/ 23 August 2011

Mikel’s kidnapped father found in Nigeria

The kidnapped father of Chelsea midfielder John Obi Mikel was freed on Monday after detectives traced him to a sprawling city in northern Nigeria and arrested his abductors, the country’s federal police said.

Police spokesperson Olusola Amore said that investigators followed Michael Obi’s trail from central Nigeria’s Plateau state to Kano, one of the nation’s largest cities. There, officers raided the area where Obi was held, freeing him and arresting his kidnappers, Amore said.

Amore said he had other details about the operation.

Obi himself, looking worried and dishevelled, appeared at a hastily-called news conference on Monday night at a police station in Kano, about 1 150km from the country’s commercial capital of Lagos. There, police officers paraded five of his suspected kidnappers, all wearing military-style camouflage fatigues.

Officers said they did not believe the men were soldiers, though they used the uniforms to kidnap Obi and remain unchallenged in a country still wary of the military after a string of dictatorships.

“I was seriously beaten,” Obi said in a brief statement to journalists.

Relief
London-based Sport Entertainment & Media Group, Mikel’s management company, welcomed Obi’s release.

“Earlier today, Michael Obi called his family to advise them that he had been released by his abductors. [We] have waited until now to release this information to ensure that Michael was safe,” a statement issued on Monday night read.

“John Obi Mikel would like to thank everyone in Nigeria, his family and friends, Chelsea FC and their fans and his agents for their total support during this terrible time.”

Michael Obi was kidnapped on August 12 while on his way home from work in the central Nigerian city of Jos.

Nigeria, an oil-rich country of 150-million people, is almost evenly split between Muslims in the north and the predominantly Christian south. Plateau state, in Nigeria’s fertile central belt, has seen thousands die in recent years in religious and ethnic violence rooted largely in political and economic issues.

Extortion
Mikel’s family, from the Igbo tribe, is in the minority in the area. However, John Obi Mikel said the kidnapping shocked him because his family never had any problems there before.

Kidnappings in Plateau state are a rarity when compared to Nigeria’s oil-producing southern delta, where militants and criminal gangs often kidnap foreigners for ransom. Middle class Nigerian families also increasingly find themselves targeted in the country’s east as well.

It isn’t the first time a football player’s family has been targeted in Nigeria. In 2008, gunmen abducted the younger brother of Everton defender Joseph Yobo as he left a nightclub in Port Harcourt, the delta’s largest city. The brother was released unharmed about two weeks later, though it was unclear if a ransom had been paid.

Michael Obi’s release comes as a rare bright moment for Nigeria’s weak federal police, whose officers mostly concern themselves with extorting money from motorists and serving as personal attendants to the country’s elite. Most kidnap victims find themselves released only after their loved ones pay ransom.

A Forbes magazine survey in June listed Mikel as the seventh highest-paid African player in Europe. The magazine listed Mikel’s salary as $5.8-million a year. — Sapa-AP