THE
people of Omuokiri Aluu Community have begun to count their losses
barely 24 hours after students from the University of Port Harcourt
embarked on reprisals to avenge the killings of their colleagues.
The
angry students had on Tuesday stormed the community, burnt some houses,
cars and other property over the torture and murder of the students on
Friday.
Four
undergraduates of UNIPORT were lynched by a mob comprising members of
the community for allegedly stealing laptop computer and a BlackBerry
phone.
The
students were Biringa Chiadika of the Theatre Arts Department; Ugonna
Obuzor of Geology Department, Mike Toku Llyod of Civil Engineering
Department and Tekena Erikena.
When our correspondent visited the community on Wednesday, few of the indigenes were seen bemoaning their losses.
One of the leaders of the community, Sunday Ahanonu, said he had lost all he laboured for to the students’ reprisals.
Ahanonu,
whose house was torched by the students, expressed shock that security
agents could not stop the rampaging students when they stormed the
community.
Sixty-five-year-old Ahanonu and father of 15 children, worked at UNIPORT for 35 years before he retired.
He
appealed to the state government and the management of the university
to compensate him for the destruction of his property, adding that he
and members of his family were not involved in the killings of the
students.
Ahanonu
said, “I am a retired civil servant. I worked with UNIPORT for 35. But
all I have achieved for many years have been destroyed by students from
the university. I don’t know where my family and I will lay our heads
when my only house has been burnt.
“I
lost the sum of N850,000 cash, which I kept in my house. I could not
take the money to the bank because I was not feeling okay and went to
the hospital. It was at the hospital that I learnt that my house was
burnt by the students.”
Also,
a woman, who identified herself as Pauline Nwakwo, told our
correspondent that she left the village when she learnt that security
agents had embarked on mass arrest, but came back to notice that her bar
had been burgled.
According to her, the rampaging students forcibly entered her bar and carried away her deep freezer and drinks.
She
said, “As a woman, I had to run away when we noticed that the police
were embarking on mass arrest. The students broke the door to my bar and
took away a deep freezer I bought for N66,000. I want government to pay
me back all I have lost.
“The students were killed far from here at the Burrow pit. We don’t know anything about the killings of the students.”
Indigenes
of the community were also seen leaving their homes in droves to other
places in order to avoid being attacked by the students.
One
of them, who gave her name as Comfort, said she was relocating her
children to Elele in Rivers State and would only return to Omuokiri Aluu
whenever normalcy returns.
An
artisan, Mr. Wisdom Ajuwon, who repairs home appliances along the
Omuokiri Aluu Road, said he lost property worth about N500,000 to the
riotous students.
Showing a list of what he lost to the fire ignited by students, Ajuwon also appealed to the state government to come to his aid.
A
cleric in the area, Pastor John Paul, described the situation in the
community as terrible, adding that people were running out of their
homes like refugees.
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