The armed robbers that raided the ancient Offa town, Kwara State on April 5, 2018,
killed the officer in charge of the armoury Inspector Kayode Oke (PICTURED)
right inside his office while sleeping.
Testifying
before the Kwara State High Court on Tuesday, September 8, at the continuation
of hearing on the Offa robbery case, the officer who is the station guard and a
sergeant, Sulaiman Mahmoud (PW6), said that the armoury officer, Kayode, was
ill and on medication, sleeping in his office, when the robbers struck at about
4:45 pm.
Mahmoud, who
said that he lost his AK-47 rifle during the Offa robbery incident, added that
the gun dropped while scaling the police station fence to escape superior
firepower of the hoodlums.
“I was at the
entrance of the police station when I suddenly heard gunshots from Captain Cook
junction. I ran into the police station shouting to alert others that armed
robbers were approaching our station. I ran for cover shooting to scare the
robbers away," he narrated.
"Suddenly,
my gun got hooked and no one to assist me. I ran into the escape route of the
station with my rifle. As I was about scaling the fence, my rifle fell off me
and I couldn’t go back to retrieve it as the armed robbers already took over
the station. After the shooting subsided, I came back to meet my colleagues
crying. I went to the place where my rifle fell off me, but I didn’t see it
again,” he said.
Mahmoud also
said during cross-examination by the defence counsel, Mathias Emeribe, that
Inspector Kayode Oke was killed in his office while sleeping, as he was on
medication for his illness.
The court on
Tuesday also ordered the prison authorities to see to the medical complaint of
the first accused person in the Offa robbery case, Ayoade Akinnibosun, who the
defence counsel said needed medical attention.
The defence
counsel had told the court that Akinnibosun was having severe pains on his
wrist, ankle and right lap.
The counsel
added that Akinnibosun, “had a swell on his right lap close to his scrotum. The
pain has been constant, repeated and severe. He needs a thorough medical
examination.”
The presiding
judge, Justice Halima Saleema, also overruled the objection to the
admissibility of the death certificate raised by the defence counsel.
The defence
counsel had objected to the admissibility of the document, saying that the
documents are not coming from the maker and thus not admissible.
While
adjourning the Offa robbery case to December 22, 2020, Justice Saleema agreed
to a long adjournment moved by the prosecution counsel, Bola Razaq Gold.
Gold had said
that the police officer, who is the prosecution’s next witness, Danjuma
Mohammed Garba, was away in Somalia on a training course and would complete the
programme on December 15, 2020.
The
prosecution counsel had said that the video recordings and CCTV shots of the
Offa robbery incident in the affected banks ought to be played and analysed in
court by Garba before any other witness would give evidence.
“Without
tendering that documentary evidence through him, our other witnesses would not
be able to give evidence,” he said.
All the
accused: Ayoade Akinnibosun, Ibikunle Ogunleye, Adeola Abraham, Salahudeen
Azeez and Niyi Ogundiran were present in court on Tuesday.
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