Evil Mistress Strangles Lover’s 4 Children
AFRIK UPDATE
News/Africa
NIGERIA
News/Africa
NIGERIA
A woman in Obuno Umuochefu, Igbo-Ukwu in Aguata Local
Government Area of Anambra state has snuffed life out of four children of her
boyfriend by strangling them. Not done with her bestial mission, the suspect
sat back at the scene of the crime until her victims’ parents returned, and
attacked their mother.
For Mr and Mrs Nwanneka Ogechukwu Okonkwo, both natives of
Ekwulumili in Nnewi South Local Government Area but resident in Igbo-Ukwu,
January 15, 2013, came like any other day. But the young couple who are each 28
years old, never knew that it was the day their four children, Chukwuebuka,
(13), Chukwumelum (6) Obumneme (3) and 15-month-old Chinenyenwa would breathe
their last.
The young couple had no premonition of the tragedy that shocked
everybody in the community. Their three sons and a daughter were allegedly
killed by a lady simply identified as Blessing, from Abakiliki in Ebonyi State.
Narrating the tragic incident, the mother of the dead children who spoke with
Sunday Sun at Ekwulumili Health Centre where she was recuperating from the
shock, said that she was also attacked by the suspect. Mrs Okonkwo said that
the eldest of her children, Chukwuebuka, was the first casualty.
According to her, the suspect allegedly hit him on his forehead
with a hard object and dumped the lifeless body inside an underground tank in
the compound before strangling his siblings one after the other. “I was to go
for a burial ceremony with my husband at Ukpor on that fateful day and the
children went to school. We initially left with the youngest one, Chinenyenwa
but the vehicle we boarded was jam-packed with passengers and the baby started
crying. Consequently, my husband said we should disembark and use our
motorcycle but people around said the road was too dusty to ride with a baby on
a bike.
I decided to go home and wait for our other children who went to
school so that they would take care of the baby and enable my husband and I to
make the trip with our motorcycle. “But long after school hours, the children
didn’t come home. We went to the school and other pupils told us that our
children had gone home. I looked for them along the roads they usually take to
the house but I did not see them.
Thereafter, I urged my husband to go on his own and look for
them, but he returned soon after, saying he had seen them coming home. Before
my husband and I left for the burial, I gave them food and told them to go and
stay with an old woman in the neighbourhood because we are the only occupants
of that building, and I don’t like them staying alone in the compound. “We had
stayed barely one hour at the burial ceremony when my husband said we should go
home.
But before we left, my husband’s phone rang and I heard him say,
‘I’m in a burial’. So, as we got close to our home, his phone rang again and he
told the caller that we were not back yet. I didn’t ask him who the caller was
as we rode straight to the house.
“When we got to the elderly neighbour’s house, we were told that
she had gone for prayers and that my children were not seen there. We got to
the house and I opened the gate from behind believing that the children were
inside the house. As we parked our motorcycle inside the compound, my husband
pointed to the underground tank that was open. I became apprehensive because we
don’t keep it open. But I said maybe the eldest might have drawn water from the
well and had forgotten to close it.
I called Ebuka but there was no response. I ran into the sitting
room and saw the three younger ones lying on the floor as if they were asleep.
I ran out again believing that those three were sleeping. I continued to call
Ebuka and looked into the tank and I didn’t see anything. “Later, I decided to
wake up Ebuka’s immediate younger brother to ascertain the whereabouts of his
brother. I called him but he didn’t wake up; I tried to rouse him but he was motionless
and so were the other two. I cried to my husband that the children were dead
and I concluded that since the three were dead, Ebuka might be inside the well.
There were marks of human nails on their necks that showed that
they were strangled. One of them had faeces in his anus. “It was when my
husband started crying and moved towards our bedroom, that the lady (suspect)
emerged from the bedroom and asked him why he was shouting. Then, I advanced
towards her and demanded from her, where she kept Ebuka’s body because I had
seen the others she killed. I held her and she gripped me. When I freed myself
from her grip, I rushed to lock one of the two gates and raised the alarm until
neighbours came.
“Later, somebody rushed out and called the youths of the community
before the local vigilante and policemen arrived. She was arrested along with
my husband.” Sources told Sunday Sun that the timely arrival of the police and
the local vigilante saved the suspect from being lynched. It was also gathered
that Mr Okonkwo, a furniture maker, had been dating the suspect, a relationship
his wife confirmed, and had been battling to stop.
When contacted, the couple’s landlord, Mr Sunday, who lives
outside the community, described the alleged killing of the innocent children
as unfortunate and declined further comment. The Police Public Relations
Officer (PPRO) in Anambra State, Mr Emeka Chukwuemeka, confirmed the incident
and said the matter was being handled by the State Criminal Investigation
Department in Awka, the state capital.
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