The police and the Army have launched a 
manhunt for inmates of the Koton-Karfi Prison in Kogi State, who were 
set free by gunmen suspected to be Boko Haram insurgents.
There
 were about 145 inmates in the 80-year-old prison as of 10pm on Sunday 
when the gunmen gained entry into the prison   by blowing up its iron 
bars with an improvised explosive device.
A male prison officer and an inmate were injured while another inmate   was   found dead after the attackers left.
Twelve of those who fled were said to have returned to the prison under controversial circumstances.
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Another Scene of the Koton-Karfe Prison break in Kogi State … on Monday | 
A
 prison source told one of our correspondents on Monday that the 12 
returned of their own volition but the Nigeria Prisons Service Public 
Relations Officer, Ope Fatinikun, said they were captured. Fatinikun
 added, ‘‘Unknown gunmen invaded Koton- Karfe prison between 9.30am and 
10pm and immediately it happened, the acting Comptroller-General of 
Prisons, Aminu Suley,   informed the Inspector-General of Police, 
Suleiman Abba, and the Chief of Defence Staff, Alex Badeh, and they 
ordered policemen and soldiers to beef up security around the prison and
 to arrest the fleeing inmates.”
The gunmen were said to have also   broken some of the prison’s walls before vandalising its record office.
Our
 source who pleaded anonymity said sounds of gunshots caused     panic 
close to the prison which is located on the Lokoja-Abuja Road.
According
 to him, the gunmen operated unchallenged for hours   before security 
operatives arrived in the prison after they had left.
The
 comptroller-General of the NPS   told   journalists when he visited the
 Prison in company with   Governor   Idris Wada on Monday that the 
gunmen forcibly freed the inmates.
He said that 26 of the inmates were convicts   while 119 were   awaiting trial for different offences. He
 lamented the congestion of the prison and pleaded with Wada to prevail 
on the judiciary to quicken  the trial of those on awaiting list.
Wada said he would invoke his power of prerogative of mercy to set free some of the inmates . He said that he would also urge   the chief judge of the state to free some of the inmates.
The
 governor said security operatives were prompt in their response when 
they were alerted, adding that it was regrettable that much damage had 
been done before their arrival.
He also decried the deterioration of the prison, saying it was not good for human habitation.
The governor promised to provide beddings for the inmates who had been forced to live in sub-human conditions.
Wada
 urged the Federal Government to expedite action on the new Koto-karfi 
prison. He added that when the   prison was completed, the old building 
which was established in 1934 would become a tourism centre.
The Koton-Karfe prison was   attacked in February 2012 by   Boko Haram members who freed 119 inmates.
Meanwhile,
 the Police in Yobe State have confirmed the killing of   four persons  
 by a suicide bomber who attacked   a religious procession in Potiskum.
This
 figure was however disputed by the leader of the Muslim Brotherhood 
in   the town, Mustapha Lawan, who lamented that 26 people died in the 
incident.
The suicide bomber was said 
to have joined the procession by Shiites muslims celebrating the annual 
Ashurah (the 10th day of Muharram 1436 celebration).
The state Commissioner of Police,   Markus Danladi, who addressed journalists, said that five people were injured in the blast.
He
 said, “The blast killed three members of the Muslim brotherhood plus 
the bomber. Before we got to the scene, the group had evacuated the 
bodies of those effected by the blast.”
But
 Lawan told journalists on the telephone that apart from the 13 persons 
who died on the spot, 13 others who were among the injured   later 
passed on where they were being treated.
Yobe State Governor Ibrahim Gaidam condemned the attack on the   procession as heinous, barbaric and unwarranted.
The
 governor, in a   statement by his media aide, Abdullahi Bego, said it 
was regrettable that the attack came at a time that peace was gradually 
returning to the state.
Gaidam, who 
described those behind the attack as “criminals who want to fan the 
embers of religious discord,” called on   the people   to remain calm 
and vigilant.
The governor directed 
government hospitals in the area to provide immediate medical treatment 
to all the victims of the attack free of charge.
Source:
Punch Newspaper 

 
 
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