the
Pipelines and Product Marketing Company (PPMC), a subsidiary of NNPC, who had
been dispatched to the ruptured products pipeline site, had successfully put
out the fire by ensuring a complete cut-off of product supply to the pipeline
from the Atlas Cove depot, and the team was on the verge of gaining access to
the damaged point to commence proper assessment of the scope of work when the
vandals, who had laid ambush, opened fire from a distance, killing the three staffers
and injuring several others.
Ibadin, who spoke in Lagos yesterday, added: “Shortly after the
incident, the Inspector General of Police, Mohammed Abubakar, reconstituted the
dissolved anti vandal team.
“It became important to get to the root of the incident that led
to the death of these NNPC officials. And in the cause of investigation, about
six suspects were arrested. We gathered from the confession of one of the
suspects, Imerepamu Ijebu Joel, that he knew where the NNPC staffers were
buried.
“Initially, he took our team to a spot and after several hours,
the bodies were not found.
“At night, the Ijaw boy attempted to dig one spot, but the police
who were on guard stopped him. And two days later, he opened up and agreed to
take us to the real spot.
“It took six hours of sailing to get to the spot. We had 40
heavily armed men, and we took along a pathologist, a coroner, and the medical
team from NNPC that eventually identified the bodies.
“They took us to a place where they claimed they bury non-natives.
With the assistance of one John Bosco, Peter Opidi, and the suspect, Imerepamu
Ijebu Joel, we were shown two shallow graves.
“It was there that we discovered the bodies and they had been
deposited at a mortuary.
“I wish to commend the sector commander, DSP Onaghise Osayande,
and his team who dared the dangers of the creek to recover the bodies.
Meanwhile, we are carrying out further investigations to see if there was more
to the killings than what we had gathered.”
In March 2008, a pipeline explosion, in the same village, killed
the Deputy Area Manager in charge of Maintenance at the Mosimi depot.
Three other senior NNPC officials were also severely burnt.
In June 2009, NNPC’s oil pipeline in Ilado, a Lagos suburb, also
exploded leaving scores injured.
Eleven boats that belonged to the vandals were razed.
The evening explosion damaged the pipeline transporting refined
products from the corporation’s Atlas Cove depot to Mosimi depot, from where
products are distributed to users in parts of Ogun, Ondo and the North.
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