Over the past few weeks I have been revisiting the controversial attempt to kidnap Umaru Dikko in 1984 (Read Part 1 and Part 2). Dikko was one of the most powerful and notorious figures in the government of President Shagari between 1979 and 1983. This is the concluding part of the series which recounts the circumstances, timing and details of the kidnap.
Mossad boss Nahum Admoni felt that
Logistics
The plans for Dikko’s capture were assembled by a small team. It involved making arrangements to anaesthetise, capture and then transport Dikko out of the
The next day Major Yusufu drove the van he had rented from Notting Hill Gate in west
Porchester Terrace – Midday
Just before midday lunchtime Dikko emerged from the house in Porchester Terrace for a midday interview meeting with a Ghanaian journalist named Elizabeth Akua Ohene. Ohene was then the editor of Talking Drum magazine but later became a Minister of State in
However there was a hitch. Through a window Dikko’s secretary Elizabeth Hayes witnessed Dikko being bundled into the van. The astonished secretary managed to compose herself enough to quickly dial 999 (the
Back to
By mid-afternoon on July 5, 1984 Dikko had been anaesthetised into unconsciousness by Dr Shapiro, locked into a crate and taken to Stansted airport. However at Stansted there was no visible sign of Dikko, Shapiro, Abithol or Barak. Instead a lorry ferried two crates to the airport. The lorry was escorted by two black Mercedes Benz cars bearing Nigerian diplomatic licence plates. Shortly before 3pm the two crates labelled “diplomatic baggage” and addressed to the Nigerian Ministry of External Affairs in Lagos were being loaded onto the Nigerian Airways plane. The crates were 1.2 meters in height, 1.2 meters in depth and 1.5 meters in width. They were accompanied by Major Yusufu and a member of the Nigerian High Commission in
There was a second hitch. When subsequently interviewed by
What they found inside was shocking. In the first case was a bound and unconscious Dikko with his torso bare. Dikko’s captors had shoved an endo-tracheal tube in his throat to prevent him from choking on his own vomit when he was out cold, but he was still alive. They wanted him brought to
Official Reaction
2 comments
So grateful to read this after all these years. I am wishing to get in touch with an old school friend in Ireland Cork. It is this very secretary Ms Elizabeth Hayes. Can anyone help?? We were best friends in boarding school 1970
Thanx for the great article.