He was sent to school to explore the serene academic
environment offered by the university to equip himself with the needed
creativity for personal growth and career development but Mari Paul Dirkwa, a
final year student of the University of Maiduguri rather veered into
criminality.
Mari was known as the “good guy” on campus. Those who
knew him said he exhibited rare ingenuity and unmistakable mien of an
intelligent young man but little did his schoolmates know that the 29-year-old
undergraduate in the department of Business Education also doubled as a car
thief having reportedly stolen six cars until recently when the bubble finally
burst.
“I have stolen six cars before this recent one. I was
trying to open the Honda Civic car when some people saw me but the police
arrested me before I could escape,” he told journalists at the state
headquarters of the Nigeria Police in Maiduguri. Asked why he ventured into
car theft as an undergraduate, Mari said greed and selfish desire pushed him
into the criminal act.
“It was selfishness and greed. Each time I stole a car
and sold it, I got a lot of money and I felt like stealing another car again. It
is greed and I regret my action. I promise I won’t do it again when I get off
this case,” he said in a sober tone, asking his family for forgiveness. He said
he often used a special key he called master key to open cars wherever they are
packed, adding that his buyers are mostly in Gamboru-Ngala area in the
Nigeria-Cameroon border. “Yes, I know the buyers, they buy the cars and take
them off the border in Gamboru area,” he claimed.
Commissioner of Police, Borno state Command, Mr Clement
Adoda told journalists the suspect was arrested by a team of police Special
Anti-Robbery Squad on patrol along Bama road in Maiduguri while attempting to
steal a green Honda Civic car. He said his arrest was possible following a tip
off by those who witnessed the attempt to steal the car.
“On interrogation, the suspect confessed to have
previously stolen six assorted motor vehicles within Maiduguri metropolis and
disposed off the same at different locations within the state,” the CP
disclosed but added that it was difficult for the police to immediately trail
the buyers due to the insecurity in Gamboru area. Gamboru has been under Boko
Haram control for almost two months now. “We are not able to locate the buyers
now because of the terrain, I mean the security challenge in the area,” the
police boss stated.
Adoda who expressed concern over the involvement of a
university undergraduate in such criminal act, said it was embarrassing. “I’m
saying this because it baffles me. When something that is supposed to go
forward is moving backward, then people should begin to ask question. The
university is a place for learning and culture but when an undergraduate now
imbibes criminal culture, something appears to be missing,” he said, stressing
that he was compelled to bring the incident to public domain to dissuade others
from engaging in such criminality. He urged parents and guardians to train
their children/wards appropriately to shun crimes. He attributed poor upbringing,
influence of bad friends and uncontrolled desire to get rich quick as some of
the factors responsible for the involvement of students in criminal acts.
The commissioner said, “Some people in the society have
been mounting pressure” on the police to release the suspect but he maintained
that he would be charged to court as soon as the police have completed their
investigation.
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