Newly
signed West Ham striker, Emmanuel Emenike has finally broken his silence on the
match-fixing allegations that led him to a Turkish prison for days even though
he was innocent.
In
an exclusive interview the new Hammers forward
granted The Sun UK, Emenike
recalled how he was treated like an animal by Turkish authorities in spite of
being a star player for one of the top clubs in the country, Fenerbahce.
Emenike
says he is still haunted by the difficult time he went through during the
match-fixing scandal.
According
to him, he spent four frightening nights in a Turkish cell after being accused
of faking injury to deliberately miss a title-deciding game, surviving only on
bread and water.
“My
time in prison was a crazy nightmare that I couldn’t wake up from.
“I’ve
never committed a crime in my life, but I was treated like a criminal, living
on bread and water.
“It
was not a good experience! It gave me a different perspective on life.”
He
added: “When I was finally cleared I thanked God for letting justice prevail.”
Emenike’s
match-fixing ordeal started in July, 2011, when he was playing for Turkish club
Karabukspor where just after eight weeks of joining, he was arrested as part of
a football corruption investigation and accused of deliberately missing a match
against Fenerbahce with a fake injury — in return for getting a move to the
Turkish giants.
Fenerbahce
won the game 1-0 to clinch the title, but two weeks later the champions were
alleged to have rewarded Emenike by signing him for £9million. Emenike and Karabukspor
denied the allegations and his club produced a doctor’s certificate verifying
his injury but that did not stop the Turkish authorities from throwing him in
jail before he was eventually released by a Turkish court for lack of evidence.
Although
Emenike was released after four days, the investigation continued and he was
not acquitted until April 2013.
Emenike
remembered how about two years later after he was acquitted, he was on the team
bus that was shot at by a gunman on its way to Trabzon airport in Turkey. The
driver was wounded and taken to hospital but all the players escaped injury.
Emenike
recalled: “I was on the phone to my brother when I heard a loud bang. The bus
suddenly swerved and there was panic.
“I
instinctively took cover and our security officer told us the driver had been
shot. Seeing him covered in blood was scary.
“We
were lucky but it brought back bad memories. I had been involved in a terrible
car accident in Nigeria where my mother and I both lucky to be alive.
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