CONFESSIONS OF GLOBAL ROBBER (PART1) •’I carried out exploits - TopicsExpress



          

CONFESSIONS OF GLOBAL ROBBER (PART1) •’I carried out exploits in 18 countries’ •How he was nearly killed in South Africa .......................................................... His story sounds like fiction but it’s real. Oluchukwu Clement Nwizu can be described as a global robber who traversed no fewer than 18 countries and three continents doing what he knew best, Robbery. A native of Awarase, Uga in Aguata Local Government Area of Anambra State, Nigeria. Oluchukwu moved around without hindrance in China, Germany,Holland, South Africa, Ghana, Togo etc, dishing out mayhem and death to innocent people until God arrested him. Like biblical Saul who was converted on his way to Damascus, Oluchukwu who had seen it all in the crime world aborted a trip to Malaysia to continue his illicit trade and came to repentance after receiving a Christian magazine in his village during a burial ceremony. Oluchukwu’s gripping account of his life in the underworld is presented below. *ORIGIN* I was born in 1974 and started primary school after six years or thereabout at Central School, Uga. Though I scored the highest in the common entrance examination,after my primary education, there was no money for me to go to secondary school and instead of furthering my education, I went to serve somebody at Onitsha. Things didn’t work out with my master and I left him. Later, I went to serve another master. This one again did not materialize and I had to return home. After staying a while in the village, I left for Lagos and there I began to hustle to survive. I stayed with one of my brothers, the late UchennaNwizu who God blessed and was dealing in cars. I joined him, but later, he died and I didn’t know what else to do. I had to leave Lagos for Warri in Delta State. It was while in Warri that somebody introduced me to illegal oil bunkering from where I had a lot of customers from Limba, Cumba, Bermenda, Douala, Yaoundé and Victoria, all in Cameroun. JOURNEY INTO ROBBERY While in Cameroun, I got information that some of my boys had been arrested and I had to leave immediately and entered Gabon. In Gabon, the Igbo people I met there were from Mbaise and as they did not want to open up to me, I left Gabon and entered Equatorial Guinea where I lodged in a hotel in Malabo, the capital. From Malabo, I began to move about and came to know of a place called Bata where I decided to live. What we were doing there was armed robbery and after sometime, I decided to come back to Nigeria. When I entered Nigeria, I moved to Katsina State and lodged at one Liberty Hotel. It was at that hotel that I met some people who gave me the connection to travel to Libya. About 105 of us left Nigeria for Libya and by the time we entered Tripoli, the capital, we were only five remaining as 100 had died on the way. Some were killed by cyclones while a good number of them died as a result of dehydration because we had no water to drink. And even when we resorted to drinking our urine, at a point, none was coming out, because it’s when you take in that you will release. As we walked in the desert, some of us would just shout ‘I’m thirsty, I’m thirsty’ and before we looked towards their direction, they had fallen down and were dead. When we entered Tripoli, I told the other surviving four persons with me that each man should seek for his own way of survival and everybody went his own way. From Tripoli, I located a place called Benghazi, where I started my armed robbery escapades. I was doing that business in Tripoli until one day when my friend who duped someone was caught. After admitting the crime, the authorities cut off his right hand and I became afraid. Within that period also, some of my friends with whom I went on armed robbery operations were arrested and they squealed on me. Security agents there were after me and I had to go underground. Immediately I got the opportunity, I moved over to Algeria. In Algeria, I continued my robbery business and when after some efforts, not much money was coming in, I left for Mali. When I entered Mali, I found out that their money had no value and I didn’t know what to do. I left Mali immediately and entered Mauritania. I continued the robbery business in Mauritania but because I was not getting enough money as the country is poor, I moved over to Guinea Bissau and continued the same business.Thereafter, I moved over to Dakar, capital of Senegal. It was while in Senegal that I was able to make some money through armed robbery after which I left for Cote D’Ivoire and came to Abidjan, the capital.... To be continue tomorrow.... He cares
Posted on: Mon, 05 Aug 2013 13:49:07 +0000

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