BANDITS KIDNAP POLICE INSPECTOR, TOW OTHERS IN KANO, BEAT THEM IN CAMERA AS THEY BEG FOR HELP
By Olayiwiola Ibrahim // Their cries for mercy punctuated the footage as they appealed to the public and their families to raise ransom for their release.
Suspected bandits have kidnapped a serving police officer attached to the Police Academy, Wudil, Kano State, alongside two other men, subjecting them to brutal beatings while forcing them to plead publicly for ransom.
The victims were identified as Inspector Kabiru Bello Adamu, a serving officer at the Police Academy, Wudil, Muntari, and Musa Rabiu (also known as Danladi), all from Tofa Local Government Area of Kano State.
In a disturbing video obtained by SaharaReporters, the three abductees were seen in visible distress as armed terrorists pointed guns at their heads, assaulted them with sticks and repeatedly struck them with AK 47 rifles.
Their cries for mercy punctuated the footage as they appealed to the public and their families to raise ransom for their release.
A source told SaharaReporters that the victims were abducted while travelling from Rijiya Zaki Motor Park in Kano State to Kebbi State.
They were reportedly kidnapped on the way to Kebbi.
The officer, Inspector Kabiru Bello, is a serving policeman with the Police Academy, Wudil, the source said.
In the video, Inspector Kabiru Bello identified himself and narrated in Hausa how the incident occurred.
“My name is Kabiru Bello Adamu. I am a police officer working at the Police Academy, Wudil.
Yesterday afternoon, I was travelling to Kebbi to visit my relatives and former colleagues I worked with years ago, to keep family ties, he said.
On the way, we encountered a calamity. We met armed bandits in the bush, and as of now, we are in their hands.
The inspector, speaking under duress, appealed for mercy while invoking religious sentiments.
We are asking Allah, Subhanahu wa Ta’ala, to bring understanding between us and them.
We have families and relatives. Let whatever happens be resolved peacefully,” he pleaded.
