Opinion
OSPAC As A Tainted Brand
When it came to organised vigilante security in Rivers State, OSPAC once stood out as a preferred model. For those who are yet to understand it, the acronym stands for ONELGA Security and Peace Advisory Committee; while ONELGA itself is a short way of saying Ogba/Egbema/Ndoni Local Government Area.
A few years ago, this local council area and the communities around it constituted a battle ground for rival youth bodies, cult gangs, kidnappers, oil thieves and sundry criminals. It was particularly more so in the lead up to the 2015 General Elections when they were recruited by politicians to undertake various types of infamy. And as was observed in several places across the country, reining in such armed thugs became extremely difficult after the polls. Here in the state, government’s appeals and amnesty initiatives to pacify the boys could be described as successful, if only just.
Criminality became the order of the day not only in ONELGA but also Ahoada East, Ahoada West, Eleme, Emohua, Etche, Ikwerre, Khana and Omuma LGAs. The marauding gangs unleashed mayhem on lives and property in these areas as obviously overwhelmed security agents gazed helplessly from relative safety. People fled their communities for fear of direct attacks or being caught in the line of fire. Traditional rulers were stripped of their charges as rival war lords demanded loyalty, food royalties and payment of other types of homage from the traumatised natives. Any attempt by the Port Harcourt-based elite to visit home often took the form of a stealthy and hasty round trip.
In ONELGA, it was reported that attempts by the then Caretaker Council Chairman, Hon. Osi Olisa, to reconcile some rival youth groups from the area were rebuffed due to pressures from their respective political patrons. Meanwhile, the late militia kingpin, Ejima Johnson Igwedibia (aka Don Waney), and his group held sway in the LGA, buoyed mainly by kidnap ransoms, illegal bunkering proceeds and protection monies from oil and gas firms operating in the area.
The former militant leader began to roam large after the shooting to death of another notorious cult kingpin, ‘General Igbudu’, and his men by a police anti-robbery squad on East-West Road in 2016. Igbudu’s gang had been dominant in the two Ahoada LGAs and parts of ONELGA.
Matters got to a head when Olisa reportedly lost one of his trusted aides to Waney’s gang. The obviously distraught council boss was said to have invited some external hands to help found OSPAC and rout out Waney and his boys. The outfit was a more reformed version of the highly dreaded Bakassi Boys of Aba and Onitsha fame in the early 2000s. For leader, it had no less a personality than the late Dr Maxwell Ahiakwo, a senior academic in the state.
In one of their encounters with the notorious killer gang, it was reported that no fewer than 10 persons were gunned down, with the late kingpin making a narrow escape. He, however, returned to vent his anger on innocent persons at a Crossover Night church service on New Year Day 2019, killing more than 20 worshippers in Omoku, the council headquarters.
Provoked by this misdirected killing spree, a combined team of soldiers, police and DSS men was said to have traced Waney to a rented apartment somewhere in Enugu State where he and two of his henchmen were shot dead before they could execute their rumoured plan to attack another worship centre in the LGA.
With the two war lords out of circulation and the remainder of their top commanders going underground, OSPAC quickly positioned itself to restore peace in much of the Orashi area. Its activities included constant patrols, stop-and-search, distress call response, community dispute resolution using decent and unorthodox methods to extract confessions.
So dreadful was this vigilante outfit that fleeing criminals, rather than regroup and fight back, ran to swell the ranks of their affiliates in other LGAs; thus forcing such councils to consider floating their own equivalents of OSPAC. Some even opted to still retain the OSPAC name.
Before long, their decisions began to yield results as news of successful outings by the different ‘OSPACs’ made headlines. For example, on March 19, 2019, a newspaper reported how OSPAC raided criminal hideouts in Egbeda, Omudioga and Ubimini communities of Emohua LGA and rescued kidnap victims. Also, on June 16, 2019, it was reported that 10 suspected kidnappers were nabbed by OSPAC at Ndele where they mounted road block on East-West Road. We surely haven’t forgotten how notorious that axis of the popular interstate road was back then.
Unfortunately, it seems the spark has now gone from OSPAC. What is left is a brand name that smells of filth and appears garbled beyond recovery. Of late, the outfit has been accused of carrying out illegal detentions, torture and extra-judicial killings of suspects in brazen violation of Section 36 (5) of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria 1999 (as amended), which states that an accused person shall be deemed innocent until proven guilty by a court of competent jurisdiction.
Sometime in April last year, it was reported that police arrested eight members of ‘Diobu OSPAC’ for alleged kidnap, torture and rape. The following month, members of OSPAC were said to have invaded Isiokpo in Ikwerre LGA and had, while combing for a criminal syndicate, arrested some youths, including daily paid farm labourers who were returning from work. The report said the innocent victims were subjected to physical torture and starvation, among other inhuman treatments. Though many still think the prevailing peace compensates for all that.
The ugly tales have continued to come; the latest being that the leader of the disbanded OSPAC in Omudioga was killed last week by suspected cultists who danced around with his severed head. Too bad!
But no matter the offence, why disband such outfit without quickly assembling a replacement?
By: Ibelema Jumbo
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