HOODLUMS
suspected to be militants on Sunday invaded the Save Rivers Movement
rally in Bori, Khana Local Government Area and unleashed terror on
members of the group.
The militants, who wore masks were said
to have shot sporadically mostly at vehicles parked at the venue of
the event by state government officials.
The Secretary to the State Government,
Mr. George Feyii, the Chief of Staff, Government House, Chief Tony
Okocha, and some journalists were among those that escaped death by a
whisker.
Some however sustained serious bullet
injuries during the incident that occurred barely a week after a
similar rally was disrupted by operatives of the Rivers State Police
Command in Obio/Akpor Local Government Area.
Okocha was also lucky during the Obio
Akpor rally but a pro-Rotimi Amaechi senator, Magnus Abe, was not as he
was shot with rubber bullets by policemen. Abe is currently in a
London hospital receiving treatment.
It was learnt that during the latest
incident, the militants, who besieged the All Saints Anglican Church
venue of the rally, had begun shooting within Bori around 4.30am on
Sunday.
They (hoodlums) however marched to the
open field and fired at the parked vehicles at about 10. 40am, forcing
the SRM members to flee.
The first group of militants arrived
wielding cutlasses while the second group came in later, wearing masks
and shooting intermittently with sophisticated weapons.
However, the absence of security operatives at the venue made the attackers to have a field day.
Channels Television crew members
that were on the ground to cover the event had the windscreen of their
Outside Broadcasting Van smashed.
The SSG’s bullet-riddled Brilliance saloon car was seen being driven out of the venue of the rally.
A government official said they had to run into the bush when they saw a group of masked militants arriving the venue.
He said, “Immediately they came close,
they started shooting at some of our vehicles. Some of us would
have died if we had not taken the decision to run into the bush.”
Okocha told journalists that his personal security aides and those of the SGS rescued them.
Channel’s reporter, Grace Ekang, said she was “traumatised by the incident.”
“They (hoodlums) were shooting seriously; they attacked us and the first group that came stole our big camera,” Ekang lamented.
At Bori, policemen mounted roadblocks
and barred journalists from gaining entry into the scene of the incident
while motorists were forced to take longer routes to their
destinations.
Governor Amaechi, who later inspected
some of the damaged government and Channels Television vehicles,
lamented the security situation in the state and described President
Goodluck Jonathan’s government as being worse than Sani Abacha’s.
Amaechi said that democracy was in
danger in the country with the insecurity in the state and added that
the State Commissioner of Police, Mr. Joseph Mbu, had declared war on
his administration and the people of the state.
He accused Mbu of being part of the
attack on SRM supporters, maintaining that the Federal Government was
desperate to win the 2015 elections.
PUNCH NG
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