body-container-line-1

Gunmen kidnap wife, daughter of court judge in Nigeria

By AFP
Nigeria Arms and ammunitions recovered from Islamist insurgent during a clash with soldiers in Borno State, April 30, 2013.  By Pius Utomi Ekpei AFPFile
MAY 12, 2013 LISTEN
Arms and ammunitions recovered from Islamist insurgent during a clash with soldiers in Borno State, April 30, 2013. By Pius Utomi Ekpei (AFP/File)

LAGOS (AFP) - Gunmen have kidnapped the wife, daughter and driver of a supreme court judge on a road in southern Nigeria apparently hoping for a ransom payment, police said Sunday.

"Three people were seized from their car at a point on the Sagamu-Benin expressway on Friday," a senior police officer in southern Edo State who did not want to be named told AFP.

"We understand the victims are the wife, daughter and driver of Justice Bode Rhodes-Vivour of the Supreme Court," he said.

He said the kidnappers also went away with the car in which the trio were travelling to Benin for a wedding.

"We have launched a manhunt for the criminals with a view to rescuing the victims unhurt," he said.

"We are aware their motive is to collect ransom money from the family, but they are yet to contact the family," he added.

Lagos lawyer Festus Keyamo appealed to the kidnappers to release the hostages.

"By the nature of their job, justices of the Supreme Court, and indeed all judges, always live a spartan life, not given to ostentation and primitive acquisition of wealth," he said.

"Therefore, the kidnappers should know that Justice Bode Rhodes-Vivour is the wrong target of this dastardly act," he said.

"Therefore, I passionately appeal to the kidnappers, wherever they may be... to release unharmed the wife and daughter of Justice Bode Rhodes-Vivour," he added.

Kidnapping for ransom, which was rife in the Niger Delta before a 2009 amnesty deal for oil militants, has spread to other parts of the country in recent months with prominent Nigerians and their relations becoming targets.

In December, the mother of Finance Minister Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, a former World Bank managing director, was kidnapped from her home in southern Delta State.

She was released a few days later allegedly after a ransom was paid.

body-container-line