A Nigerian man identified simply as Junior has been reunited with his family and friends after spending nine months in the custody of bandits, emerging from the ordeal physically unrecognisable and visibly broken by what he endured.
His story came to public attention through a Facebook post by his friend, Mike Agwam, who recounted a chance encounter with Junior at a social gathering, having not seen him in three to four years. Agwam said he did not recognise him at first. The man standing before him was half his former size.


In his post, Agwam described the moment Junior realised what was going through his friend’s mind and immediately offered an explanation.
“He saw and knew what was going on in my mind, and immediately went ahead to tell me that he was just out from the den of kidnappers, and he has spent 9 months in their hands,” Agwam wrote. Junior then showed him a photograph taken shortly after his release. Agwam described what he saw as a 63-year-old man who looked a hundred, emaciated and defeated, with a white beard he said made him resemble ancient men who once lived in caves.
Junior told his friend that throughout the nine months, he was forced to sit in one position under a tree, regardless of weather. When it rained, he stayed. When the sun bore down, he stayed. Swarms of flies circled him constantly, he said, the way they would circle a dead animal. Bathing was nonexistent. Whatever food was brought to him, he ate, because the alternative was starvation. Ticks infested his body, inside and outside his groin, tormenting him without pause, day and night.


“It’s an experience you will not wish your worst enemy to experience,” Agwam wrote, adding that an ordinary mind would not have survived it intact. He credited Junior’s resilience and endurance for bringing him through.
Agwam said that after Junior finished speaking, his heart melted. He closed his post with a warning to Nigerians, that no one should assume they are beyond the reach of kidnappers simply because they have not been targeted yet. He called on citizens and authorities to take more decisive and practical steps to reverse what he described as a deepening crisis of insecurity across the country.
Junior’s story, Agwam noted, is not unique. It stands in for the thousands of Nigerians who have passed through similar ordeals, many of whom never make it back at all.











