Lawrence Nomanyagbon Anini,
Nigeria’s acclaimed most notorious armed robber, was born sometimes in 1960. He
terrorised the old Bendel State, especially its capital, Benin City in the
1980s, but in 1986, his robbery exploits reached a terrific level that it
became a national issue. He operated along with his lieutenant, Monday Osunbor,
and others. However, one striking feature in the Anini reign of terror was the
police complicity. It was soon discovered that the Anini gang had insiders
within the police hierarchy of which George Iyamu, a Deputy Superintendent of
Police, was their arrowhead.
Anini, dreadfully called ‘The Law’
or ‘Ovbigbo’, was born in a village about 20 miles from Benin City. He migrated
to Benin at an early age, learned to drive and became a skilled taxi driver in
a few years. He became known in Benin motor parks as a man who could control
the varied competing interest among motor park touts and operators. He later
resorted to criminal acts in the city and soon became a driver and transporter
for gangs, criminal godfathers and thieves. Later on, he decided to create his
own gang and they started out as car hijackers, bus robbers and bank thieves.
Gradually, he extended his criminal acts to other towns and cities far north
and east of Benin.
On the 23rd of August 1986, something bizarre happened in Bendel
State, Nigeria. A prince of the Benin royal family, Kingsley Eweka, was bundled
to the Asoro firing range. A Bini prince and an aristocrat by birth and
virtue of belonging to one of Africa’s oldest and most revered monarchies,
Kingsley was however not accorded any honour that fateful day. As a matter of
fact, he had just been condemned and sentenced to death by a court of law for
armed robbery and he was manacled like a petty criminal that he was. At a time
when the law was really blind, the prince was lined up and in a matter of
minutes, he was fired and joined his ancestors. But something very interesting
happened shortly before he was killed.
Prince Eweka took a good look at his executioners, struggling to
turn his neck as his body was firmly tied to the stake. They also looked back
at the condemned criminal and cast furtive and somewhat puzzled glances at
themselves. Then they asked him if he had anything to say. An embittered Eweka
was overtaken with rage and he thundered:
‘My friend and his boys will avenge my death!’
But the executioners, who did not know those Eweka was ranting
about, thought it was just the paranoid prattle of a man facing a sure
death. They thought Prince Eweka was just delusional and were not even
interested in any friend of his, if indeed he had any. Theirs was to escort him
to the border between this world and the next. The executioners let out warm
smiles that slipped out of their vengeful cheeks and in a matter of minutes;
Kingsley Eweka was history, to explain himself before the gods. But the
prince was not blabbing. The whole of Nigeria would soon hear of his ‘friend
and his boys’. And it was indeed a very bloody revenge.
Prince Eweka and other suspects were arraigned before the Armed
Robbery and Firearms Tribunal. With his fellow partners in crime, they paid the
ultimate price.
ANINI EXPLOITS
The year 1986. October was the month. The iron-fisted military
junta of Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida was rattled by a 26-year-old man who could
not even speak a single sentence in English, not to talk of write a line of
grammar. The gap-toothed Nigerian military president was furious and he
summoned his highest-ranking police chiefs.
Some hundreds of kilometers away from the cosy and secured
chambers of IBB’s Armed Forces Revolutionary Council where the high-powered
meeting was going on, in the ancient city of Benin, everyone was bathed in fear
and it was very palpable Bendel State lived under the dark blanket of sheer
terror spread by this young man who spoke only Pidgin English and his local
dialect . Everything was tried to capture this elusive figure but nothing
worked and he continued to unleash unspeakable horror upon the defenceless
citizens.
The people of Benin felt they had had enough. One fateful day,
women leaders of various markets all over Benin trooped to the Oba of Benin’s
palace and pleaded with him to use his powers to consult with the spirits and
stop the dark rains of Anini. At a point, the monarch had to go on radio to
appeal to the gangsters to let peace reign in Benin. Anini respected the crown
and went underground with his gang for a while only to resurface with renewed
vigour.
The Oba of Benin, Omo N’Oba N’Edo Uku Akpolokpolo, Erediauwa I,
was visibly disturbed as his people were mercilessly slaughtered, killed,
raped, robbed and maimed by a young desperado that everyone, including the
government, feared. Being a monarch who would never fold his arms and leave his
people to be terrorized, the highly-revered Oba called a meeting with his
council of traditional chiefs. The Oba then ordered all his Bini subjects to
make supplications to the gods for the reign this young man to end. The Oba
also called on the security agencies to try their best to fish out the brains
behind the dastardly acts threatening to turn pristine Benin into something
else.
Benin Kingdom is one of the most legendary in Africa and not even
in its thousands of years of existence was it so menacingly disturbed by a
single bandit. A curfew from 10pm till dawn was imposed on the whole state
because of one man. He was an armed robber but they called him ‘The Governor’.
When people mentioned the Governor of Bendel State, they would ask you:
Anini or Inienger?
Inienger, a colonel in the Nigerian Army was the governor of the
state. But wait a minute, who was Lawrence Nomayangbon (also spelt as
Nomayanukpon) Anini, aka Anini the Law and why was he feared to the extent
that IBB had to personally demand for his capture during a meeting of the Armed
Forces Revolutionary Council (AFRC), the nation’s highest decision making body
in October 1986? IBB faced his Inspector-General of Police, Etim Inyang and the
Commander-in-Chief blurted out:
‘My friend, where is Anini?’
A challenged Inyang replied:
‘We shall find him soon.’
But Inyang never did. His retirement from service came in November
1986 (his retirement notice was previously announced in October 1986 and it is
still not clear whether his retirement was mandatory or voluntary) and the lot
fell of the next IGP, Mohammed Gambo Jimeta who told journalists upon becoming
the new police top boss on the 1st November, 1986:
‘I would catch Anini very soon.’
The nation would later get the answer in the most dramatic
fashion. Dearest Reader, Abiyamo welcomes you to the underworld, the den of the
smoking guns, of the racing bullets, the world of the legendary and almost
mythical Anini alias The Law, alias The Governor, alias Ovbiudu (the
Lion-Hearted), alias Robin Hood of Africa, alias The Unbeatable, alias The
Robber’s Robber, the man who would later etch his name in ugly and scrawly
black ink in history as Nigeria’s most notorious armed robber. But who was this
thief whom many believed could vanish into the thin air using the dark forces of
magic?
Babangida had been thorougly embarrassed by the Anini saga and he
was even taunted by the BBC that as the military president, he held sway over
all the 17 out of the 19 states of the Federation with the exception of two
strategic ones: Lagos and Bendel which were ruled by criminals. In one year in
the 1980s, from January to July, Lagos alone witnessed 208 violent crimes.
IBB’s clenched fist was understandable. Anini was the latest target. The Daily Times (8th December, 1986) fired back at the BBC following Anini’s
capture:
‘President Babangida controlled 17 states while
while Anini Suzerainty held sway in the remaining two states, Bendel and Lagos.
The grievous implication of BBC’s scathing news items was that Nigeria was a
country where security of life and property could not be assured and that the
atmosphere was not fertile for foreign investment. No thanks to the dastardly
acts of a mean criminal called Anini. The BBC should swallow its words.’
Born around 1962 (some records
indicate 1960), Nigeria's most legendary armed robber hailed from the town of
Orogho, one of the seven communities in the oil-rich Orogho Dukedom in
Orhionmwon Local Government Area of Edo State (then, it was called Bendel State
which was later split into Edo and Delta States on the 27th of August 1991 by
the Ibrahim Babangida regime). Orhionmwon is about 20 miles from Benin City and
is headed by the Enogie (Duke) a blood relation of the Oba of Benin. Anini was
born into the Owuo family quarters. An only son of his
Evbueisi-born mother, he had two sisters.
Tiny Anini was brought to Benin
where he was admitted at the Oza Primary School but from a young age, he
started manifesting the signs of truancy. He struggled to finish his primary
school then entered the Igiedumu Secondary School. He did not spend more than
three years when he dropped out of school, preferring to be an apprentice at a
local mechanic workshop. That was around 1976. But after about three months,
his master, David Isiokherhe, booted him out of the workshop. Anini had started
stealing.
On that fateful day, a sum of
N7 (seven naira) belonging to one of the other apprentices at the workshop
suddenly vanished like a Lockheed Martin F-22 Raptor. The frantic owner raised
an alarm upon discovering that his money was missing.
But the criminal lad called
Anini would not confess. He lied that the money was given to him by his mother
to procure some medications for her. Isiokherhe then threatened to bring out
some 'voodoo' to
identify and nail the culprit. At that juncture, Anini owned up and confessed
to the theft. A search was conducted and N5 was found on Anini. He had 'jeunsoked' the
remaining N2. His master fired him as an apprentice.
GROWING
UP
Omorogieve Obayowana was the
head of Anini's village and according to his accounts, Anini's father died when
he was still a young boy. Anini would later be raised by an uncle he came to
regard as his father. Later on, he would leave the village for the city of
Benin in search of greener pasture. He started work as a lorry driver (some say
taxi driver) after his master fired him and slowly transformed into a leader of
the local motor parks, controlling and commanding touts. When politics came
back to the arena in 1979, the politicians found good use of Anini as a
political thug and his hooliganism paid off with him learning the mastery of
firearms use in the process.
Later, following the sudden
overthrow of the politicians in the early 1980s and banning of politics in 1984
by the Buhari regime,
the highly-skilled driver (now of criminal gangs and godfathers) discovered
that armed robbery was far more lucrative and decided to form his own deadly
gang. He sealed a pact with corrupt police officers and ruled with reckless
abandon. He would then swear allegiance to a bloody profession that would bring
him wealth, fame and doom. Highway robberies, car jackings, bank raids, Anini
was a specialist in all aspects of pilfering with the gun.
THE DAYS OF ARMED ROBBERY
Anini did not give much information about his early days in the
underworld but he confessed that he was introduced to the 'trade' by one Friday
Agbonifo (dead as at the time Anini was captured). He is thought have become
friends with Kingsley Eweka in the period between 1984-1986. By July 1986,
Anini was powerful enough to launch a full frontal assault against the entire
police force of Nigeria's Mid-West region.
By August 1986, Anini had metamorphosed into a full-time snitching
monster. That month, one of the bloodiest bank robberies in Nigeria's history
would be commandeered by Anini and his ruthless fellows. In the heist, a
policeman was gunned down while others, including two children, were also
killed. That same bloody month, Anini and his 'guys' were cruising down and as
they vehicle was flagged down at a police checkpoint, they opened fire. Two
police officers lost their lives in that incident. Within 90 days, a total of
nine policemen lost their lives in Anini's hands. 16 civilians had been killed
and a total of 12 banks robbed, according to Prince Amen Oyakhire, the former
military governor of Taraba and Yola States, who was mandated by IBB to travel
to Benin on the Anini case.
But August 1986 would not end without another Anini's displaying
his insatiable appetite for taking what does not belong to him. This time
around it was the turn of First Bank Plc and the specific target was their
branch at Sabongida-Ora. Monday 11th was the appointed date and 3.30pm was the
time. Amazingly, they left with a relatively little amount of money (N2,000)
but they wasted numerous lives at the scene of the robbery. They killed three
people on the spot upon reaching the venue, one of whom was a policeman. Stray
bullets from the maniacal Anini and his possessed gang flew off and killed two
children who had been locked up in a building near the bank. They were madly
firing at the house when a policeman ran in for safety.
The prince executed for armed robbery was indeed Anini's jolly
friend and they moved together. However, when he was executed, Anini vowed to
not only make the police repay him his money which he paid so the evidence
against Eweka could be destroyed but he would also avenge the death of his
friend in a most gripping manner, one that the Nigeria Police would never
forget in a hurry. Over time, Anini had various bloody confrontations with the
Nigeria Police. At a point, the Nigeria Police unleashed so much terror and
destruction on his network that his bubbling business in Ibadan, Oyo State was
liquidated and brought to a sudden halt.
Following the execution of his friend, Prince Eweka, and coupled
with the way the police had dealt with him and his nefarious businesses, Anini
vowed to deal ruthlessly with the Nigeria Police. Henceforth, he would be far
more ruthless than he had been in the past as he believed that the Ibadan
attack on him by the cops was just unjustified. What even enraged him more was
the fact that the police (George Sam Iyamu to be specific) had collected the
sum of N50,000 from him and agreed that Eweka would be freed as it was to him,
a 'taboo' for a Bini prince to be executed, only for the police to turn around
and nail Eweka's coffin. Anini would never forget this act of 'betrayal' and
from then on, him and his killing spree partner, Monday Osunbor would
specifically target policemen. Oba of Benin then stressed the fact that Anini
has no link whatsoever with the royal family. The monarch would later tell the
police authorities to search their cupboards very well.
Then the bloodbath began, Anini and his gang turned Benin City to
a stage of gory robberies and treated the people to horrendous spectacles of
blood-curdling crimes. For maximum dramatic impact, Anini, would spray naira
notes from their getaway car as he engaged in frantic shootouts with the police
shouting:
'I rob for the people!'
-It was on the 14th of August, 1986. Anini was driving a stolen
Peugeot 504 and when he was flagged down by policemen at the Jeromi-Edebiri
junction, he fired at the officers without thinking. By the time the policemen
were taken to the Central Hospital, two of them were already dead.
Before long, he was known not only within Benin but all over
Nigeria. Newspapers and media outlets all went into frenzy with editorials and
major features discussing nothing but Anini and whether he would ever meet his
nemesis. Anini never hid his disdain for the police and when he was eventually
nabbed, he would confess:
'Dem kill my father and brother at Ibadan and my
friend Kingsley Eweka.'
But like a man possessed by the very evil of the Devil himself,
Anini was also believed to carry out another car snatching near the Federal
Electoral Commission (FEDECO)office in Benin (another Peugeot 504) the next day
after AIG of police Omeben's driver had been abducted (see below), in the first
week of September. Omeben was in Benin to work on the Anini case. Anini was
suspected to have used a Passat TS vehicle for this particular operation (of
course, the Passat too was believed to have been pilfered).
But that was not all. 48 hours after the Passat incident, Anini
stormed his own local government area (Orhionmwon) and by the time the hapless
people knew what had hit them, Anini and his death squad had pumped bullets
into two police officers. A string of three different armed robberies would
then follow and all fingers pointed at Lawrence (his nickname The Law is a
shortened form of his name).
-In one of Anini's operations, the Mercedes Benz 200 (registered
BD 1 HA) of the Ogbogbovmen II, the Ovie (King) of Ughelli was stolen in
Benin. Actually, the monarch in full regalia in his car before he was swooped
upon by Anini's gang and he was dragged out of the car. They ensured that they
meted out some measure of disgrace upon the helpless traditional ruler before
they made away with his glittering Mercedes. As the King took a hired taxi back
to his palace, he was wondering if it was one very bad dream. Yes, it was a
nightmare and it was called Anini.
-A chartered accountant named Mrs. Remi Shobanjo who was also the
President of the Ugbowo Lioness Club, was murdered while a former worker and
Staff Writer with the Nigerian Observer, Mr. Frank Unoarumi, was also killed and they made away with his
Peugeot 505. When Anini and his gang reached the office of the Shobanjos, they
banged the door with all the fury left in Hell and then started firing at the
door. They arrived the Adesogbe Street office around 7.40 in the evening.
The terrified couple inside the room did not know what to do and
decided to be silent and not open the door. Then they continued firing at the
door until it gave way. A bullet sped in and lodged itself near the poor
woman's heart. Before she knew what hit her, Mrs. Shobanjo was dead. She died
on the spot. Then they entered, stole N200, the couple's Peugeot 504 (later
found in Aghalokpe, Delta State) which they drove off with, after making away
with some documents too.
Between 5th and 9th September, 1986, Anini and his gang made it
clear that they were not joking. The attacked two police stations and posts at
Abudu (the seat of his own local government area) where he killed a police
sergeant and father of seven named Daniel Omedew, took his pistol and went away
with other weapons in the station. Then he and his devilish train moved to Ugo
town where Corporal Lucky Ogieva was not lucky at all, falling to their
bullets. By the time they left, two officers of the Nigerian Police had been killed
in cold blood and many more escaped with varying degrees of injuries.
By the end of September 1986, Anini seemed untouchable and the
entity called Nigeria was already saturated with the chilling news of a dreaded
robber from Benin. That month, Anini, wearing the uniform of a police
superintendent launched another assault on a petrol station situated along Wire
Road in Benin City. He then collected all the proceeds of their sales for the
day, an undisclosed amount of money, then he decided to shoot the station
manager in the thigh. In a macabre fashion, he sprayed part of the money along
the road as he made his escape. This act of his is why some termed him the
'Robin Hood of Africa'.
As you might have guessed, Anini's string of successes further
emboldened him and spurred him to take even greater challenges. On Independence
Day (1st October, 1986), he fired another salvo of surprise at Nigerians when
he waylaid a man, Mr. Casmir Akagbosu, in Benin around 9 pm and shot the
cartilage of his nose, which almost fell off. A reflex turning of his head
saved Akagbosu's life. His head was just centimetres away from the speeding
bullets. That night was real evening of terror as Anini's superior weaponry
blasted off with brutal efficiency, shattering the calm peace of a Benin
populace preparing to sleep.
But Akagbosu was no ordinary citizen, he was actually the State's
Commissioner of Police and he had just been attacked in his new Peugeot 504
right at a spot just about 100 meters from a police roadblock. With a shattered
nose, he managed to survive the attack with other injuries and it must be noted
that earlier that day, Anini's men had gone round town that same day, even
killing a policeman in the process. He was a pack of sheer terror, violence and
destruction and I believe that at a point, he must have believed that he would
never be caught, that he was on top of the world, with the globe at his sinewy
feet.
The Commissioner of Police would also survive a second attack. He
was seated in a station wagon flanked by two officers, his aides: one Sergeant
Ojo and Corporal Ogbe Zechariah. All of a sudden, they were under a volley of
fierce bullets coming from all directions. Anini and his boys again. Luckily
for Akagbosu but unluckily for his assistants, his two aides received all the
hits on their limbs and thighs. The driver, Constable Paulinus Oweh was not
that lucky. He was hit in the head and his limp body collapsed on the seat,
with blood gushing out of the point of impact. An unidentified MOPOL (mobile
policeman) seating in front with the driver however escaped untouched. The
sudden attack left the Commissioner and his boys completely flabbergasted and
could not mount any reasonable response on time. At that point, the legend of
Anini, the man who attacked a Police Commissioner spread far and wide all over
Nigeria. Demoralized policemen would become hypertensive at the mere mention of
the Orogho crime lord.
Not long after that, Anini was on rampage again. He was off to the
Ring Road, one of his favourite spots for attacks. Driving the blue Santana
that he had stolen earlier (to tease the police, he took the car after stealing
it to a car wash where he calmly stayed for about an hour while the car was
being cleaned), he turned at the Iwehen Street junction and he was not too far
from the petrol station where he had struck less than a month ago. All of
sudden, he caught a glimpse of a lonely police constable walking on the
street. Chai!
He brought the car to a halt, withdrew his submachine gun and with
the madness of a crazed Hitler, he released a torrent of bullets on the poor
policeman.
Osunbor Monday, Anini second in command |
For whatever reasons, some believe Osunbor, Anini's
second-in-command was even more brutal but whatever the case, the duo rained
unspeakable terror on Nigerian citizens and were duly punished. Osunbor was a
son of headmaster but he later dropped out from the Avboneka Grammar School
when he was in Form Three or thereabout. He was the first out of 16 children
and he had a bullish behavior right from when he was little. The daredevil made
attempts to escape from the Benin Military Hospital after their capture.
THE CAPTURE OF ANINI
Following the 'war' that he declared on the police, Anini and his
henchmen launched a series of daredevil armed robberies and attacked police
stations as they rampaged the entire city. One day in September 1986, after
operating with a stolen Passat TS, the most wanted man in Nigeria was spotted
at the Ekiosa Market, he was identified but in the mêlée that followed, he
outsmarted those on his trail and disappeared without a trace. The police could
not shoot as he mingled with the buyers and sellers.
Because of his dramatic escape, many even believed Anini used
magic (some policemen even swallowed hook, line and sinker that Anini's body
was covered head to toe with charms that made his body resistant to bullets)
and some swore that Anini had a magic mirror that showed him the movements and
location of the police as they hunted him but as we now know, as against the
superstitious nonsense and myth around Anini, that he had highly-connected
sources in the police who always gave him hints and tips. That explains why he
was always a step ahead of his police foes. Anini himself made the whole court
room go into fits of laughter when he declared that he had no single
supernatural power to disappear that what they used to 'disappear' was the
insider police information supplied to them by Iyamu. As at the time Anini was
arrested, Iyamu had already been posted to the Force Criminal Investigation
Department (CID) at Alagbon, Lagos where he would continue his work as a top
anti-crime police officer. Following Anini's confession, he was arrested on the
4th of December.
The support he received from his police collaborators and
godfathers imbued him with the extraordinary confidence to go on with his
despicable acts. On the 21st of October, 1986, A.O. Emojeve, a medical doctor based
in Benin, was killed at his residence by Anini in one of his operations on
Textile Mill Road in the city. The IBB regime deployed all methods and
tactics to capture Anini but the harder the police tried, the more elusive he
became.
After his narrow escape at Ekiosa Market, one would have thought
that Anini and his gang would lie low for a while but no, not the Ovbiudu of
Bendel. On the 22nd of October, 1986, Anini and his gang left the city of Benin
and launched a daredevil armed robbery in another town named Agbor. Upon
landing in Agbor, the 'action' men launched their assault on the African
Continental Bank branch in the kingdom. This was one of his most classic and
dramatic robberies. Upon entering the bank, Anini first introduced himself with
all majesty.
Then he ordered everyone to take their valuable cash deposits to
his Santana car parked outside. After barking out the commands, he calmly
strolled to a nearby bar and demanded for a chilled bottle of beer. By the time
the operation ended, Anini was N40, 000 richer (some accounts say N46, 000).
Then, Anini, a man given to illogical festivities, drove off and went to feast
men and marketwomen at Oka and he spoilt them with naira notes which he sprayed
as if money rained from heaven. There, he declared that the police would never
win the battle against crime as long as unemployment was the order of the day.
Anini was regarded as a chieftain among the National Union of Road Transport
Workers (NURTW), he lamented the poor state of the economy, inflation,
expensive education fees and even proferred solutions. He even slammed the
Benin police stating that some of their officers must be tried for corruption.
At that stage, some analysts feel Anini was simply preparing a political
platform for himself. On inflation, he said:
“Tell our President, we like him but we are not
happy here in BendeI. The payment for everything is too much. That is why I now
divide any money I get to the people. Ask them.’’
He even listed conditions for peace to reign in the state:
‘They are to put a stop to the persecution of
innocent armed robbers; a stop to police collusion with NURTW (Nigerian Union
of Road Transport Workers) and Ogboni cult members; non-harassment by the
police of market women returning from village market; abolition of the
collection of 5Ok - N5 (by Highway Patron); equal treatment for everybody; and
fair treatment for all legitimate drivers by the police.’’
To be seen as a man fighting the cause of students, he shot a
police sergeant in the leg and sent him to Akagbosu, the police commissioner
with a note stating his displeasure with the violence meted out on protesting
students at the Ahmadu Bello University in Zaria, Kaduna State. He was
gradually warming his way into the minds of the people but the police was
desperate to stop him in the tracks.
For a man who terrorized an entire region of Nigeria with reckless
abandon, his capture was indeed very humorous. Many would love to think that
Anini was hunted down and captured by a battalion of heavily-armed soldiers and
policemen but the interesting is that his end was brought about by the action
of a single and extremely-determined police officer named Kayode Uanreroro, who
was then a superintendent in the police force, who led a relatively small team
of 10 mobile policemen (considering the fact that Anini's gang can be almost
twice that on some operations), with him being the arrowhead of the whole
capture and arrest operation.
KAYODE UANRERORO,Anini captor |
On the 3rd of December, 1986, a Wednesday, around 1pm, Uanreroro
traced Anini to his hideout at No. 26, Oyemwonsa Street, opposite Iguodala
Primary School on the Murtala Muhammed Way in Benin City, he had got vital
information from the locals (today, people are even afraid to take part in
community policing because na you wey talk to police dem go first arrest).
Uanreroro went back to the police command to relay the information of Anini's precise
location. The police wanted to be 101% sure. Mistakes had got them nothing but
bullets and ridicule in the past. Osayande (the Police Commissioner) sent a
lady in disguise to ascertain and confirm Anini's location. Her response was
positive.
A reinforced Uanreroro returned to the building after his 'recon'
operation. As usual, Anini was 'chopping the life of his head' with six
rumbustious women in the room, one of whom was named Florence that Uanreroro
shot in the leg as she ran out of the house to the backyard as he entered. The
house belonged to Florence's father, Jackson Aideyan. Anini had a weakness for
women and apart from using them as his tools of pleasure; he also used them for
his condemnable operations.
Uanreroro, described by Osayande as being 'brave and energetic'
went straight to the house that contained Anini and served as his hideout
around 2pm with his team surrounding the hideout. He knocked and guess who
opened the door? Yes, it was Anini himself, wearing nothing but his underpants.
His instincts must have told him the game was up but like a drowning man, he
would still clutch at straws. With a thousand thoughts flying through Anini's
mind, Uanreroro then demanded sharply without wasting time:
'Where is Anini?!'
Interestingly, Uanreroro met very little resistance from the famed
king of bandits. Cornered like a terrified rabbit and sweating, Anini the Law,
the Terror of Bendel and the Robber of Robbers meekly answered even as he tried
to play smart:
'Anini is under the bed in the inner room.
Don't let him escape. Leave me.'
But Uanreroro would not be bothered with the robber's theatrical
performances. He reached for his pocket and brought out the picture of the
wanted Anini. At that same time, Anini attempted a somewhat brazen move to walk
past the police officer and escape (you know, like Pablo Escobar walked right
past the soldiers that the President of Colombia had sent to arrest the world's
most famous druglord. As if he placed everyone on a spell, Escobar walked right
past all of them, at 2.am and slipped into the darkness of the night). But
Anini was no Escobar. As he made his dumb move to shove the police
officer aside, he head butted Uanreroro, who then reached for his pocket,
brought out his gun and stomping very hard right on Anini's right toes, he
pulled the trigger....
Some of the other mobile policemen outside rushed into the room.
Anini had no gun with him. All the police cleared from the room were 16 rounds
of 9mm bullets, a tiny woven pouch of charms, his gold ring, a wristwatch and
uniforms of police and the soldiers, including the ceremonial versions.
Bendel state commissioner of police as at the time Anini was capturred, Parry Osayande |
Capturing Anini was more of a tragicomic drama. While he made a
mess of himself with his thoroughly imbecilic and cowardly response, the
policeman who confronted him was in no mood for any stupid stage performances,
especially knowing very well how dangerous a free Anini could be. As Anini was
making funny moves, Uanreroro aimed his gun and fired Anini's left leg.
His ankle was shattered. The six bullets lodged in his left leg
ensured he was demobilized. As he luged forwards towards the police officer in
pain, Uanreroro caught hold of Nigeria's most wanted robber and sat him down.
No magic, no amulet. Anini was a human being after all, and there he was,
writhing in agony like a cobra dropped in coal embers. Subdued and almost in
tears, Anini was a pitiable sight, his eyes were red and the pain was unmistakable.
But that was not Uanreroro's business. He aimed his gun at his ankle again and
fired the same spot he shot earlier! Anini let out screams as his dangling
ankle was almost falling off his leg. His right leg was already badly
fractured. At that point, Uanreroro decided to play the gentleman and asked:
'Are you Anini?'
And Anini, with a fluttering heart beating like the famed drums of
Benin answered:
My brother, I no go deceive you; I no go lie, I
be Anini. Please, take me to the hospital.
He was then whisked off inside a police Land Rover into the
waiting hands of Parry Osayande, the State Commissioner of Police at the Bendel
State Police Command Headquarters (Osayande replaced the injured Akagbosu) off
Sapele Road, where Osayande was with Donald Ugbuaja and Edward Irabor, both
also police commissioners. But please note that all the six girls caught with
him all escaped as the police focused mainly on Anini and did not want to be
distracted.
At the police command headquarters, Anini, who was desperately
interested in being taken to the hospital, was subjected to a series of
questioning and through the incredible pain, he struggled to explain himself in
a smattering of Pidgin English which his interviewers struggled to understand.
Irabor had to ask him of his identity in Bini dialect and Anini nodded in
confirmation. Then he started a barrage of confession, of their raids, of their
police accomplices and of even how his deputy, Monday Osunbor had shot and
injured Akagbosu (also a Bendelite but from Agenebode) who was the former
police chief in the state and almost killed in the Independence Day attack.
He named George Iyamu, the police officer who supplied them with
logistics, police intelligence reports and weapons (Anini claimed he collected
between N6,000 and N10,000 per deal for weapons supply). He also confessed as
to how Iyamu would join them after their robberies to get his own share of the
loot. Anini said they called Iyamu 'Baba' and that the palatial buildings that
Iyamu had all over the city were from the proceeds of their criminal
activities. The nation was shocked at his revelations.
At that point, he was losing so much blood that he feared for his
life. He begged the police chiefs and requested that he kindly be taken to the
hospital.
By the time he landed at the Benin Military Hospital on Airport
Road around 3.15 pm with an escort of menacingly-armed mobile policemen, Anini
was 'properly' injured and no one could say the number of bones that had been
fractured in his 26-year-old body. One of his legs was speedily amputated and
an emergency operation was conducted to stop the bleeding as the Governor and
the police wanted him alive so he could confess properly and name his
collaborators. However, at the military hospital, he was treated kindly and
with a great sense of care. The Commandant of the Hospital, Major Ibrahim Musa
and the Matron, Lt. Col. AK Onogu even took them (later with Osunbor) on walks
round the hospital for 'tours'.
The next day, Commissioner Osayande was at the hospital to see the
nation's biggest catch of the year. He asked if they have given him food. He
responded in the affirmative and replied the Commissioner that he would talk
but he would want that to be when he gets well enough. Osayande asked if he
needed anything else, Anini asked for soft drinks and cigarette. Their
conversation continued as follows, as culled from the Nigerian National
Memoirs:
Osayande: I have to find out from doctor whether you can
smoke.
Anini: Eh! He allowed it. I asked him here and he said I am free to smoke, but no money to buy it.
Osayande: Do you know me?
Anini: Yes. I do but without you, I don’t think I can make a statement to anybody.
Osayande: Without me? Oh, you want me to be here. Okay, I will come. When do we come? Monday (Osunbor) is here, he was lying against you. You don’t know that.
Anini: Was he saying I am the one who killed the policemen?
Osayande: Yes.
Anini: He is the one who killed them. Has he not confessed to you that he is the one who killed them?
Osayande: Kills policemen?
Anini: Yes
Osayande: Did l say you are very humane, that you don’t kill policemen?
Anini: I have not killed a policeman before, I have not killed anybody. I only threaten people. If you like to give me, if you don’t like, okay. But once it is Monday or any other person, they are ready to shoot. But for me, I don’t shoot any person. Eh Pa, tell them to buy cigarette for me now?
Osayande kept his promise to give him anything, and ordered Uanreroro, the man who reduced the former armed robbery king to whimpering helplessness, to go and arrange for two packets of Benson and Hedges and two bottles of soft drinks to be brought to Anini. Before then, he gave him eight sticks from his own packet.
Anini: Eh! He allowed it. I asked him here and he said I am free to smoke, but no money to buy it.
Osayande: Do you know me?
Anini: Yes. I do but without you, I don’t think I can make a statement to anybody.
Osayande: Without me? Oh, you want me to be here. Okay, I will come. When do we come? Monday (Osunbor) is here, he was lying against you. You don’t know that.
Anini: Was he saying I am the one who killed the policemen?
Osayande: Yes.
Anini: He is the one who killed them. Has he not confessed to you that he is the one who killed them?
Osayande: Kills policemen?
Anini: Yes
Osayande: Did l say you are very humane, that you don’t kill policemen?
Anini: I have not killed a policeman before, I have not killed anybody. I only threaten people. If you like to give me, if you don’t like, okay. But once it is Monday or any other person, they are ready to shoot. But for me, I don’t shoot any person. Eh Pa, tell them to buy cigarette for me now?
Osayande kept his promise to give him anything, and ordered Uanreroro, the man who reduced the former armed robbery king to whimpering helplessness, to go and arrange for two packets of Benson and Hedges and two bottles of soft drinks to be brought to Anini. Before then, he gave him eight sticks from his own packet.
He even got a very controversial gift from the First Lady of the
state, Mrs. Inienger. While he was being treated at the hospital, with his
right-hand man, Osunbor, the First Lady was on a tour of the hospital and she
met with the two dreaded robbery suspects. Mrs. Inienger then asked them to ask
for any special thing that they want. Both of them then stated that she should
help them intercede with the governor so that they would be freed. They
promised to change their evil ways and even help combat crime in the state
owing to their years of 'experience'. She listened to them with rapt attention,
gave them gifts and then left. Whether she delivered the message to her
husband, Governor Inienger, or not, Anini and his friend would soon know.
(Col. John Mark Inienger was the Governor of Bendel State from
August 1985 to December 1987, IBB rewarded him with the post of a governor for
his role in overthrowing Buhari. You can read all about General Buhari HERE. Governor Inienger later died on
the 8th of February, 2002 at the age of 56. He hailed from the town of Mbaduku
in Vandeikya Local Government Area of Benue State).
The police raided their hideout and found a terrifying cache of
weapons and a variety of charms and amulets, including the one that Anini was
said to have worn on his waist during his numerous operations.
Anini would later confess that he and his members made good use of
police insider information (as against the widespread belief of juju) but the
day he was to be caught, he and his fellow partners in crime had a 'bad
feeling'. On the 9th of November, 1986, policemen swooped on their hideout and
made away with Osunbor and three other gang members. Osunbor was badly injured
and another robber caught in the crossfire was killed. Anini was there too at
the scene of combat, he was injured but again, he managed to escape. But his
escape would not last. Two weeks later, on the 27th, he was also in the police
net. Upon facing the journalists, Anini denied he ever killed anyone, let alone
a policeman. He said on his bed in the military hospital where he was being
treated for his injuries:
I am Anini. I no dey kill people. I only threaten people for their
money. If you like, you give me, if you no like, forget am. I no shoot people.
Na only Monday Osunbor (his second-in-command) dey shoot (kill) people.
Meanwhile, Osunbor was just a couple of hospital wardrooms away
and listened as Anini talked to the reporters declaring his innocence. Osunbor,
who had been silent since they caught him, could not take it anymore and he
shouted:
'Anini dey lie! Na him be overall boss! Na him
dey bring guns and na him too dey drive the Santana car we take dey do
operation.'
Osunbor also pointedly accused Anini of orchestrating the murder
of Dr. Emojeve at his residence and that he should not even start 'to dey form angel for police'. Osunbor on his own also blasted the police for their corruption
and double-faced hypocrisy. At the end, Osunbor would later tell other robbers
to desist because 'it is a dirty
game' according to him. Osunbor said
he had met Anini about four months ago at a 'smoke joint.'
Since one of his legs was
amputated, he had to be conveyed to the courtroom for his trial on a
wheelchair. During Anini and his gang's trial before Justice James Omo-Agege in
Court Room 2 (Justice Amissah held proceedings in Court Room 1), they treated
the nation to enough doses of drama. At a point, Iyamu the police officer
denied ever having anything to do with Anini. A furious Anini fired back from
his wheelchair:
Deputy Superintendent of police, George Iyamu, assisting Anini with weapon,logistic and police intelligence |
You
be shameless liar!
During the trial, a lot of
revelations were made. The tribunal learnt that Iyamu had tipped off Anini that
the Bendel-born Deputy-Inspector General of Police (then an Assistant
Inspector-General of the Police, AIG in charge of F Deparment (Research and
Planning)), Christopher Akhigbe Omeben would be in Benin City and that Anini
and his gang should finish off Omeben. Iyamu even told them that the DIG would
be staying off Ekehuan Road and gave all the needed description but Anini was
unable to carry out the plot to murder the police chief. Iyamu was said to have
said:
'If
you can finish off with him, the entire police intelligence network will be in
disarray.'
Iyamu denied this allegation
and even said he never collected any N50, 000 from Anini to facilitate Eweka's
release. Although Anini and his gang would not be able to 'finish off' Omeben,
something really nasty happened. On the 6th of September, 1986, Anini's gang
kidnapped Omeben's driver, Albert Otoe, a police sergeant, and snatched the
Peugeot 504 he was driving. What was later found was his corpse. He had been
beheaded and his corpse was hidden away before his decomposing skeleton was
discovered on the Benin-Agbor Highway, Umelu area, over 15 kilometres from
Benin, the capital city on the 13th of September, 1986. The attack derailed the
investigation and further sent fears down the people's spines.
Some records indicate that the
sergeant was abducted and decapitated by mistake, that the gang had someone
else in mind. Omeben, who was also involved in Dele Giwa's case, later became a
pastor and wrote a book on his experience in the police force.
The trial held at the High
Court of Justice, off Sapele Road in Benin City. Anini had implicated 10 police
officers and five of them were eventually convicted (a total of 80 policemen
suspected of being in collusion with Bendel criminals had been earlier
transferred to other states).
During the trial, Anini
maintained a sober, apologetic and somewhat regretful mood but Osunbor did not
even 'send'. He
maintained a permanent frown on his face, expressed no pitiful emotions or
remorse and quickly accepted fate that the end was near. He was not interested
in any defence even though the government had to assign a lawyer to him.
As for Anini, he was still
optimistic a miracle would happen. At a point during the trial, he said:
'I
know say Oga Ben (his lawyer) go try for me. Hin go try free me.'
Anini's lawyer, named Ben
Iserhien, gave a spirited defence for his client. The lawyer even went ahead to
state that Anini should not be executed because he suffered from a multi personality
disorder which made him rob banks and then distribute the loot to the poor. As
far as Anini's lawyer was concerned, Anini was a kind man that deserved help
and assistance. The most amazing part of the whole saga was that Anini had
great confidence in his lawyer and he strongly believed he would save him from
an imminent death. Well lawyers, As
at that time, Iserhien, a Benin-based lawyer, was not too famous and taking on
the case launched him onto the national stage. To worsen Anini's case, IBB
demanded for a speedy trial (many Nigerians will really find that funny and
ironic).
As the laws stated then, Anini
faced the Armed Robbery and Firearms Tribunal (put in place by the military)
and he was found guilty. Subsequently, he was condemned to death by the firing
squad. Same for his cohorts and Iyamu. The military governor of the state,
Inienger, approved and signed his execution papers and that was how Anini's
world came to a screeching halt. While giving the judgment, Justice Omo-Agege
then stated:
“Anini
will forever be remembered in the history of crime in this country, but it
would be of unblessed memory. Few people if ever, would give the name to their
children.”
Their
execution took place on March 29, 1987.
been waiting to read this story, thanks kay
ReplyDeleteANOTHER FANTASTIC STORY WORTH READING
ReplyDeleteWOW!worth reading
ReplyDeletethe law , the notorious one
ReplyDeleteanother unforgettable story
ReplyDeletehistory wont forget him in a hury
ReplyDeletesad end of Anini
ReplyDeletebeen hearing that name for a long time, what a man
ReplyDeleteHe is afraid to die,what of those people he has killed. A torundorun e lae. Means to hell with him.
ReplyDeleteAnini terrorise the entire southwest that time.
ReplyDeleteThis name is an household name and wont be forgotten in a hurry
ReplyDeleteANINI story can never be forgotten.nice one
ReplyDeletethe great d law, anini himself
ReplyDeletethis is a lesson for everyone, fantastic story
ReplyDeleteThe evil men do, lives after them.
ReplyDeletein fact, the evil men do lives with them
ReplyDeleteHmmmmm... this guy worry sha...
ReplyDelete