Parliament

Reps decry ritual killings, task IG on menace

The House of Representatives has charged the Inspector-General of Police (IGP) to take urgent steps towards tacking ritual killings in the country.

This followed the adoption of a motion of urgent public importance by Rep Toby Okechukwu, the Deputy Minority Leader, at plenary on Wednesday in Abuja.
Presenting the motion, Okechukwu said that incidents of ritual killings had assumed an alarming rate in Nigeria, while decrying the upsurge of reported ritual killings with increasing cases of abductions and missing persons in different parts of the country.
He added that in most cases, the culprits also rape, maim, kill and cut out sensitive body parts of unsuspecting victims for rituals.
He said that the Red Cross Society in 2017 reported that it received 10,480 reports of missing persons in Nigeria.
“On Jan. 22, three teenage suspects and a 21-year-old reportedly killed one Sofiat Kehinde and severed her head and burnt in a local pot in Abeokuta, Ogun.
“The police command in Ogun on Feb. 7, reported that one of the suspects confessed that he learned the act of ritual killing from a video he watched on Facebook,” he stated.
He said that the death of Sofiat attracted national outrage and condemnation considering the age of the suspected killers.
The lawmaker said that merchants of such wicked acts often use the social media as tool to advertise their evil acts.
He also mentioned the grievous killing of Iniobong Umoren, a young woman in her 20s; who was lured to a particular location in Uyo, Akwa Ibom for a job interview, as widely reported in the national dailies.
He also cited the gruesome killings and heinous activities of Badoo Boys in Lagos State, which was also reported in the national dailies.
“Ritual killing had become a predominant theme in most home made movies which if not checked, our younger generation may begin to view it as an acceptable norm,” he said.
The House thereafter, declared a national emergency on ritual killings and urged National Orientation Agency (NOA), stakeholders and the media to initiate a campaign towards changing the situation in the country.
The House tasked the Executive Director, National Film and Video Censors Board to rise to the mandate of the agency as the clearing house for all movies produced in the country.

TheStar

Editor

Recent Posts

Ireti Kingibe: ADC suspends FCT ward chairman, two others

The Federal Capital Territory chapter of the African Democratic Congress (ADC) has suspended three executive…

58 minutes ago

UK silence fueled Nigeria persecution debate — Presidency

The Presidency has said a more balanced and well-informed intervention by the United Kingdom during…

1 hour ago

Adeola Akinremi unveils new poem Scattered Ground

Award-winning investigative journalist Adeola Akinremi has announced the publication of his debut poetry collection, Scattered…

1 hour ago

Trump warns NATO of ‘very bad’ future if allies fail to help reopen Hormuz

U.S. President Donald Trump has warned that NATO could face a “very bad” future if…

1 hour ago

Police arrest two customs officers over killing of driver in Osun

The Osun State Police Command has arrested two officers of the Nigeria Customs Service over…

1 hour ago

FULL LIST: ‘One Battle After Another’ dominates 98th Oscars, wins best picture

The film emerged as the biggest winner at the held Sunday night in , taking…

1 hour ago

This website uses cookies.