Tag: Kidnappers

  • Kidnappers kill young Senegalese goalkeeper in Ghana

    Kidnappers kill young Senegalese goalkeeper in Ghana

    An 18-year-old Senegalese goalkeeper, Cheikh Touré, has been murdered in Ghana after falling victim to a network of scams and extortion.

    According to reports, he was killed by kidnappers after his family was unable to raise the ransom they demanded.

    His death was confirmed by Senegal’s Minister of African Integration and Foreign Affairs, who issued a statement announcing the tragic killing of the young goalkeeper after his lifeless body was discovered in Ghana.

    The Minister explained that Cheikh had been deceived into believing he was travelling to Ghana for a trial with a professional club. The scam resulted in his being held hostage by his captors, who demanded a ransom from his family in exchange for his release.

    The statement added that Touré’s body, currently deposited at the Ebenezer Tarfo morgue in Kumasi in the Ashanti Region, will be repatriated once the necessary authorisations are completed.

    The Senegalese Embassy has dispatched two representatives to Kumasi to collaborate with local authorities on the required administrative and judicial procedures, while maintaining close contact with the victim’s family.

    The Cyber Security Authority in Ghana recently reported a rise in cyber crimes in Ghana. According to the CSA, Ghana has lost over GH¢19 million to cybercrime between January and September this year. This marks a 17 percent increase in cyber crimes compared to the same period last year.

    The Authority’s Head of Law Enforcement and Liaison at the CSA, Colonel George Eduah Bessi, made this revelation during a cybersecurity awareness webinar organised by the Africa Centre for Digital Transformation.

    He expressed concern over the growing trend of online crimes in Ghana, highlighting the dangers it poses to the economy. Earlier in the year, the authority reported a steep rise in cybercrime, with a record 2,008 cyber incidents, marking a 52 per cent rise from 2024.

    In a related development, Ghana Police, in a joint operation with the International Police (INTERPOL), cracked down on scammers in the country, arresting sixty-eight suspected individuals involved in romance scams and sextortion.

    In a release shared by INTERPOL on its official website, the international security agency revealed that the operation, dubbed Operation Contender 3.0 and funded by the United Kingdom’s Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office under the African Joint Operation against Cybercrime project, discovered that these criminal syndicates caused USD 450,000 in financial losses, with USD 70,000 recovered in cash.

    “Ghanaian authorities arrested 68 individuals, seized 835 devices and identified 108 victims. Their investigations revealed USD 450,000 in financial losses, with USD 70,000 recovered,” excerpts of the statement revealed.

    According to INTERPOL, the operation was targeted at criminal networks exploiting social media and dating platforms to carry out romance scams and sextortion.

    “The crackdown targeted transnational criminal networks exploiting digital platforms, particularly social media, to manipulate victims and defraud them financially. Specifically, the operation focused on romance scams, where perpetrators build online relationships to extract money from victims, and sextortion, in which victims are blackmailed with explicit images or videos,” the statement said.

    According to INTERPOL’s 2025 Africa Cyberthreat Assessment Report released in June, “two-thirds of surveyed African member countries said cyber-related offences make up a medium-to-high proportion of all crimes.”

    The Economic and Organised Crime Office (EOCO) on the other hand, in a joint operation on Friday, October 17, busted a human trafficking syndicate operated mainly by Ghanaians and Ivorians.

    In a statement shared the same day, the crime intelligence agency announced that following the raid, it had successfully rescued 26 victims of human trafficking, comprising sixteen (16) Ghanaians and ten (10) Ivorians.

    These nationals had fallen victim to job opportunity scams run by individuals posing as recruitment agents for QNET, a multinational company known for its wellness and lifestyle products.

    The operation, dubbed “Operation Quest,” was conducted by EOCO’s Anti-Human Trafficking Unit in collaboration with QNET, around 10:30 a.m.

    “The operation, code-named Operation Quest, followed intelligence that some foreigners and Ghanaians had been trafficked under the guise of employment with the QNET Company — a reputable organisation that trades in wellness and lifestyle products.

    The suspects include two (2) Ivorians and seven (7) Ghanaians, while the victims were made up of ten (10) Ivorians and sixteen (16) Ghanaians,” the statement noted.

    The organisation clarified that these individuals had no legitimate ties to the company and were exploiting QNET’s reputation to carry out their illicit activities.

    “All nine (9) suspects are currently in the custody of EOCO to assist in investigations,” parts of the statement added.

    EOCO cautioned the public against falling for such scams and advised that all reports of employment offers purportedly from QNET be directed to the appropriate authorities. It also reminded the public that the company is working to restore its reputation, which has suffered due to impersonation by groups and agencies using its name for fraudulent recruitment schemes.

    “EOCO wishes to advise the general public to report all cases of individuals and groups who claim to be agents of QNET who can provide job opportunities at the company, either in Ghana or abroad.

  • Kidnappers kill 3 girls after family failed to pay N60m ransom

    Kidnappers kill 3 girls after family failed to pay N60m ransom

    In a horrifying incident in the Dutse area of the Federal Capital Territory, three young girls who were kidnapped met a gruesome fate at the hands of their abductors.

    The perpetrators, suspected to be herdsmen, invaded Sagwari Layout Estate in Dutse on Sunday, January 7, where they abducted ten individuals, including two hotel workers and eight residents.

    After the kidnappings, the criminals demanded ransom from the victims’ families. Regrettably, due to the families’ inability to meet the ransom demands promptly, the kidnappers mercilessly murdered some of the victims, seemingly as a tactic to increase pressure on the families.

    Over the weekend, four lifeless bodies were discovered dumped at Ida, near Ushafa in Bwari Area Council. Among the identified victims are Folorunsho Ariyo, a secondary school student, and Nabeeeha Al-kadriyar.

    Folorunsho was the daughter of the Chief Legal Officer of the National University Commission (NUC), hailing from Ekiti State, as reported by the Nigerian Tribune.

    According to family sources, the kidnappers wanted N60 million in exchange for the release of Folorunsho, her mother, and her three siblings; however, they were only able to raise roughly N5 million.

    “Talks were still ongoing, and as of last Friday, we were optimistic about a positive outcome until we were contacted to pick up her body,” a family source said.

    The other family members remain with their kidnappers, but the teenage girl was buried on Sunday, January 14, 2024, in Dutse Cemetery, Abuja.

    In Nabeeha’s situation, she was abducted along with her father and five sisters. However, her father was released to procure the ransom for the freedom of his children.

    Tragically, Alhaji Abdulfatai, the uncle who led police officers to intervene in the kidnapping, lost his life as he was shot dead by the perpetrators

  • Police manhunt kidnappers of Kubease Chief

    Police manhunt kidnappers of Kubease Chief

    The Police Service is on a manhunt for some six individuals who kidnapped the Chief of Kubease, Nana Ottupre Kwagyan, a suburb of Kwahu Abetifi in the Eastern Region

    A preliminary report from the Police indicates Nana Ottupre Kwagyan in the early morning of Monday, October 16, 2023, was forcefully taken from his house to an unknown location.

    The swift intervention of the police following a report of the incident led to the rescue of the victim at Abene.

    “The victim is currently in safe custody,” the Police noted in a public notice.

  • South African authorities detain suspected Grindr kidnappers

    South African authorities detain suspected Grindr kidnappers

    Seven people have been taken into custody for supposedly kidnapping a homosexual student at a university in South Africa. They enticed him into meeting them by using a dating app called Grindr.

    The 18-year-old student, who is studying at the University of Witwatersrand, was reported as not being present by his roommate on Tuesday.

    The police said that the people who took him away then asked his family for about $1,500 (£1,200) to let him go.

    The group got caught after one of the criminals tried to take out the ransom money from a cash machine in Johannesburg.

    He showed the police where the victim was kept – the officers found him tied up and not awake.

    The people who are believed to be guilty have been connected to at least 85 incidents where members of the LGBTQ community were singled out and asked for money in return for their safety.

    In simple terms, South Africa has a very fair constitution that supports the rights of gay people. It is the only African country where same-sex marriage is legal. However, many gay and lesbian individuals still experience unkindness and unfair treatment.

  • Police arrest 4 suspected kidnappers in Cape Coast

    Police arrest 4 suspected kidnappers in Cape Coast

    Police have apprehended four individuals suspected of being involved in kidnapping activities at a rented residence in Ntranoa, near Ankaful, in Cape Coast.

    One of the suspects, who had allegedly disguised himself and entered a mosque, reportedly lost his life. Meanwhile, two other suspects, including the supposed leader who is believed to be in his 60s, are currently evading capture.

    In an operation conducted on Wednesday evening, the Police successfully rescued several victims, all in their 20s, and promptly transferred them to a hospital for necessary care.

    According to information obtained from the local community, the suspected kidnappers enticed their victims from various parts of the country, including Accra, by offering job opportunities and subsequently housed them within their fenced apartment for illicit purposes.

    Reports indicate that the apartment is owned by a university lecturer.

    Some residents told the GNA that they noticed the presence of the suspects, believed to be francophone nationals, in the community about two months ago.

    However, their decent disposition did not give them away as being involved in any illegal activities, such as trafficking or ritual activities.

    Some residents said that on Wednesday afternoon, at about 1300 hours, one of the victims managed to escape and called for help from the community members.

    The matter was then reported to the Regional Police Headquarters whose timely intervention saved two of the suspects from being lynched by the community members.

    One of them, who also attempted to escape, was reportedly caught and beaten at Atrokwa before he was handed over to the Police.

    Later in the evening, a female who identified herself as the cook for the suspects was also arrested.

    The Police reportedly retrieved talismans, knives and other implements from the apartment. The victims were put on a bus with their luggage and mattresses.

    The Police declined to comment on the issue when contacted by the GNA.

  • Nigeria election 2023 in Katsina: ‘You let kidnappers take me, now you want my vote’

    Nigeria election 2023 in Katsina: ‘You let kidnappers take me, now you want my vote’

    Many Nigerians live in constant fear of being kidnapped and held for ransom by armed gangs, especially in the north-west of the country, where thousands of people have had to flee their homes. The insecurity means many in the region, which has the country’s largest number of registered voters, may not take part in the 25 February elections.

    An unpaved mile-long road that ends at a tree stump is the only way for vehicles to get into Bakiyawwa village in Nigeria’s northern Katsina state.

    This community of mostly subsistence farmers is not where you would expect criminals behind Nigeria’s lucrative kidnap-for-ransom business to go looking for victims.

    It came as a surprise therefore when motorcycle-riding armed men invaded last September and abducted 57 villagers.

    “They held my wife for 38 days,” said Abduljabara Mohammed, a civil servant and one of those considered well-off. He paid 1m naira ($2,100; £1,700) for her release.

    A man holding a radio to his ear
    Image caption,Zaradeen Musa will not say how much he gave the kidnappers, but said it was a lot of money

    “I gave them all my money and a motorcycle, then pleaded with them not to take me,” said Zaradeen Musa, 30, whose door was kicked in around 01:00 as the armed men, commonly referred to as bandits, operated unchallenged for four hours after repelling a police unit called in by the villagers.

    Maria Sani, 45, was seized but managed to slip away as the bandits led the victims to their forest hideout.

    She was left wondering what would have become of her if she had not escaped as, like many abducted that day, she could never have afforded the ransom.

    All those kidnapped were eventually freed but only after months of negotiations that resulted in them paying with cash or valuables such as motorcycles. The abductions show how far the kidnapping problem has spread – not even the poorest are spared.

    Nevertheless, those in Bakiyawwa would consider themselves lucky as the attacks sometimes turn deadly, such as the reported killing of more than 100 villagers by armed men last Friday in another part of Katsina.

    Such armed groups in the north-west and violent secessionists in the south-east pose real threats to the 25 February elections, analysts say.

    Attacks on offices of the Independent National Electoral Commission (Inec) led to polls being moved by a week in 2019, and the recent burning of an Inec office in the south-east has led to fears of another postponement, although officials have said there will be no delays.

    In December, Inec announced that it was too dangerous to hold the polls in some parts of Katsina state but it is not clear what will happen on election day.

    Law professor Chidi Odinkalu argues that this election risks being dragged into unchartered legal territory if insecurity hampers voting and a candidate believes they have been robbed of vital support.

    In the past, people have stayed away from voting over fears of violence in southern states like Imo, Anambra, Lagos and Rivers, but now, the kidnap crisis in the north has left many disinterested in the elections.

    “You let kidnappers take me, now you want my vote,” said Mrs Sani through an interpreter.

    Like many here she previously voted for President Muhammadu Buhari but she is sitting this one out.

    A woman in hijab standing between a door post
    Image caption,Maria Sani has no interest in the coming elections after the attack on her village

    President Buhari is standing down after serving two terms and Bola Tinubu is standing for the governing All Progressives Congress (APC).

    “How can you see all the suffering and still vote for the APC?” said Lawal Suleiman, a former party member but now a lone voice in the village campaigning for the Labour Party’s Peter Obi.

    Many others in Bakiyawwa say they would probably back the main opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), if they vote at all.

    “If Buhari couldn’t solve the problems of this country, no-one else can,” Nana Samaila, who fled her village in Batsari three years ago after attacks by armed groups, told the BBC.

    Her daughter, Aisha Mama, also recently fled with her husband from the village of Dangyya after persistent night-time attacks forced her family to sleep in their farm for weeks.

    Mrs Samaila had high hopes that President Buhari, a former military ruler who comes from Katsina, would solve Nigeria’s myriad issues when she first voted for him in 2003, but like many others, she is now disillusioned by the failures of his government.

    Hundreds of school children have been abducted and released, and the state governor once asked residents to arm themselves against the bandits in a show of helplessness.

    The leading candidates in the election recognise that insecurity, which is intertwined with rising food prices that have caused record levels of inflation, is Nigeria’s biggest challenge at the moment.

    Atiku Abubakar of the PDP, Mr Tinubu of the APC and Mr Obi of the Labour Party are proposing police reforms, revamping the military and improved welfare, among other ideas.

    Their plans are not radically different from what President Buhari, who was elected on a promise of tackling Islamist groups in the north-east, has done with only limited little success.

    While he has largely succeeded in containing the Islamist insurgency, violence in the north-west and south-east has massively increased on his watch.

    “He scattered [destroyed] the economy, there is so much insecurity,” said Mohammed Yusuf, a farmer originally from Katsina now forced into selling tea and cooked noodles on the streets of the region’s biggest city, Kano.

    Two men sitting on a bench
    Image caption,Mohammed Yusuf (L) says he will be voting PDP this time

    Kano, Katsina and Kaduna, dubbed the three Ks, are considered key states for whoever wants to emerge as Nigeria’s president because of their large voting population. There are more registered voters here than in the five south-eastern states.

    Mr Buhari’s bloc of votes in the trio of states helped him win two elections in a row, and while some will still back the APC, there is a feeling that the party has lost ground in a region battered by insecurity.

    Just two weeks ago, this was illustrated when stones were thrown at the president’s helicopter during a visit to Kano.

    There is also a dark horse in the form of Rabiu Kwankwaso of the New Nigeria Peoples Party (NNPP). Only his die-hard supporters expect him to win the presidency, but he has emerged as a major disruptor who might decide who becomes the next president.

    A former governor of Kano state and one-time defence minister, Mr Kwankwaso is immensely popular in Kano and neighbouring Jigawa state.

    If he takes the majority of votes in Kano, whose six million registered voters rank second only to Lagos, it will greatly affect other candidates, especially those of the APC and PDP.

    This might work in favour of the Labour Party which does not have a strong support base in the region.

    Mr Kwankwaso, like many other Nigerian politicians, has switched parties several times. Last time, he backed the PDP and there are rumours he will step down for its candidate and fellow northerner, Mr Abubakar, at some point.

    “He and Obi won’t win, though they are better alternatives to Mr Abubakar who is a crony capitalist,” said Umar Yahaya, a university student driving a taxi in nearby Kaduna.

    “But anyone that votes the APC is rewarding them for failure,” he said, as we headed to the recently reopened Rigasa station to board the Kaduna-Abuja train. The line had been shut for months after a deadly attack by militants which saw the killing and abduction of dozens of passengers.

    When Mr Buhari inaugurated the line in 2016 it was considered a sign of progress in the north, but now it has become a symbol of the violence consuming the region.

    Source: BBC

  • Nigerian pastor arrested for providing a members’s infomation to kidnappers

    Sahara reporters learnt that Kenneth, a mother of seven is a self-acclaimed prayer warrior who consults for people with diseases and spiritual conditions.

    The Nigeria police have arrested a 37-year-old female pastor, Ruth Kenneth for allegedly providing information about congregants to kidnappers in Adamawa state.

    SaharaReporters learnt that Kenneth, a mother of seven is a self-acclaimed prayer warrior who consults for people with diseases and spiritual conditions.

    She was arrested after the police tracked her conversations with kidnappers who threatened to kidnap one of her patients if he failed to pay a ransom of N10 million.

    As gathered, a patient suffering from an undisclosed ailment visited her prayer house along Numan Road in Yola, the state capital. After a prayer session, she claimed that it was revealed to her that kidnappers were after him.

    The man, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said, “When my children and son-in-law took me to her prayer house for healing, she told me that she saw in a vision during prayers that my name was given to kidnappers, and that to avert being kidnapped I should buy a two-year-old ram without bargaining (over) its price.

    “According to her, she needed the ram for a sacrifice to keep the kidnappers away from me. That after slaughtering the ram, she will pull one of its horns, remove something from its heart and mix it with some herbs.

    “That after completing the concoction, she will bury the horn within my compound, after which no man would be able to attack my house or harm me and my family members.”

    “I told her I needed to return home to raise the money. Surprisingly four days after I got back home in early November 2022, I got a strange phone call from someone demanding N10 million, else I risk being kidnapped with some members of my family,” he added.

    The spokesperson for the state police command, SP Suleiman Nguroje has confirmed her arrest, saying “operatives of the Command apprehended her and investigation is ongoing”.

    “The Commissioner of Police, Sikiru Akande, has ordered Criminal Investigation Department to conduct a discreet investigation into the matter as well as to ensure the prosecution of whoever is found wanting.

    “The CP has also advised the public to be very careful while carrying out their daily activities and report suspicious characters around them,” he said.

     

    Source: Sahara Reports

  • Gunmen kidnap Son of Kwara priest seeks N100m in ransom

    A clergyman named Sofiu Amolegbe and his son Aliyu were kidnapped by gunmen on Saturday in Oko-Olowo, Kwara State’s Ilorin region.

    The cleric’s brother, Fasasi, was reportedly shot by the gunmen who broke into the cleric’s home to carry out the crime.

    His father described the situation, claiming that the kidnappers took his son and grandson to a secret place after believing Fasasi had passed away.

    Mr. Amolegbe added that his son, Fasasi was taken to an undisclosed hospital where he had been recovering after the kidnappers left.

    Now a N100m ransom is being demanded by the abductors to release  the captives according to the clergyman.

    He indicated that, “The kidnappers have gotten in touch with us and are demanding a N100 million ransom even though we don’t have the money.”

    “I am appealing to the state government and men of goodwill to assist us in getting my two sons out of the den of the kidnappers,” the grandfather, he explained.

    State police public relations officer, SP Okasanmi Ajayi has also reported that two suspects had been detained in relation to the incident.

     

     

     

     

  • Kidnappers demand N300m to free UNN students, others abducted on Sunday

    Abductors of passengers and several students from the University of Nigeria who were travelling to Nsukka along the Ugwuogo-Nike/Opi/Nsukka Road have reportedly demanded a ransom of N300 million.

    The act is suspected to be perpetrated by herdsmen on Sunday, October 23.

    It is unclear how many were abducted, but sources say there were more than 10.

    A family member of the abducted who spoke to SaharaReporters on Wednesday evening said that the abductors contacted his family and demanded they collectively raise N300 million to secure the release of the abductees.

    According to him, the kidnapperswere seven in number and allegedly Fulani.

    He said the abductors rejected the N500,000 offered as a ransom to secure the release of the students. They, instead, asked them to start preparing for their burial if “we’ll even see their bodies to bury.”

    “They are now threatening that they will kill all of them if the money is not complete.”

    SaharaReporters learnt that some passengers were killed a few metres from the military checkpoint along Ugwuogo-Nike-Opi-Nsukka Road on Sunday.

    The passengers, according to SaharaReporters, were travelling in five vehicles when they were attacked.

    The report says some narrowly escaped.

    Many of the passengers were students of the University of Nigeria who were returning to school following the suspension of eight months of industrial action by lecturers and the subsequent resumption of academic activities.

     

    Source: mynigeria

     

  • Four suspected kidnappers arrested at Ekumfi Abirem

    Some residents of Ekumfi Abirem in the Central Region managed to apprehend four suspected kidnappers on Wednesday afternoon.

    The four suspects attempted to kidnap three children aged 12, 14, and 15, but were apprehended after some vigilant residents raised an alarm.

    The suspects were later handed over to the Ekumfi Police in the central region’s Ekumfi District.

    Tweneboah Kodua, the youth leader of Ekumfi Abirem, told Atinka News that he was on his way to his farm when he heard one of the children screaming in the forest, “they’re killing us.” He said he was able to rally the townfolk to rescue the three male children.

    The four suspected kidnappers were taken to the chief’s palace and later turned over to the police.

     

    Source: Ghanaweb

  • Fleeing Nigerians drown after gang shoots at boats

    At least 18 women and children have drowned in Nigeria’s north-western Zamfara state after their boats capsized as a gang of kidnappers opened fire on them, a resident has said.

    The 18 were among dozens of people trying to escape an attack by the gunmen on the village of Birnin Wajje in the Bukkuyum area.

    The attackers shot dead at least six people and kidnapped seven other villagers before opening fire on the those fleeing on two boats, the resident told the BBC.

    The shooting caused something of a stampede on the boats, which then tipped over, the resident explained.

    A police spokesman confirmed to the BBC that there had been attack on the village and drownings, but could not give casualty figures.

    The resident, who the BBC is not naming for safety reasons, said that 18 bodies had been recovered, but several others were still missing.

    The attackers have also abducted at least 16 people in the nearby village of Dargaje.

    Zamfara is one of Nigerian states worst affected by killings and kidnappings for ransom.

    Source: BBC

  • Canadian kidnappers accuse police of pocketing their money

    The four accused persons who have been charged for kidnapping two Canadian nationals have accused the investigator in the case of hoarding their pocket money.

    The accused persons through their lawyer Yaw Dankwah asked the court to issue an order for their money to be released to them.

    This was after Sampson Agharlor, the main accused person, said out of his GHc890 that is with the investigator, only GHc250 has been released to him.

    State drops charges against 4 in Canadian girls kidnapping

    Another accused person, Elvis Ojiyorwe, also raised similar concerns but the court was reluctant to give the order.

    This was because the investigator in the matter was not present in court when the matter was called. The court said it could not grant such an order unless it hears from the investigator.

    NEW JUDGE TO TAKE OVER

    The sitting judge at the Criminal Division of the Accra High Cour Justice George Buadi has said his mandate as the trial judge ends on November 29, 2019.

    He said he will not be the judge to deal with the trial but deems it prudent to direct the prosecution to disclose to the accused persons all documents they would rely on in the course of the trial.

    The court also directs that names of all witnesses, their evidence also be served on the defense team on or before November 14.

    Case adjourned to November 21

    TRIAL WARRANT

    The court prior to adjourning the case instructed the Nsawmam Prison officers to take custody of the accused persons and produce them in court anytime they are to appear.

    Employees of Canadian firm kidnapped in eastern DR Congo

    This was after their counsel Yaw Dankwah raised a concern that even though the accused persons were remanded at the Nsawma Prisons, they could not have conference with them. He said when they went to Nsawam Prisons they were told the accused persons names were not on their list.

    But Winifred Sarpong, the Senior State Attorney explained that even though court remanded them to Nsawam, a trial warrant was needed for the investigator to hand them over to the prisons.

    She added that such was the miscommunication that led to defense council not being allowed to see their clients.

    All three Nigerians Sampson Aghalor, Elvis Ojiyorwe and Jeff Omarsar tother with one Ghanaian, Yussif Yakubu have been slapped with conspiracy and kidnapping.

    They have all pleaded not guilty.

    Source: starrfm.com.gh