Esther and Aaliyah were revealed bitter ordeal, these two were daughters to seventy years-old Cletus Offem. However, the two daughter’s outlook was ignited by the action of men
of the Nigerian Army deployed on a peacekeeping mission to Nko community in the Yakurr Local Government Area of Cross River State who were said to have burnt their father inside his house last week.Esther and
Aaliyah, in separate telephone interviews, said that the incident took place
last Sunday, following a communal clash between Nko community in the Yakurr LGA
and Onyadama community in the Obubra LGA of the state. They said the clash
between the warring communities was recurrent.
“On
Saturday, there was a group chat message from my elder sister (Aaliyah) asking
us to pray for ‘them mumsy’ (our parents), that they are saying they (the
warring communities) are fighting in the village and they killed one soldier
and they can’t find mummy and daddy and everyone was running into the bush. All
the children were saying ‘God forbid.’ Maybe the war that used to happen in the
village has started again,’” said Esther.
She said
they tried to call their parents on the phone after the report, but the calls
were not going through. Esther said that they therefore believed that they
(their parents) must have run into the bush to hide and, perhaps, there was
poor network in the bush, or their phones were off.
“When I
returned home from the church on Sunday, my sister started calling on the
phone. And when I picked up, she was crying. I asked her what was going on and
she said they told her that our house was burnt down but they couldn’t tell if
my dad was inside and that we needed to confirm,” she said.
She added,
“I went to bed hoping to wake up the following morning with positive news, but
the news I got confirmed that indeed the soldiers burnt down our house and my
father was inside and burnt with the house.
Esther, said
her father was suffering from arthritis and limping, she said her father was
not strong enough to run away when the soldiers arrived. She alleged that the
soldiers were aware that her father was locked up in his room and still went
ahead to burn down the house with her father inside.
She
wondered why the officers of the Nigerian Army could not “bundle” her father
out of the building before burning the house, querying why they had to burn
down the house in the first place.
Esther
added that her mother, who witnessed the incident first-hand, “ran away from
the house naked and ran into the bush. We have not been able to reach her
because her phone was burnt with the house as well. It was people around her in
the bush that used a wrapper to cover her because she was naked.”
She
further stated that her mother was able to return to the burnt house days later
and found the remains of their father in the wreckage of the house. “The
position of the remains of my father was actually at the spot where his bed
was. So, it’s obvious that he was lying down on his bed when they burnt the
house,” she said.
She said
reports from the community suggested that soldiers were still shooting
indiscriminately and chasing people away.
Esther
called on well-meaning Nigerians to help her family get justice.
Speaking
about the incident, Aaliyah confirmed to our correspondent during a telephone
interview that her father was indeed burnt together with his house in the Nko
community.
Aaliyah
said she got a message from the village which made her call her uncle who told
her that “they burnt your father while setting his house ablaze.”
Aaliyah,
who said she expressed shock at the news and argued that it could not have been
her father, said she was told that the soldiers, whose camp was adjacent to
their father’s house, were still parading the village. She alleged that the
soldiers monitored the burning of the building and made sure that no one could
come to rescue her burnt father.
She said
while the crisis began again on Saturday, her father was burnt with his house
late Sunday.
She
alleged that soldiers were still patrolling the community, killing men and boys
and beating up women who refused to take refuge in nearby bushes.
Also,
narrating her ordeal, Mrs Offem, the late Offem’s wife, said that the soldiers
first stormed Nko on Saturday and vowed to return on Sunday.
“They (the
soldiers) said we should leave the house. My husband asked me to cook to
prepare to leave the house. He went to put on a pair of trousers and said that
would enable him to run well when the soldiers arrived. I was sitting outside
when a neighbour told me that the soldiers were coming back, that I should tell
my husband to know where to run to, and I saw them coming shortly after that,”
she said.
She added
that sensing danger and having seen that people were running, she went in to
tell her husband that it was time to run. But her husband said he had been told
that if he stayed inside and locked himself up without confronting the
soldiers, they would not do anything to him or the house.
Mrs Offem
said while still speaking with her husband, the soldiers arrived and began to
“break the windows and the main door. I went to the backyard to hide. From my
hiding, I began to see smoke. I decided to check where the smoke was coming
from, it was from our house.”
She said
neither she nor her husband knew that they (the soldiers) were already setting
the house on fire.
Offem, who
said she spoke from an undisclosed hiding place, said the soldiers prevented
men from burying her husband’s remains, adding that she could do it by herself
if she wanted to. She questioned why a woman should be asked to undertake such
a task.
Esther,
however, said the remains of her father were later buried on Wednesday at about
5pm.
“The
remains of my father were packed in a bag and buried in a shallow grave on
Wednesday evening around 5pm. My father didn’t deserve that. My father was an
honourable man,” she wailed during a telephone conversation with our
correspondent.
Efforts to
get the reaction of the Cross River State Police Command were abortive. The command’s spokesperson, Irene Ugbo,
didn’t pick the calls made to her mobile and she also didn’t reply to a text
message sent.
However,
responding to series of allegations trailing the soldiers conduct in the
communities, the Director, Army Public Relations, Brig. Gen Onyema Nwachukwu,
said, “The troops did not conduct themselves unprofessionally. Troops were
legitimately deployed to restore law and order in a communal clash between
Onyadama and Nko communities. The troops were attacked and shot with firearms.
The five personnel who are critically wounded are currently under intensive
medical care.”
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