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Monday 21 October 2013

Two men remanded for murder of customs officer

Motojehi Ige



An Ebute Meta Magistrate’s Court has ordered the remand of two men, Afeez Agate, 22 and Toheeb Salami, 26, for the death of a customs officer, Motojehi Ige.

The police told the court that the two defendants were part of a mob that killed Ige by giving him machete wound on August 29, 2013.

According to reports, the late Superintendent of Customs was killed in retaliation for the death of a 35-year-old man, Saturday Joel, who was allegedly shot by officials of the Nigerian Customs Service.

It was reported that Joel was hit by a stray bullet while some customs officers were trying to apprehend a motorist who was smuggling a red Volkswagen bus from Benin Republic into Nigeria.

Some residents had taken to the streets to protest the death.

However, Ige, was said to have been driving by at the time when the angry mob dragged him out of his Toyota Corolla car marked ABJ 663 DW, and killed him.

The irate mob was also said to have allegedly set Ige’s vehicle ablaze.

The police told the court that Agate and Salami were part of the mob that killed Ige and burnt his office.

The accused allegedly made away with 25 bags of rice, a generator, and other valuable property belonging to the Nigeria Customs Service.

The police added that the duo set ablaze a Hilux van with Reg. No. CS 152A, while the Toyota Corolla car worth N2m was also destroyed.

The two vehicles were said to be owned by the deceased customs officer.

The defendants were arraigned on eleven counts of murder, arson, stealing, malicious damage, rioting, unlawful assembly, disorderly conduct and intimidation.

The charge read in part, “That you, Afeez Agate, and Toheeb Salami, and other at large on the 29th day of August, 2013 around 9am, at Seme Town, Lagos, in the Lagos Magisterial District, did conspire amongst yourselves to commit felony to wit murder.

“That you, Afeez Agate, and Toheeb Salami, on the same date, time and place, in the aforesaid magisterial District did unlawfully kill a customs officer, SC Motojehi Jethro Ige, by giving him several machete cuts.

“That you, Afeez Agate, and Toheeb Salami, on the same date, time and place, in the aforesaid magisterial District did steal the following items: 25 bags of rice, one generator and other assorted items, value yet to be ascertained, property of the Nigeria Customs Service.”

The prosecutor, Inspector Asup Feddy, said the offences were punishable under Sections 231, 221, 409, 339(a)(c), 285, 348, 45, 410, 44(1), 166(d) of the Criminal Law of Lagos State, Nigeria, 2011.

No plea was taken for the murder charges.

Feddy applied that the defendants be remanded in prison custody due to the nature of the offences.

The magistrate, Mr. E.O Ogunkanmi ordered that the defendants be remanded at the Ikoyi prison custody pending legal advice from the Directorate of Public Prosecution.

The matter was adjourned till November for DPP’s advice.





#punch

Policeman brutalizes eight-year-old daughter over witchcraft, parades her naked on the street



Goodness
Goodness Ayamba


A police sergeant from Ibiaku community, Mkpat Enin Local Government Area of Akwa Ibom State, Mr. Ita Ayamba, has allegedly brutalized and abandoned his eight-year-old daughter, Goodness Ayamba over her refusal to confess to witchcraft.

Ita was said to have paraded the little girl along the village streets naked, declaring that Goodness was responsible for his retrogression in the Police Force.

A source and relative of Ita, told Punch correspondent in Eket on Saturday, on the condition of anonymity, that the police sergeant tortured his daughter for several hours in an attempt to extract a confession of being a witch from her.

He said, “When he discovered that Goodness had passed out, Ita abandoned her, having hit her chest with the butt of his AK 47 Rifle.

“None of us could go close to Ita to rescue Goodness as he had threatened to shoot anyone that dared.

“I don’t see how a child of that age could become a clog in the wheel of her father’s progress in the Police Force. We need to tell each other the truth. Progress in one’s career depends on the efforts one has made academically.”

PUNCH Metro gathered that Ita had divorced Goodness’ mother some years back. He was said to have remarried almost immediately, leaving three children including Goodness with their grandmother.

A resident of the area, Okon Ekong, said that on July 28, 2013 when the children were on holiday, Ita had requested custody of them. He was said to be at his new station in Port Harcourt, Rivers State, at the time.

Ita’s former wife, Mrs. Anietie Ayamba, allegedly heeded his request and took the children to him. Ekong said that the children’s stepmother made life miserable for them.

He said, “It was during their stay in Port Hracourt, that their stepmother took the children to a Pentecostal church. Goodness was accused of witchcraft at the church. Her stepmother was told that Goodness was the person responsible for their father’s non-rising profile in the force.

“The father who was also in the church began to beat and kick Goodness in a bid to extract a confession about her witchcraft.”

When PUNCH Metro visited Immanuel Hospital, Eket, Eket LGA, on Saturday, where Goodness was taken to for medical attention, it was gathered that she had been admitted at the intensive care unit of the children’s ward.

Nurses at the hospital said Goodness’ condition was stable but that her bones and chest cavity had been badly damaged.

A group of women lawyers under the aegis of Federation of International Women Lawyers have said that they would do everything within their power to ensure that Ita was brought to justice.

The state director of the organisation, Mrs. Mary Udonsek, stated that the women would not continue to sit back and allow men maltreat their children on the guise of labelling them witches.

Ita, said to be working at Trans Amadi Police Station, Port Harcourt, Rivers State had allegedly not been to Ibiaku, Mkpat Enin LGA since the incident.

The state Police Public Relations Officer, Mr. Etim Dickson, said the Rivers State Police Command would be contacted about the matter.

He said, “Messages have been sent across to police area commands in Oron and Ikot Ekpene so that Ita will not have any place to hide once he is in the state.”

*This is child abuse in the highest order and i pray that this excuse of a father will be brought to justice!


#punch

Saturday 19 October 2013

CHILLING! 15 years ago, Couple vanished but relatives still received Christmas cards. Now two bodies have been found under their lawn

  • Friends and relatives received cards from 'Bill and Pat' long after they were believed to be murdered 15 years ago
  • Rumours after they vanished said they moved to Blackpool or emigrated, so were never reported missing
  • Niece, Hilary Rose, of Stone, Staffordshire, continued to receive Christmas cards until 2009

Every year, Vivien Steenson received a Christmas card from her elderly uncle. At least, that is who she thought it was from. Sometimes there would be a brief message, passing on the compliments of the season; on other occasions, her uncle and his wife would simply ‘sign’ their names, ‘Bill and Pat’.

Before moving to Nottinghamshire, the couple lived a few miles from Mrs Steenson in North London. ‘I hadn’t seen them since they left London in the late Eighties,’ she said. ‘We just used to exchange cards at Christmas.’

‘Bill and Pat’ — whose full names were William and Patricia Wycherley — also ‘kept in touch’ with other members of their extended family in different parts of the country. Over the past decade or so, those relatives, too, would regularly receive cards. How could they — how could anyone — have known the sinister truth behind those festive greetings?

For whoever wrote the cards, it couldn’t have been William and Patricia Wycherley. Police believe they were murdered 15 years ago and buried in the back garden of their semi-detached home on the outskirts of Mansfield. The two bodies found in a shallow grave there last week have not yet been formally identified, but detectives are in little doubt they are the skeletal remains of the Wycherleys.




Buried: Police found two people, believed to be elderly couple Bill and Pat Wycherley, buried in the back garden of the house in Mansfield

Had they lived, Mr Wycherley, a retired engineer, would now be 100. Mrs Wycherley would be 79.

There were rumours after they vanished that they had gone to live with friends, moved to Blackpool or emigrated, so neighbours never reported them missing.

However, police recently received a ‘tip-off’ — seemingly out of the blue — that led them to dig up the garden of their old house.

It was the start of an extraordinary series of revelations.

Those Christmas cards were not the only incriminating evidence that someone had tried to conceal Bill and Pat’s deaths. The couple’s signatures, the Mail has discovered, are also on a legal document which allowed their home to be sold for more than £60,000 in 2005.


‘Bill and Pat’ couldn’t have signed the papers. They were almost certainly long dead by then.

So who forged their signatures? Who received the money from the sale of the property?

These are questions we shall return to. But the more that emerges about this troubling case, the murkier it gets. Indeed, it reads like the extraordinary plot of a crime novel.

Yet there could not be a more unlikely setting for this still unfolding mystery than Blenheim Close, a suburban cul-de-sac in the former mining village of Forest Town.

Residents who remember the Wycherleys described them as ‘reclusive’. They had no friends to speak of and few, if any, visitors. Only one person, a former neighbour, seems to have even set foot inside their house, which is perhaps why their fate remained a secret for so long.

Mr Wycherley, the son of a coal miner, was originally from Mansfield. One of four children, he had a turbulent upbringing.

He was among thousands of youngsters from deprived or troubled backgrounds in Britain sent to a ‘better life’ in former colonies such as Canada and Australia.




Aerial picture of Blenheim Close in Mansfield where two bodies were found. Police confirmed they have launched a double murder inquiry



In reality, many of those involved in the controversial child migrants programme, which continued until the Sixties, were physically abused in foster homes, orphanages and religious institutions or used as slave labour on farms.


Records show Mr Wycherley returned from Canada when he was 18 and went to live with one of his brothers in London. Later, he travelled the world with the merchant navy.


In 1958, he and Patricia, then a library assistant, were married in Hammersmith, West London. He was 46. She was 23. At the time, Patricia was pregnant with their only child.


The baby, a girl called Susan, was born three months after the wedding. Mr Wycherley’s occupation on the birth certificate is listed as: ‘Machine shop inspector, motor accessories manufacturer.’


The Wycherleys lived at various addresses in the capital, eventually returning to Mr Wycherley’s roots in the East Midlands. They moved to No.  2 Blenheim Close in around 1987.


Their daughter, who is now married, remained in London. Brett Wilson lived next door to her parents from 1990 to 1994. His neighbours, he recalls, brought an old Yamaha organ with them. It was positioned next to the dividing wall.

‘It was very annoying because the houses had thin walls,’ he says. ‘You could hear a pin drop. I could hear them singing most afternoons and evenings. They were fond of old music hall songs like,

“Daisy, Daisy, give me your answer do.”

‘Mr Wycherley played the organ, and his wife sat next to him. On one occasion I had to go round and politely ask them to turn the organ down. They invited me in and said they were sorry and promised to keep the noise down. They were fine after that.’

Mr Wilson, 53, is possibly one of the few people to have been in the house. The decor was shabby and yellowed — both Mr and Mrs Wycherley smoked — and it was full of old-fashioned ornaments such as little bowls with sweets and stacks of books, newspapers, and magazines piled high on the organ.

‘They never bothered anyone,’ says Mr Wilson. ‘They never did any harm to anyone. But they would not stray beyond their own little world. I noticed that when we or any of the neighbours went out into the back garden, they always went inside.

‘They didn’t mix. They didn’t talk or communicate with anyone. They didn’t even have a car. You just used to see them moving around behind the net curtains like shadows.’

Then, one day there were no more ‘shadows’ or music hall songs, or sightings of the white-haired couple walking to and from the shops, or waiting at the bus stop.



Deeds: The document of sale for the house


No one can quite remember precisely when they last saw the Wycherleys, but the common consensus is that it was around 1998.

The fateful call to police which triggered the criminal investigation is understood to have been about an ‘incident’ alleged to have happened at No.  2 Blenheim Close in the late Nineties.

To the couple’s relatives beyond the street, though, ‘Bill and Pat’ were still very much alive and well.

Another niece, Hilary Rose, of Stone, Staffordshire, continued to receive Christmas cards until 2009.


‘I know this because my mother died in 2009 and a Christmas card arrived two months later,’ she said.


According to the historical electoral roll, the Wycherleys were the registered occupants of the house long after their deaths.


So someone must have filled out the official form confirming they still lived there and returned it to the council each year. A pre-paid envelope was provided for that purpose. Local authorities now allow those eligible to vote to reply by phone, text or email.


Back in her flat in Whetstone, North London, Vivien Steenson, the daughter of Mr Wycherley’s late brother, James Wycherley, had no reason to suspect anything was wrong.

A Christmas card and other correspondence was still being sent to her until two years ago. ‘It doesn’t make sense,’ says Mrs Steenson, now 75. ‘I can’t really believe they were buried in the garden and had been there since the Nineties.’

One of the most sinister aspects of the story involved the sale of their home. Our own inquiries have established that the property was marketed through the estate agency arm of the Halifax, which has now closed.


Details of the subsequent sale — the house went for £69,000 — are filed at the Land Registry. They make for chilling reading.


Included in the legal bundle is the actual deed ‘transferring’ No.  2 Blenheim Close to the buyer, who, it should be stressed, has been ruled out of the police investigation.

The ‘signatures’ of the vendors, William Geoffrey Wycherley and Patricia Dorothy Wycherley, are scrawled under their names. They are supposed to have ‘signed’ this document on August 10, 2005, ‘in the presence’ of a witness. How could this be when the signatories were dead? 

The identity of the witness, whose name and address is printed on the deed, cannot be revealed for legal reasons.

All we can tell you is that the person is male, and that around the time the house was sold he had debts and was being pursued by creditors. Our attempts to contact him proved unsuccessful.

We will leave you to draw your own conclusions about the significance of this information and the importance it might yet play in the criminal inquiry into the deaths of Mrs and Mrs Wycherley. But what of their daughter?

Susan Edwards, as she is known today, is now 55. Until recently, she was living with her husband in a council flat in Dagenham, Essex. Like her parents, it seems, she was very private.

‘She would never speak to anybody,’ said a neighbour.

‘Even when the postman knocked on the door with a parcel, she wouldn’t answer the door.’

According to relatives, Susan’s father was not in favour of her marriage, at least to begin with; they did not know why, other than suggesting that Mr Wycherley could be a little ‘possessive’ and perhaps overly protective when it came to his daughter.

One woman who has lived in Blenheim Close for 18 years said she did not see Susan — or anyone else for that matter — visit her parents in all that time, not even once.

Recent events have been greeted with shock and disbelief in the quiet cul-de-sac. Residents woke up on Thursday of last week to find men in white boilers suits in the back garden of No.  2, mounds of earth piled up against the fence — with a mini-digger a few yards away — officers sweeping the woodland by the banks of the River Maun near the house, and helicopters flying overhead.

‘Our bedroom directly overlooked their garden,’ said their old neighbour Brett Wilson.

‘You would find it extremely difficult to bury two people and not be seen.’

It is one of the many mysterious aspects to the story.

A Home Office post-mortem examination to establish the cause of death was being carried out on the bodies unearthed in the garden, but it could be ‘weeks or even months’ before the results are known.
Nottinghamshire police have launched a murder inquiry.

‘The focus of the investigation is on the Wycherleys themselves and the goings-on at No.  2 Blenheim Close back in the Nineties,’ said Detective Chief Inspector Ron Griffin.

‘I would like anyone who knew the couple back then to come forward or anyone who lived in the area of Blenheim Close between 2000 and 2005 to get in touch. In so far as suspects are concerned, we are entirely open-minded.’

But at least one individual featured in this article may, in the coming weeks, have some difficult questions to answer.
    #dailymail

Miscarriages are NOT caused by stress or heavy-lifting - Research


The majority of Americans are misinformed about the causes and frequency of miscarriages, leading to feelings of guilt when parents experience it.


A poll of 1,083 men and women in the U.S., conducted by researchers at New York's Albert Einstein College of Medicine and Montefiore Medical Center, found that 76per cent believed a stressful event is a common cause of miscarriage, and 74per cent listed longstanding stress as a major cause.

What's more, 65per cent wrongly believe miscarriage is a rarity when, in actual fact, one-in-four pregnancies result in a miscarriage, making it the most common of any pregnancy complication.







Dr S Zev Williams, an OB-GYN at the institute, said of the findings: 'Miscarriage is a traditionally taboo subject that is rarely discussed publicly - even though nearly one million occur in the U.S. each year.'

Not only are Americans misinformed about the frequency of miscarriages, but they also have false ideas when it comes to its most common causes.

The majority of those surveyed wrongly believed stressful events or chronic stress are major causes of miscarriage - a common misconception that has never been proved true.

In reality, 60 to 80per cent of miscarriages are due to chromosomal abnormalities, the most common cause by far.

According to the research, which was posted on LiveScience.com, 41per cent of Americans believe miscarriages may be due to sexually transmitted diseases - a factor that can contribute, but is not a leading cause.

Sixty-four per cent said they thought lifting a heavy object could cause a miscarriage.

And nearly a quarter said they believed the myth that a mother not wanting the pregnancy can result in a miscarriage.

These common misconceptions about the causes of miscarriage have led parents to feel guilty when they experience one, since they believe their behavior has caused it, according to Today.com.

Other perceived causes cited by the people polled were previous abortions and long-term birth control.

One thing they did accurately predict was the emotional impact caused by a miscarriage.

66per cent said they believed the emotional impact is 'severe and potentially equivalent to losing a child', a feeling that is shared by many parents who experience a miscarriage.





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Comedy Pioneer, Felix Dexter who played the BBC Real McCoy Nigerian character, dies of cancer

 
'Hugely talented': Fellow comedians have paid tribute to Felix Dexter
 

Real McCoy star and comedy pioneer Felix Dexter died of cancer last night.

The versatile comic, 52, had been fighting multiple myeloma, which affects the bone marrow.

Tributes flooded in for the St Kitts-born former barrister, whose characters on the 1990s BBC series included Nigerian accountant Nathaniel.

He also starred in The Fast Show and Absolutely Fabulous and was the first black comic to get a regular slot at London's Comedy Store.

Close friend and radio presenter Eddie Nestor said he had kept his sense of humour even in his final hours.
"It's quite weird, you're going to see somebody being diagnosed with a terminal illness and you find yourself laughing, really hard," he told BBC Radio's Up All Night programme.
"It was great to be able to spend some time with him.
"(I was) lying with somebody on their death bed and they're still making jokes."
Nestor said although Dexter was on pain medication, his mind was still sharp and he seemed "really upbeat".
"You try to hold it together when you're in there, but when you come out of that room, it's a different gig," he said.
Comedian Felix Dexter at the BT Emmas (Ethnic Multicultural Media Awards) at the Royal Lancaster Hotel in 2000
Loss: David Baddiel said Felix's death would be felt throughout the comedy world
 

Actor David Morrissey said he had worked with Felix and was sad to hear the news. "Such a funny, talented and generous man," he tweeted.
 
Fellow comedian Sean Hughes wrote: "So so sad to hear about the truly wonderful Felix Dexter passing away. I hope you can feel the love in the comedy community fella. Rip."
 
Actor David Schneider remembered Felix's popular character Nathaniel the Accountant on The Real McCoy, which he was perhaps best known for. "Lovely, lovely guy," he posted. "And I think nothing on TV has ever made me laugh more than his Real McCoy Nigerian character."
 
Dexter was once named Time Out Comedian of The Year. He also performed a season with the Royal Shakespeare Company. More recently, Dexter featured in the BBC series Citizen Khan.
 
Comic Meera Syal said: "It's such a huge tragedy for a hugely talented man."
Bill Bailey paid tribute to his "old friend" as a "brilliant comedian, a superb comic actor, a lovely man I fell privileged to have known".

David Baddiel tweeted: "Felix Dexter? Doesn't seem possible. Very funny, very gentle, man: his death is a real loss to comedy."

Matt Lucas said: "So sad to hear about Felix Dexter. A brilliant performer and on the few occasions I was lucky enough to meet him, a very nice man."

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