Police rescue 13 kidnapped Naval Engineering College students in Edo

The Police Command in Edo said that it had rescued 13 kidnapped students of Naval College of Engineering, Sapele in the state.

The command’s Public Relations Officer (PPRO), SP Kontongs Bello, disclosed this in a statement issued in Benin.

Bello explained that the students were travelling in an an18-seater bus from Kaduna to Sapele when the bus was intercepted by hoodlums suspected to be kidnappers on Ekpoma-Benin Road, Iruekpen in Esan-West Local Government Area of the State.

He said that on receipt of the information, operatives of the command swung into action and rescued 13 of the victims, while one came back from the bush on her own the following day, with five others still with the kidnappers.

Bello added that efforts had been put in place to rescue the remaining five victims.

He described as fake and misleading, news making rounds, especially in some online news portals, on the alleged kidnap of seven naval officers said to be travelling from Kaduna to Delta on Benin-Sapele Road.

He quoted the fake report as stating further that the command rescued five of the victims, two of them still with their abductors and that efforts were on by the operatives of the command to rescue the remaining two.

“The command wishes to refute this fake and misleading news that is capable of putting the Navy against the Police and diverting the attention of the two Security Agencies from their work of protecting lives and properties,” he said.

The police spokesman added that none of the reporters of the online media visited him in his office or called him on the phone to confirm any story.

“The closest to the incident is that of the students of Naval College of Engineering, Sapele, who travelled in an 18-seater bus from Kaduna to Sapele.

“The bus was intercepted by hoodlums, suspected to be kidnappers, on Ekpoma-Benin Road, at Iruekpen in Esan West Local Government Area of Edo.

“The command, therefore, enjoins the general public to disregard the fake and misleading news, orchestrated by mischief makers to pit the navy against the police and further create tension among commuters and motorists.

“The command also assures the general public that those behind the fake, fabricated and misleading news will be tracked and made to face the full wrath of the law,” Bello said.

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