Category: City Beats

  • Police conduct pre-deployment training on child protection in armed conflict

    Police conduct pre-deployment training on child protection in armed conflict

    The Nigeria Police Force (NPF) has concluded a week-long Pre-Deployment Training on Preventing the Recruitment and Use of Children in Armed Conflict, held at the Peacekeeping Hall, Force Headquarters, Abuja.

    The programme was officially opened by the Inspector-General of Police (IGP), Kayode Egbetokun, represented by AIG Aminu Baba Raji, AIG Training and Development. The training equipped officers with skills in child-sensitive policing to enhance their effectiveness during internal security operations.

    According to a statement issued by the Force Public Relations Officer, CSP Benjamin Hundeyin, “The programme was delivered in partnership with the Dallaire Institute for Children, Peace and Security, featuring international facilitators and certified Nigeria Police Trainers-of-Trainers. Officers were trained to detect and prevent child recruitment and to recognize that children associated with armed groups are primarily victims deserving of confidentiality, empathy, and protection.

    “In his remarks, the IGP stressed that children remain among the most vulnerable in situations of violence and that their recruitment by armed actors, whether as fighters, spies, or in other roles, is a grave violation of their rights and a threat to national security. He emphasized the need for officers deployed to conflict-affected areas to identify these risks and respond with professionalism, sensitivity, and gender-responsive approaches.

    “The training further strengthened existing Nigerian Police child-protection initiatives such as the Safer Schools Programme and POCACOV. A total of 25 officers were certified as ready for deployment to conflict-affected areas.

    “IGP Egbetokun expressed appreciation to the organizers for their support and assured that the Nigeria Police Force remains committed to upholding human rights and enhancing child-protection capacity through continuous training and strong partnerships”.

  • Minister calls for action to strengthen women’s political, economic participation

    Minister calls for action to strengthen women’s political, economic participation

    The Minister of Women Affairs and Social Development, Imaan Sulaiman-Ibrahim, has urged Nigerian women to work together with greater intentionality to expand their influence in politics, strengthen economic empowerment, and address systemic barriers that limit their advancement.

    She made the call in Abuja on Tuesday at the Beijing+30 Women’s Summit, which is part of the activities to commemorate the 2025 edition of ’16 Days of Activism against Gender-Based Violence’.

    The event organised by the Amandla Institute for Policy and Leadership Advancement (AIPLA), in collaboration with the African Women Leaders Network (AWLN-Nigeria) and Womanifesto, is a national gathering to reflect on three decades of progress, challenges, and unfinished commitments under the Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action (BPfA).

    Speaking further, the minister, who acknowledged her long-standing experience in the gender space both in Nigeria and the UK, said her appointment was a divine opportunity to champion transformative change for women.

    The minister criticised the fragmentation that often weakens women’s chances in political contests, noting that women frequently compete against each other instead of uniting behind a single candidate.

    “No country in the globe has the kind of resources we have. We are blessed, and we must work for each other,” she said, stressing the need for collaboration rather than competition among women.

    “At what time have we been able to impress our political agendas like the men? The men have sponsors. They know how to organise, they know how to stay the course, they know how to manage their disappointments,” she said.

    She emphasised that women must be strategic and intentional if they hope to secure meaningful representation in politics, pointing out that limited financial resources also constrain women during campaigns.

    The minister also highlighted the broader social impact of empowering women, noting that when women have money, communities thrive.

    Drawing from a recent visit to China, she cited examples of women’s economic empowerment, noting that 96 percent of Chinese women own their homes and 68 percent are economically empowered, a model she believes Nigeria can aspire to.

    On gender-based violence, the minister shared a personal experience, saying she once faced bullying but rose above it.

    She stressed the need for honest leadership, arguing that innovative leadership is insufficient without leaders who speak the truth and confront Nigeria’s democratic and social challenges sincerely.

    “We cannot be part of a movement that has no struggles to protect our children,” she said, calling attention to the gaps in Nigeria’s child protection laws, including the Child Rights Act, which she noted must be updated to reflect emerging threats.

    She revealed that several ministries, departments, and agencies are now prioritising investments in women because of their critical role across sectors, noting that women constitute about 70 percent of Nigeria’s medical workforce and dominate the SME space, though many have struggled for decades with limited access to formal financing.

    “As a nation, if we don’t work together, we will not see results,” she said.

    The minister also reaffirmed ongoing efforts to review laws and policies affecting women and children, including adoption processes, orphanage regulations, and broader child protection frameworks, to ensure they reflect today’s realities.

    In her remarks, Co-founder of the Amandla Institute for Policy and Leadership Advancement, Erelu Bisi Adeleye-Fayemi, urged African governments, institutions, and women’s rights advocates to intensify efforts toward achieving gender equality, warning that gains made since the 1995 Beijing Conference remain fragile and under threat.

    However, she lamented that progress for African women over the last three decades has been uneven.

    “The progress of African women since Beijing has been one of five steps forward and ten steps back,” she said. “We make gains, but our losses keep increasing.”

    Adeleye-Fayemi recalled that concern for the future of women’s rights on the continent led to the establishment of the African Women’s Leadership Institute (AWLI) in 1996, targeted at young women aged 25–40.

    “Our thinking back then was that we needed a cadre of women across the continent grounded in feminist theory and practice, gender mainstreaming and analysis, with strong leadership capacities,” she said.

    Nearly three decades later, the AWLI has trained more than 10,000 women leaders across Africa, many of whom now occupy key decision-making roles, including in Nigeria.

    The success of the institute spurred the creation of the African Women’s Development Fund (AWDF) in 2000, a pan-African grant making foundation which has supported more than 4,000 women’s organisations in 42 countries.

    Adeleye-Fayemi noted that during her husband’s tenure as Governor of Ekiti State, the state became known for building one of Nigeria’s strongest legal and policy frameworks for gender equality—an example, she said, of what committed political will can achieve.

    Adeleye-Fayemi warned of a rising global anti-gender movement but expressed confidence that continued collaboration, capacity-building, and feminist leadership would help safeguard progress.

    She urged women’s organisations and stakeholders to remain vigilant, unified, and proactive.

    “Our development will continue to be stunted if we do not prioritise the full and equal participation of women at all levels,” she said.

    The summit continues in Abuja with delegates from across government, civil society, academia, and international organisations.

  • HJRBDA boss hails Tinubu over students’ rescue operation

    HJRBDA boss hails Tinubu over students’ rescue operation

    Managing Director of Hadejia Jama’are River Basin Development Authority (HJRBDA), Alhaji Rabiu Suleiman Bichi, on Tuesday commended President Bola Tinubu for his decisive and personal intervention in the successful rescue operations of the abducted students from Kebbi and Niger States.

    In a statement issued from his office in Kano, Alhaji Bichi expressed profound appreciation for the president’s demonstration of “exceptional leadership and deep-seated concern” for the security and welfare of Nigerian citizens.

    “We must acknowledge and sincerely appreciate President Bola Tinubu for his great concern and bold moves taken in rescuing our precious children.

    “History shows that while past administrations often limited their response to strong condemnations, President Tinubu went a decisive step further by personally aborting an important international trip to Johannesburg to commandeer the rescue mission.

    “This hands-on approach underscores a new proactive standard in leadership at the highest level,” Alhaji Bichi stated.

    The HJRBDA boss observed what he described as a concerning trend in public discourse, where tragedies are met with swift condemnation of the government and blame placed on the president, often with accusations of inaction.

    “It has become a pattern that when such heartbreaking tragedies strike, the focus is predominantly to blame the government and the president for allowing it to happen or for perceived delays in response.

    “However, there is a palpable reluctance to extend credit to where it is due when the same president and our security forces especially the National Security Adviser, Nuhu Ribadu, demonstrated courage, dedication, and ultimately averted greater catastrophe, rescuing the victims,” he noted.

    Alhaji Bichi emphasised that while holding leadership accountable is a vital aspect of democracy, fairness demands that exemplary acts of courage and successful operations should also attract national acknowledgment and support. 

    This, he argued, strengthens national morale, motivates security agencies and in this regard, will encourage the leaders to ensure successful rescue of all the kidnap victims.

    According to Bichi, the successful rescue of the affected students is a victory for the nation, made possible by the president’s direct involvement and the tireless efforts of our security personnel.

    He noted, “Let us be a people who are balanced in our engagement—constructive in criticism, but also generous in praise where praise is earned. This is essential for building a united front against the challenges we face.”

    Bichi reiterated the commitment of the Hadejia Jama’are River Basin Development Authority under his leadership in supporting the Renewed Hope Agenda of the federal government, particularly in fostering sustainable development and security in communities.

  • Group seeks national honour, special day to immortalise Gen. Musa Yar’Adua

    Group seeks national honour, special day to immortalise Gen. Musa Yar’Adua

    A group known as the Coalition of Pro-Democracy Activists in West Africa has called for the declaration of a special day and the conferment of a national honour in recognition of the late Gen. Shehu Musa Yar’Adua’s contributions to Nigeria’s development.

    The demand was made in Katsina during a one-day public lecture held in honour of the late General, with the theme Yar’Adua: A Democratic Soldier.

    The Nation recalls that Yar’Adua died on December 8, 1997.

    Leader of the group, Bishir Dauda, said Yar’Adua’s sacrifice and role in shaping Nigeria’s political evolution place him among leaders deserving of such national recognition.

    He questioned why other leaders have been honoured while Yar’Adua has not received similar acknowledgment.

    Dauda also lamented what he described as a leadership vacuum in the North, noting that figures like Yar’Adua and Gen. Hassan Usman-Katsina had provided essential guidance and mentorship to emerging political leaders before their passing.

    The group urged President Bola Tinubu and the National Assembly to move swiftly to immortalise Yar’Adua’s legacies.

    He noted that Yar’Adua, who served as Chief of Staff, Supreme Headquarters—and effectively Nigeria’s vice head of state—from 1976 to 1979, as well as a key political figure during the transition programmes of the 1980s and 1990s, deserves every honour the country can offer.

    Dauda added that the lecture aimed to enlighten young people about Yar’Adua’s contributions to national development, particularly in the northern region, so they can appreciate his efforts and emulate the values and experiences they did not witness firsthand.

  • Enugu launches multi-sectoral taskforce to end gender-based violence

    Enugu launches multi-sectoral taskforce to end gender-based violence

    Enugu State on Monday formally launched its Gender-Based Violence (GBV) taskforce, marking what stakeholders described as a decisive turning point in the fight against sexual and gender-based abuses across the state.

    The state had seen a dangerous rise in gender based violence, particularly against women in recent months, with the most recent case being a 51-year-old neighbourhood security operative, identified as Emeka Emmanuel Nwangwu, allegedly murdering a 19-year-old maternal cousin, Loveth Uloma Nwangwu, inside a pharmacy at Total Roundabout, Nsukka.

    The launch, implemented by the Economic and Social Empowerment of Rural Communities (ESERC) in partnership with the Ministry of Children, Gender and Social Development and funded by the French Embassy Fund for Civil Society (FEF-OSC), brought together government officials, traditional rulers, religious leaders, civil society, and security agencies at the International Conference Centre, Enugu.

    Declaring the Taskforce open, Commissioner for Children, Gender and Social Development and Chair of the taskforce, Mrs. Ngozi Eni, said the state had made a bold statement that “gender-based violence has no home in Enugu State.”

    She described the taskforce as a functional mechanism with clear mandates on prevention, protection, accountability and multi-sectoral coordination.

    “This is not a symbolic body. It is a force for action. Today, we begin a new era where every survivor is heard, every perpetrator faces justice, and institutions respond with one voice,” she said

    Eni commended Governor Peter Mbah for prioritising GBV response and creating an enabling environment for inclusive governance.

    She also praised the French Embassy and ESERC for supporting a survivor-centered framework that will strengthen shelters, legal aid, psychosocial support and safer reporting channels.

    Commissioner for Health, Prof. George Ugwu, said the MoU signed by all partners demonstrated the state’s readiness to prevent GBV.

    “The pain of experiencing GBV is unimaginable. For this reason, I want to call on us all to always act responsibly, especially in moments of anger or under drug influence,” he warned.

    Religious and traditional leaders emphasized the centrality of community gatekeepers in eliminating GBV.

    Bishop of Nike Anglican Diocese, Rev. Dr. Christian Onyeka Onyia, said involving the church and traditional institutions was “the most sensible step,” insisting GBV prevention would fail without them.

    Chairman of the State Traditional Rulers Council, Igwe Samuel Asadu, pledged monarchs’ commitment and called for constitutional recognition of their roles to perform more for their subjects.

    Executive Director of ESERC, Rev’d Ikechukwu Nwaogu, described the launch as a historic milestone. He said the project, supported by the French Embassy, had already transformed GBV reporting systems in Ebonyi State and would replicate similar success in Enugu.

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    Nwaogu highlighted the project’s three pillars: community engagement, multi-sectoral coordination and economic empowerment for survivors.

    He announced the training of Community Advocacy Groups in Enugu East and Nkanu East, the activation of the GBV Taskforce with all relevant MDAs and security agencies, and the rollout of seed grants to help survivors rebuild their lives.

    He stressed that impunity would no longer be tolerated, noting that taskforce hotline numbers have been distributed across schools, markets, churches and community centers.

    “This is not merely a structure; it is a movement to end GBV in Enugu State,” he said.

    Stakeholders jointly pledged sustained action to build a state where every child is protected, every woman is respected and every community rejects violence

  • Police condemn attack on Anambra Church

    Police condemn attack on Anambra Church

    • Vows to hunt down perpetrators

    The Anambra State Commissioner of Police (CP), Ikioye Orutugu, has condemned the attack on the Anglican Church last Sunday, during which the wife of the cleric was killed and part of the church as well as part of the building razed.

    In a statement, the Police spokesperson, Tochukwu Ikenga, said: “The Commissioner of Police Anambra State Police, Ikioye Orutugu, condemns in the strongest terms the attack in the morning of December 7, 2025, carried out by armed criminals which resulted in the death of one person confirmed with serious injuries inflicted on a few others, including the church building partially burnt, and other properties destroyed at a church premises in Lilu, Ihiala Local Government Area.’’

    The CP states that the attack was wicked and an affront on the community, peace, sanctity of life, and freedom of worship.

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    “The CP notes that no community should be subjected to such brutality as the command will not allow criminals to instill fear or destabilise the peace we are working tirelessly to maintain.

    He assured of strengthened surveillance across the area.

    “The operatives are following every lead as no resource will be spared in ensuring that those responsible are apprehended and made to face the full weight of the law.

    “The Command urges residents to remain calm and cooperate with the Joint Security team by providing useful information that can assist ongoing investigations for justice to be served.

    “The Command remains steadfast in its commitment to protecting lives and property across Ihiala and the entire state,” the CP added.

  • Pensioners protest non-payment of increment arrears in Lagos

    Pensioners protest non-payment of increment arrears in Lagos

    • By Halimah Balogun

    Federal pensioners yesterday protested in Lagos over the non-payment of their N32,000 pension increment arrears and N25,000 palliative allowance, vowing to embark on a naked protest next week if the Federal Government fails to release their entitlements.

    The protesters, under the umbrella of the Coalition of Federal Pensioners of Nigeria, accused government agencies of frustrating retirees despite what they described as repeated assurances.

    The group, which had earlier threatened to protest nationwide in the nude, said it suspended the plan following appeals from prominent Nigerians who assured the group that officials of the Pension Transitional Arrangement Directorate (PTAD) were working on the matter.

    The coalition’s National Chairman, Mukaila Ogunbote, accused government agencies of insincerity and warned that patience among pensioners was running out.

    “We came out today to protest peacefully. This was supposed to be a naked protest, but prominent Nigerians appealed to us to suspend it. In good faith, we listened. But since then, nothing has changed,” Ogunbote said.

    He demanded the payment of the six-month N25,000 palliative allowance approved in 2023 and the N32,000 pension increase announced in July, last year.

    “In 2023, workers were paid their own palliative. Pensioners were promised three months. Up till now, we have not been paid. In July 2024, when minimum wage was reviewed, workers and corps members were paid within one month. Pensioners got nothing,” he said.

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    Ogunbote noted that pensioners have been sidelined in government’s policies, urging President Bola Tinubu, Minister of Finance Wale Edun and the Accountant-General of the Federation to look into the matter.

    “What is our sin? We worked for this country in our youth and strength. Is it a crime to grow old after serving Nigeria?

    “”PTAD announced that N45 billion had been released. Where is the money? Why have pensioners not been paid?” he said.

    He issued an ultimatum that if pensioners are not paid by Friday, the group would stage a naked protest nationwide next Monday.

    “If they fail to pay us, nobody will stop us. We are not chickens that will be thrown crumbs. Naked protest or not, the suffering of pensioners is a shame on this country,” Ogunbote said.

    He demanded that December pensions be paid on the 20th, instead of January, and warned that another protest would follow on December 28 if the demand was ignored.

    Secretary of the NIPOST chapter of the Nigerian Union of Pensioners, Mr Gbadamosi Ganiu, decried the living conditions of pensioners. He lamented that many pensioners were living in extreme poverty.

    “Some pensioners collect less than N60,000 a month. After transport and medication, nothing is left. People borrow money to attend protests. At over 80 and 90 years old, people are still begging to survive,” he said.

    He criticised government agencies for neglecting pensioners while paying other groups promptly.

    “Labour protested and they were paid. Workers were paid. But pensioners have been negotiating since 2023 with nothing to show for it,” Ganiu added.

    Another member of the group, Mrs Adetokunbo of the Federal Civil Service Pensioners, Lagos Chapter, accused government officials of unjust treatment and financial manipulation.

    “The money is there, but they refuse to release it. Some pensioners who retired in 2006 have not received one kobo till today. People are dying while waiting for their benefits,” he said.

    She appealed to the Federal Government to release pensioners’ entitlements.

    The protesters also condemned the Nigerian Union of Pensioners, accusing it of siding with the government against the interest of retirees.

  • Two killed, two injured in Lagos crashes

    Two killed, two injured in Lagos crashes

    • LASTMA warns against traffic violations as delivery motorcyclist suffers limb fracture

    The Lagos State Traffic Management Authority (LASTMA) has reported two separate midnight accidents on Monday, leaving two people dead and two others critically injured in various parts of the state.

    In a statement, LASTMA’s Director of Public Affairs and Enlightenment, Adebayo Taofiq, asid the first incident occurred about 2:30 a.m. on the Otedola Bridge inward Berger on the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway.

    When an unregistered vehicle conveying two occupants reportedly rammed into a moving, heavily-laden trailer at high speed.

    Both occupants of the vehicle died on the spot due to the force of the impact. The trailer driver allegedly fled the scene with the articulated truck before emergency responders arrived.

    LASTMA’s 24-hour Night-Gang Team stationed along the corridor was said to have responded swiftly, removing the bodies from the main carriageway and clearing the wreckage from the expressway.

    Officers from the Isheri Police Division provided security support, while officials of the State Environmental Health Monitoring Unit (SHEMU) later evacuated the remains.

    In a separate incident on the same day, about 5:00 a.m., two persons sustained serious injuries in a crash involving an empty tanker and a pure-water distribution van (registration number SMK 67 XH) on the Third Mainland Bridge near the University of Lagos (UNILAG) waterfront inward Lagos Island.

    The victims were stabilised by personnel of the Lagos State Ambulance Service (LASAMBUS) before being taken to a nearby hospital for further treatment.

    General Manager of LASTMA, Olalekan Bakare-Oki, expressed condolences to the families of the deceased and described the fatalities as avoidable tragedies caused by reckless speeding and disregard for road safety regulations.

    He emphasised the agency’s strict enforcement of prescribed speed limits as essential to saving lives.

    Bakare-Oki commended the professionalism of the Night-Gang Teams and reaffirmed LASTMA’s commitment to round-the-clock surveillance and rapid-response operations across Lagos.

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    Also, delivery motorcyclist sustained a serious limb fracture in the early hours of yesterday following a one-way traffic accident on the Odo Iya Alaro Bridge inward Maryland on Ikorodu Road in Lagos.

    LASTMA said preliminary investigations showed that the accident occurred amid heavy traffic caused by the aftermath of a truck fire at the same location earlier in the morning.

    Officials said the incident resulted in a long stretch of slow moving traffic on the Ikorodu Road axis..

    LASTMA said during the gridlock, a private ambulance with registration number BED 508 EA conveying an expectant woman who was on oxygen support drove against traffic at high speed to bypass the congestion.

    The reckless manoeuvre led to a head on collision with the delivery motorcyclist who was riding legitimately within his designated lane.

    The impact left the motorcyclist with a severe fracture to his right knee and other injuries that caused him intense pain at the scene.

    LASTMA officers alerted the LASAMBUS, which deployed two ambulances to the scene for emergency rescue.

    The expectant woman, along with her life support equipment, was safely transferred into one LASAMBUS ambulance, while the injured motorcyclist was conveyed in another ambulance to the nearest medical facility for urgent treatment.

    The driver of the private ambulance was apprehended at the scene by LASTMA officials and handed over to operatives of the Ogudu Police Division for further investigation and possible prosecution.

    LASTMA officers also ensured the damaged ambulance and the delivery motorcycle were safely removed from the road and taken to the Ogudu Police Division, while policemen provided security support during the rescue operation.

     Oki restated the agency’s resolve to maintain zero tolerance for dangerous traffic violations, especially the act of driving against traffic.

    He warned motorists, including emergency service drivers, to observe traffic rules strictly, noting that reckless behaviour on the road could endanger both their lives and those of other road users.

  • Family seeks Lagos govt’s intervention to preserve Ikate land

    Family seeks Lagos govt’s intervention to preserve Ikate land

    A family has raised the alarm to the Lagos State government to protect their rights over their landed property in Ikate, a fast-emerging middle-income neighbourhood on the Lekki-Epe Expressway in Eti-Osa Local Government Area.

    Until few days ago, the land had housed six yet-to-be-delivered, uninhabited duplexes. It also housed an uncompleted apartment complex.

    Sources added that they had engaged an estate developer to build luxurious homes on their land within the emerging neighborhood.

    However, for unclear reasons involving the state and the developer, the construction was pulled down.

    The state government alleged that the developer had not complied with known laws of the state.

    The demolition was carried out in a joint operation involving the state House of Assembly, the Office of Urban Development, and Lagos State Building Control Agency (LASBCA).

    Officials claimed the exercise targeted structures that violated building regulations, encroached on drainage setbacks, exceeded permissible water levels, and posed risks to public safety.

    Present at the operation was Permanent Secretary of the Office of Urban Development, Mr. Gbolahan Owodunni Oki, who stressed that illegal constructions continued to pose significant challenges to environmental sustainability and urban planning in Lagos.

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    Acting General Manager of LASBCA, Gbaye Florence reaffirmed the agency’s resolve to intensify monitoring across all zones.

    She explained that the affected structures had been served multiple notices—including stop-work and demolition orders—but the developers failed to comply.

    In an appeal, the family through YOG, a firm, said the demolition, which affected Maple Court, Off Kusenla Road, Ikate, Lagos, came to them as a rude shock.

    “We agreed in good faith with a property developer to build habitable homes.

    “We are very disappointed and intend to investigate and pursue legal action against all those involved in this catastrophe,” the family stated

  • Coalition asks IG to probe allegations against lawmaker over harassment

    Coalition asks IG to probe allegations against lawmaker over harassment

    A coalition of Civil Society Groups in Ebonyi State has called on Inspector-General of Police (IG), Kayode Egbetokun, to investigate allegations that a House of Representatives member uses thugs to harass some of his constituents.

    The Prof. Joseph Agbo-led coalition said the call became necessary because petitions to police authorities on the activities of the lawmaker had stalled for months.

    In one of the petitions, the coalition accused the lawmaker of unlawful possession of firearms and land-grabbing.

    It listed some indigenes of the constituency, including Friday Alefia, a reporter and Chisom Achor, a Tik-toker, as being behind bars after they were arrested and arraigned by the Police at the behest of the lawmaker.

    Others are Achor’s brother, Chinonso Imeba and one Paul Nweke .

    The group, which comprises four Civil Society Organisations–Human Rights Volunteer Corps, HRVC, Human Rights Action Group, Centre for the Defense of Human Rights, CDHR and Good Living Initiative, added that a few others had been compelled to flee their communities to avert falling victims of the lawmaker’s thugs.

    One of the petitions sent to Egbetokun and the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Tajudeen Abbas, by the group’s lawyers, Ede S. Ede & Co, on behalf of Emeka Kingsley, Nweke Chidi, and others was dated November 25.

    The petition reads in part, “It is our client’s brief that they have seen evil and what appears to be a permanent life in hell fire in the hands of the Honourable. Our clients say that the actions of the lawmaker are not only atrocious but it is a situation of the timid mentality of might is right syndrome.

    “Our clients contend that the lawmaker displays firearms with ammunition anyhow and shoots without control as he feels untouchable and has boasted severally that not even the Inspector-General of Police can question his activities as he is his personal friend.

    “’Our clients say that honourable finds it very pleasurable to oppress the poor and any dissenting voice, more especially when the person or persons refuses to pay illegal levy which he often uses his cronies to levy on the downtrodden in the Amagu and other communities in Ikwo Local Government Area of Ebonyi State or that the person refuses to surrender his land (s) to grab.’’

    The coalition listed 46 persons, including the deceased, as victims of the lawmaker’s alleged reign of terror and appealed to concerned authorities to use their good offices to cause a discreet investigation into the allegations.

    The coalition had last week decried the high level of attacks on free speech by the lawmaker who has been in the news for causing the detention of those who criticise him on social media in police cells and correctional centres.

    Also, a commissioner in the state, who, allegedly ordered the torture of a journalist by the members of the Neighborhood Watch was rebuked by the group .

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    The coalition’s leader, Agbo, at recent appearances on television and radio programmes had reiterated that although the group’s do not in any way support defamation of characters of anyone, cyber-bullying or cyber-stalking of any kind among others, the allegations leveled against Ogah were too heavy not to be investigated by the concerned authorities.

    He specifically made reference to Alefia, whose case was referred to a Federal High Court, He said the judge fined that prosecutor N50, 000 for attempting to ensure that he does not get bail.”

    He said the group’s biggest concern was that ‘’as long as there are laws in our land, even if one commits murder, the laws have provided for how such a person should be handled according to law.’’

    ‘’As a coalition, we never and we would never support cyber-bullying of anybody. But we don’t want the cybercrime laws to become another Public Officers Protection Against False Accusation Decree Number 2 under the military rule. We are worried that the cybercrimes law appears to be slipping into that Decree’’’ the coalition boss added.

    “What we are saying is that the Hon. did not go to arrest any of these persons. The Police did. He did not drag any of them to these courts. The Police also did.

    ‘’The judiciary is the one that is hearing these cases. But the point we are making is: Why do you arrest somebody, handcuff him like a common criminal for cyber-bullying or defamation and you dump him in the station for weeks, or for days, and in the case of Friday Alefia, for months. Why do you refer a case of cyberbullying to a magistrate court?’’