The Oyo State Police Command has discovered a place in a remote
village of Ibadan, where thousands of fake pounds, euros, dollars and other
foreign currencies were being produced.
The
Commissioner of Police in the state, Mohammed Katsina, said that the discovery
was made by the command’s ambush squad in a village called Ojoku in Badeku,
Ona-Ara Local Government Area of the state. The police described the area as
fast transforming to an abode for criminals, having earlier served as a
kidnappers’ den.
Our
correspondent, who visited the scene of the crime on Monday, discovered that
the police had cordoned off the compound shielded by tall trees and thick
bushes.
Two
Toyota Camry cars with number plate AA 125 DK and AA 207 DH and a Nissan Almera
lift back model with number plate AGL 882 DF were found in the compound, which
was fenced with corrugated iron sheets.
Several
notes of fake foreign currencies littered the ground.
Apart
from being a fake currency factory, the place also served as a shrine where
several criminal activities were perpetrated.
There
are two houses in the compound with at least six rooms adorned with various
statues to give the impression that the place is being used as a shrine. The
walls were decorated with the group’s description of gods to scare victims.
Ismail
Adesina, 43, who was arrested at the scene, said he did not know anything about
the currencies and that the owners had escaped.
He
said he was a herbalist and that he had been involved in several financial
crimes under the pretext of helping victims to cure ailments and barrenness.
Adesina
added that the owners of the three vehicles were canvassers who combed the town
to woo customers.
He
said, “I am a herbalist and I inherited the skill from my father. I am also a
conman. I cured diabetes, barrenness, blindness and other ailments. I have
cured many people. My partner, who escaped yesterday, knows how the currencies
were produced. Taju and Wasiu are my other partners. We have been here for
about four years. We collected varying sums of money from our victims but we do
not kidnap people. We bought the land in the bush and built the houses. I am a
native of Beyerunka in Ibadan. The names of our victims are with my partners.”
Adesina
said his wife had left him and taken his child away because he could not
provide for them.
He
added that he had bought a car from the proceeds of criminal activities but had
to sell it. Asked if his father also taught him how to swindle people through
fake healing, Adesina said that he was a genuine herbalist before he took to
the crime.
The
police said apart from taken money from their victims, the suspects also
devised a way of gagging them by taking their nude pictures and threaten to
release them if they failed to keep the secret.
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