Ogun prison break
The Ogun prison break was an attack on the Sagamu minimum prison in the southwestern Nigerian city of Ogun State by the prisoners.[1] The attack occurred on 4 January 2013.[2] About 20 prisoners escaped from the prison leaving several prison officials and prisoners seriously injured with no death recorded.[3] About 4 escaped convicts were rearrested by the Armed Squad of the Prison Service.[4] It was reported that one escaped convict returned to the prison voluntarily to serve out his short sentence[5]
Ogun prison break | |
---|---|
Part of Prison escape | |
Location | Ogun State, Southwestern Nigeria |
Date | 4 January 2013 |
Target | Sagamu minimum Prison |
Attack type | Prison break |
Deaths | 0 |
Injured | at least 1 |
Perpetrators | prisoners |
No. of participants | 20 |
Defenders | 4 |
Incident
The incident was reported to have occurred on 4 January 2013 at around 3 am in the morning.[6] Zakari Ibrahim, the Comptroller General of the Nigerian Prisons Services who confirm the attack claimed that the cause of the prison break was unclear.[7] The incident resulted in the remover of Omobitan, the officer-in-charge of the facility from office for negligence of duty.[8]
References
- "Prisoners Subdue Warders, Break Jail in Ogun!". THE STREET JOURNAL. Retrieved 25 December 2014.
- Joseph1. "Prison Break at Sagamu". Retrieved 25 December 2014.
- "Jail Break: 20 Inmates Escape from Sagamu Prison, Articles – THISDAY LIVE". Retrieved 25 December 2014.
- "Jail break: 20 prisoners escape from Sagamu Prison - www.channelstv.com". Channels Television. Retrieved 25 December 2014.
- "20 prisoners escape in Ogun jailbreak; prison boss pledges discipline – Premium Times Nigeria". Premium Times Nigeria. Retrieved 25 December 2014.
- "20 inmates escape in attempted jailbreak at Sagamu prison". The Punch – Nigeria's Most Widely Read Newspaper. Retrieved 25 December 2014.
- "20 Prisoners Escape in Sagamu, Ogun State Prison". Media Nigeria. Retrieved 25 December 2014.
- "Sagamu jailbreak: Prisons sacks officer-in-charge". The Punch – Nigeria's Most Widely Read Newspaper. Retrieved 25 December 2014.