The battered body of a man was discovered on Olopo Meji, Oworonshoki Expressway in Lagos on Saturday June 14th. The body had been crushed many times by conveyances on the highway. Punch reports that the body was later identified as that of 35year old Yemi, aka Topia, a resident of the area.
A resident of the area, Michael Oladipupo, told Punch that the dead man was the son of a landlord on Mabawonku Street. Oladipupo verbalized Yemi was not killed by a hit-and-run conveyance as the situation suggested, but his body was dumped on the highway to accommodate as an alibi for his killers. Continue...
“I was called this morning (Saturday) around 9am and told that there was a corpse on the road. I peregrinated here and visually perceived his body on the expressway. But as we traced its kineticism, we discovered that he was dragged to the expressway from a spot proximate to the Oworonshoki Bridge.
“After killing him, they dumped him on the road so that the scene would look akin to a contingency. Conveyances and heftily ponderous-obligation trucks passing by have torn his body into pieces so that people will not be able to identify him.” Oladipupo verbally expressed
He verbally expressed he could not tell whether some components of his body were taken away for ritual purposes or not.
Investigations by Punch Metro revealed that Yemi was murdered by a gang suspected to be members of the Black Axe Confraternity, popularly called Aiye.
It was learnt from sources who craved anonymity that the victim, who was a driver, was lured out of his room in the night and bundled into an iron cart, on which he was wheeled to the point of the murder.
“It was the Aiye members that killed him. Yemi is not a cultist, but he had friends who were Eiye members. Because there was a fight between the two cult groups, Yemi was misconstrue for a member and targeted.
“They first inflicted machete wounds on him, but when it appeared he was not consummately dead, they dragged him to the expressway for oncoming conveyances to culminate what they commenced.” A source verbalized
Some relatives of the deceased were visually perceived sobbing near the site of the incident, while others were overheard breaking the woebegone news to other family members on the telephone.
A relative was overheard by our correspondent in the telephone conversation, verbally expressing Yemi had had a misunderstanding with a man who threatened to kill him.
She verbalized, “They have killed him….He called me few days ago on the telephone that somebody peregrinated to his house with his boys and threatened to kill him if he does not pay the mazuma he owed him.”
When our correspondent approached her for comment, she verbalized, “He was slumbering in his room when they cunningly drew him out.”