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Kidnap of Hit FM boss: Police shut down Calabar

By Anietie Akpan, Calabar
03 June 2017   |   4:38 am
Following the kidnapping of the Chief Executive Officer of Hit FM, Mr. Patrick Ugbe in Calabar, Cross River state on Thursday, the Nigerian Police has shut down all inlets and outlets into Calabar.

Patrick Ugbe

Following the kidnapping of the Chief Executive Officer of Hit FM, Mr. Patrick Ugbe in Calabar, Cross River state on Thursday, the Nigerian Police has shut down all inlets and outlets into Calabar.

Commissioner of Police in Cross River State, Mr. Hafiz Inuwa, disclosed this yesterday saying efforts are in top gear to ensure the safe release of Ugbe.

No demand for ransom has been made; neither have the abductors gotten in touch with the family, but the Commissioner pleaded for calm as efforts are on to secure his release.

Ironically, Ugbe was kidnapped in Ikot Ansa in Calabar were security was expected to be at red alert for the Acting Vice President, Mr. Yemi Osingajo who was tidying up his two day visit to Cross River state on Thursday night with a town hall meeting at the Calabar International Conference Centre.

Details of the kidnapp is not clear, but some persons have associated his kidnap with the 2019 governorship race, as speculations are rife that some power brokers in the state are considering him as a possible candidate to challenge the incumbent, Ben Ayade.

Ugbe who served as Chief Press Secretary and later, Commissioner for Information under the immediate past governor, Senator Liyel Imoke, was kidnapped at about 9.05pm in Ikot Ansa.

He attended a town hall meeting with the acting President at the Calabar International Conference Centre and had his car blocked by some unknown gunmen in an unidentified vehicle on his way back home after the ceremony and was whisked away to an unknown destination. .

This week’s visit of the Acting President has been rife with several negative issues as the National Labour Congress had on Tuesday declared an indefinite strike but last minute intervention by the state government ended the one-day-old strike.

Same day, the Navy and the police engaged themselves in a bloody clash that left three people dead and vehicles destroyed.

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