Last week’s Ikoyi ‘prison break’ was not a premeditated jailbreak. It was prompted by corruption, exacerbated by pent-up tension among images over the burning of the Igbosere court and sealed by inmates’ desperation to escape from the chaos they’d caused.
A thread.
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How it happened, a warder popularly known as ‘Pastor’ had seized a phone from an inmate in D Ward. One account has it that ‘Pastor’, who is also the Yard Master, extorted the inmate but refused to release the phone.
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Another is that ‘Pastor’ seized the phone and told the inmate who owned it to settle him, else his cell would be changed.
Whichever was the case, an inmate’s phone was seized and ‘Pastor’ wanted money (or more money) to release it.
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I know for a fact that even though inmates are prohibited from owning phones, warders smuggle phones in for them. For a fee, of course.
At times, the warders even buy the phones themselves then resell to inmates at exorbitant rates.
4/14
Meanwhile, inmates were still enraged by the torching of Igbosere High Court the previous day. Their thinking was that as a consequence, their trials would be delayed by months; they were tensed up. Their response to ‘Pastor’ was bellicose.
5/14
In the process, ‘Pastor’ slapped an inmate, the inmate returned the slap. Some prison warders intervened, but the inmate had started kicking ‘Pastor’. Other inmates joined.
The environment soon became so raucous that ‘Pastor’ fled to Records office.
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Soon, inmates were crowding out and beating the warders.
While some of them went after ‘Pastor’, the Deputy Controller of Prison (DCP), who doubles as the Officer in Charge of Ikoyi Prison, tried to calm others down.
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One inmate confronted the prison ‘Chief’, the warder directly overseeing inmates, saying the whole prison would have been burnt down were it not for the DCP who had been “nice” to them.
Chief slapped the inmate, the inmate retaliated!
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For context, the average warder-inmate relationship in Ikoyi is a master-slave one; an inmate slapping a warder is like a security guard slapping an Aliko Dangote. The end result was always going to be catastrophic.
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By this point, inmates were already beating some warders & throwing stones at them. Meanwhile, Chief sells kerosene, stored behind the office leading to his.
The inmate that was slapped by Chief got angry, picked a keg of kerosene, opened it & threw it into the Records.
10/14
Other inmates lit a fire.
The first place burnt down by the irate inmates was the Records. After that, they burnt the school, legal office, E Ward, Yard Master’s office and a shop next to welcome cell where odds and ends were sold.
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Seeing the damage that had been done, the major actors tried to escape. As expected, some others tried to profit from it by attempting a jailbreak.
The situation was eventually quelled after the DCP called for armed reinforcements.
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Although the prison has been silent on the deaths, four separate sources, including one in government, have spoken about multiple deaths.
While the government source refused to disclose the number, instead concentrating on his concerns about the cover-up...
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...the other three put the casualty toll at “over 50”, “53” and “56” respectively.
Indeed, the last two said the casualty toll could even be a lot more, as their figures were based only on the bodies they had they had personally sighted.
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The 2020/21 English Premier League season, which begins tomorrow, will be won by Liverpool.
Reason? Coronavirus!
However, this time, it will be closely contested. There’ll be no repeat of last season’s 18-point gap. 1/4
Liverpool have been in the title mix for two consecutive seasons now; asking the players to have a go for the third time in a row is a huge mental challenge.
But the Reds do know that winning the league last season without the fans...
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...robbed them of the full complement of a proper title celebration.
A part of them feels like they haven’t won the league yet; this will spur them on to success, the knowledge that fans are definitely back at Anfield before May 2021.
3/4
I’m looking to hire five young investigative journalists with whom I’ll work directly on a long-term media project. The roles are based in Lagos and the pay is competitive. Please retweet; my ideal candidates could be on your timeline🙏.
1/8
Gender, academic discipline, class of degree or length of industry practice do not matter. If you consider yourself a fantastic writer and you have completed tertiary education, please give this a shot.
2/8
Specifically, we are looking for:
(i) Candidates who genuinely still believe in Nigeria despite all the odds and are convinced journalism has a critical role to play in the emergence of the Nigeria of our dreams.
3/8
The man in the videos below — he claims to be a policeman attached to Pedro Police Station, Shomolu — today assaulted a resident of Awofodu Street, Pedro, who was spotting a dreadlocked hair. He also assaulted another and stabbed a third. 1/7
The policeman had stopped the guy in locks (first photo) and asked him to identify himself.
He explained that he is a dancer/actor with Segun Adefila’s Crown Troupe of Africa whose studio is down the road, but he got slaps in return. 2/7
A thoroughly-shocked woman intervened, explaining that as the wife of the Crown Troupe’s founder, she was in a position to confirm that the guy is indeed with the group.
Attention @StanbicIBTC, some staff at some of your branches are illegally profiting from backdoor FX exchange by hoarding high-value currencies from your customers.
It’s a practice I’ve suspected for years but one I finally confirmed yesterday.
1/11
Every single time I’ve had to withdraw USD at your Allen Avenue branch, it always came with a caveat: “Please we only have small notes; hope you don’t mind.”
Since these were usually small amounts (often payments for pieces for overseas newspapers), I never minded.
2/11
Yesterday afternoon, though, I did.
The @StanbicIBTC branch at Allen had claimed to have only $20 notes, all totalling no more than $600, which was inadequate for my need.
3/11
A Wamos Air Flight PLM556 conveying more than 200 stranded Nigerians arrived in Abuja from London on Tuesday.
The passengers were meant to return for COVID-19 tests yesterday but, guess what? Many of them did not show up! #fisayoscovid19series
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First of all, this was meant to be an Air Peace flight and should have taken off on Monday July 13 but landing permit issues prompted a rescheduling with Wamos Air for Tuesday.
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On arrival in Abuja, the passengers filled a form provided by the NCDC. They were also given six pieces of face mask, one bottle of hand sanitizer, a thermometer with which to check their temperatures morning and night and a sheet on which to record the figures.
3/11
FMC Abeokuta, Ogun, is filled with patients exhibiting classical COVID-19 symptoms. Normally, this shouldn’t be a problem; it’s a hospital after all.
But these patients are at the Accident & Emergency and the Emergency Treatment Room of the hospital. #fisayoscovid19series
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They may still be suspected but one notable red flag is that their names are registered in the hospital’s records in red ink.
2/11
Admitting them at the A&E (both children and adult emergency) means they mix with their relatives and other patients, who in turn interact with hospital staff.
Relatives of the suspected COVID-19 patients, for example, use the same wash-hand basin as hospital staff...
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