Tag: Frank Mba

  • IGP okays Bring-back-our-girls protests

    IGP okays Bring-back-our-girls protests

    THE Inspector General of Police, Mohammed Abubakar, has given the green light to individuals and civil society groups to stage peaceful protests to demand the release of the 234 girls abducted from the Government Girls Secondary School, Chibok, Borno State on April 15

    The Bring Back Our Girls (BBOG) group complained that their sustained peaceful protests in Abuja were being disrupted by policemen.

    In a statement yesterday by the Force Public Relations Officer, Mr. Frank Mba, the IGP restated his commitment to providing security for the protesters anywhere in the country.

    The statement said in recognition of the rights of the protesters, as enshrined in Chapter 4 of the Nigerian Constitution, the IGP  ordered the police to give protection to the protesters.

    The IGP was quoted to have insisted that the law enforcement agencies are duty bound to enforce the rights of the protesters.

    “To this end, the IGP has charged his zonal and state command officers to ensure that citizens embarking on rallies and other peaceful demonstrations are provided adequate security in line with the standard operational practice of the Force.

    “The IGP, however, called on leaders and organisers of such rallies to work in concert with the police to ensure the safety of participants and orderliness of the exercise. He further urged them to take measures to deter hoodlums from hijacking the assemblies.

    “While calling on the citizens to provide the police and other law enforcement agencies with useful information in the fight against terror and other related crimes, the IGP reassured them that all necessary steps are being taken towards ensuring that the abducted Chibok school girls are rescued and returned to their loved ones.”

  • ‘People should  be truthful about their destinations’

    ‘People should be truthful about their destinations’

    Force Public Relations Officer Mr. Frank Mba, in a telephone interview explained to Assistant Editor, Joke Kujenya, challenges of finding missing persons 

    WHat new measures are being deployed by the Police to find missing persons?

    Worldwide, the method of looking for missing persons varies from community-to-community, state-to-state, and country-to-country. However, they all have a common denominator: factors such as socio-economic, culture and ways of life, among others.

    As for the Nigerian Police, we have always done out, bit using standard methods in our search for missing persons depending on the person being looked for. If the person is for instance a journalist, we have to determine the personality, history, is he or she a truthful person when it comes to matter of integrity? We have to be able to ascertain the health condition of the person and so on. It is this and many other factors that will help us to initiate the methodology with which to commence our preliminary investigation and subsequent search. So, methodology differs in each case.

    In most cases, when people go missing, police often find them and indeed, many people have been found. In the cases where they are not found, it could be that such a people may have died, perhaps, in road accidents, some may have slumped along the way, and may not have had any form of identity to be traced. In other cases, we have had situations where people found cannot be traced because their finger prints never matched any of those we have in our database. That means their cases are never even brought or reported to the police. In this wise, there would be little or no way we can be of help since we were never aware of the incidents in the first place.

    Police Control Room often has lists of people reported but found. And once they are found, we have been able to reconnect them with their families. A very remarkable case was that of a two-year old we recently reconnected with her family. The little girl was found in Maiduguri after she was ‘stolen’ from her parents in Onitsha. One, we had the challenge of getting her family because she was too little to be able to tell her family. And after dedicated attempts, we were able to overcome the difficulty and eventually traced her parents and handed her over.

    So also, it is usually hard for us to connect people with either memory loss or mental challenge. Such people are never able to tell us the needed information.

    Is there a reliable database for the Police?

    Of course, just as patients go to the hospitals when they have issues; so families of missing persons go to police offices to report cases of the incidents after 24hours of occurrence. To ascertain these cases, we check where the cases are reported to have happened, do background checks on the person missing and many others. Every police command has a database just as it is done with stolen cars and when found, we can refer you to go check at Oduduwa Police headquarters.

    How then would you rate your success in these cases?

    I can tell you boldly that we have recorded 90 percent in the number of persons being found. That is the fact except in the cases of deaths, accidents, or those taken to mortuaries without recourse to the police and later being traced. Then, there are the cases of those who fall into the hands of ritualists and so on. Areas of challenges I am reiterating is in the cases of death and where these people cannot be traced at all. And when a person leaves his or her home and tells a lie about his or her destination, now, that is another big problem. You know, the police and the family will concentrate their searches on the destination and the available information the person had given, whereas, the person may have encountered problems in another area entirely. This has happened more with younger people, especially females, who have either gone with a boyfriend or a sugar-daddy but lied to their families that they had gone to see an aunt or an uncle. Then both the families and police will be dissipating their energies in the wrong direction. There have even been cases where such aunties or uncles have been arrested wrongly but after so much torture, the truth emerges and then, they would be released. We have handled cases of people going to picnics but told a different story at home. Then, their bodies were later found in mortuaries while families who knew nothing about the cases have been wrongly punished. Some people had collapsed due to internal health problems and when the situation leads to their death, they have no trace or identification and then, their families keep hoping endlessly. Many corpses found on roadsides belong to some families, but without ID cards or someone coming to identify them, they are not linked to nobody. And this is why we have been shouting to Nigerians to carry their ID cards or other viable means of identification about. They must make it easy for themselves to be connected to their families. Everybody belongs to some families anyway.

    What happens in the instances of accidents?

    Already, you know that operators of transport services make efficient use of manifests in the cases of interstate travels. And each of these manifests is duly documented at the bus terminals so they are not lost or burnt in case they encounter an accident. The idea of Passengers’ Manifest in our inter-state vehicles is for all passengers to write their names, telephone numbers, next-of-kin and destinations so that in the case of any eventuality, issue of identification will not be a problem. But even at that, many of the passengers will write fake names and information. And we also advise that people should have valid identity cards on them.

    Also, Nigerians should try as much as possible to be their brother’s keepers. When you see someone feeling sick or trying hard to gain his or her composure, it is not right to run away or leave such a person to slump. We must help one another. Some of these are minor preventive measures. Our young girls, students, should be more security conscious. Why would you hitch a ride from a total stranger on roads such as Lagos-Ibadan expressway or Ore-Benin road? That is extremely dangerous. Why travel if you don’t have the fund? Commercial Sex Workers (CSWs) have fallen prey to ritualists in brothels across the country because they operate under false names. They have been arrested when they have problems and because we don’t have their real identities, no one could trace them or tell their actual identities. These are serious factors that people often trivialise. How would a Fatima for instance call herself Sandra because she’s a CSW? So, if such a person has a problem, her identity would be hard to match with what her family is looking for and then, her search may be endless. If the CSWs must continue in their choice trade, let them have someone they will confide their real identities to so that if something happens, the police will be able to find them and notify their real families.

    So, what do you advise people do?

    It is simple. Nigerians should always tell the truth about their whereabouts. Family members should strive as much as possible to be sincere with one another. No matter how hard things are in every family, each of them must have someone they can confide in. If they must be deceptive, the most terrible thing to play with is their destination at any point in time. A family member must be able to tell the police the actual information needed to trace their missing person. But in the instance where this is missing, the police will try their possible best; but finding the person could take longer than necessary. By-and-large however, Nigerian Police has been up to task in finding and re-connecting missing persons with their families.

  • Nyanya blast death toll hits 19

    … 60 wounded, three IEDs recovered

    The police on Friday confirmed that 19 people died and 60 others injured in Thursday’s bomb blast at Nyanya in the Federal Capital Territory.
    The police spokesman, CSP Frank Mba, confirmed the figure at a news conference at Nyanya, the scene of the incident.
    The spokesperson of the Department of State Services (DSS), Marilyn Ogar, and an official of the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA), attended the briefing.
    Mba said that six others apart from the 60 injured had been treated and discharged.
    He also said three unexploded Improvise Explosive Devices (IEDs) were recovered from the scene, adding that they had been rendered safe.
    “Investigations are ongoing and we appeal to the citizens to rally round the security forces at this critical point in our history.
    “It will take the unity of all of us to defeat terror,’’ Mba said, and declined comment on whether any arrest had been made.
    “I will not speak at this stage on ongoing investigations but investigations are ongoing and we will give facts when it is right to do so.’’
    Also, Ogar, DSS spokesperson, said the cooperation of all Nigerians was required to win the war against terrorism.
    “We must take our security into our hands because the security agencies cannot do it all alone, it must be collective.
    “The call here is for all Nigerians to rally round security agencies, it is not a time to say they are not doing what they are supposed to do.
    “The number of security personnel in the country is very small compared to the population, rally round us through information, no information is useless,’’ Ogar appealed.
    The News Agency of Nigeria recalls that Mba had given a casualty figure of 12 dead and 19 wounded on Thursday, shortly after the explosion.
    He, however, described those figures as “provisional.”

  • Police deploy special  forces in Zamfara

    Police deploy special forces in Zamfara

    The Inspector General of Police, Mohammed Abubakar, has ordered the deployment of police Special Forces in Zamfara State to prevent the escalation of attacks by suspected Fulani herdsmen.

    Over 200 persons were reportedly killed by the herdsmen at Yargaladima village and other communities during a security meeting called by vigilance groups in the community.

    A statement yesterday by Force spokesman, Frank Mba, said the deployment comprised 10 units of the Police Mobile Force; three units of conventional policemen; a unit of counter terrorism personnel; border patrol teams; and Force Intelligence personnel.

    The Special Forces are to reinforce the existing police personnel in the affected areas, with the police air wing providing aerial patrol and surveillance.

    “While commiserating with the families of the victims, the IG urges citizens to cooperate with the Force in restoring peace and security in the area and advised them to be law-abiding as they go about their businesses,” the statement added.

    The police boss was said to have earlier set up a reconciliatory committee headed by DIG Michael Zuokumor with a mandate to reach out to communities and stakeholders in the states that have witnessed similar attacks in recent times.

     

  • Ejigbo assault:  Market leader, 11 others held

    Ejigbo assault: Market leader, 11 others held

    • Police declare four wanted

    Justice appears on the horizon for the three women that were assaulted in February, last year, at the Oba Morufu International Market, Ejigbo in Lagos State as the police yesterday paraded the Babaoloja of the market, Isiaka Waidi, and 11 other suspects.

    They were paraded by the Deputy Commissioner of Police (DCP) in charge of the Federal Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS), Mr Chris Ezike, and the Force Public Relations Officer (FPRO), Frank Mba, a Chief Superintendent of Police (CSP), at the Adeniji Adele Police Station, Lagos Island.

    The victims – two young girls and their mother – were tortured and brutalised by some people at the market for allegedly stealing pepper.

    One of the girls, Juliana Agoma, reportedly died in Benin Republic, where she was receiving treatment after the ordeal in which she sustained serious injuries.

    The police said four others, who are still in hiding, had been declared wanted. They added that their pictures would soon be made public for their easy identification.

    Those declared wanted by the police are: Tiri, an alleged member of the Oodua People’s Congress (OPC), who was captured in the video footage and alleged to give stripped Juliana, her daughter, Ajoke, and the other victim, naked; Otepa Oluranti, Michael Abolore and another simply identified as Akeem.

    In March, last year, an internet video, showing where the three females were being tortured went viral, drawing the ire of Nigerians, especially civil society groups, who demanded investigation of the video and the perpetrators’ arrest.

    Mba said: “Waidi is said to be the mastermind of the dastardly act which culminated in the arrest, debasement, torture and extortion of N50, 000.”

    Another suspect is Haruna Abdullahi and Buhari Yusuf, who mixed the concoction of pepper and alcoholic spirit that were applied on the bodies, including private parts of the victims. Others are: Saheed Adisa, Lateef Tijani, Ahmed Adisa, Oloruntoyin Dauda (Iya-Oja), Adekunle Adenuga, Jimoh Busari and Azeez Akinosun.”

    He said the suspects were identified on a parade by eyewitnesses, who went further to reveal parts played by each suspect, assuring that the Force would work with Interpol to confirm the veracity of Juliana’s death.

    Ezike said the suspects’ arrest was facilitated by civil society groups and the state Office of the Public Defenders (OPD).

    Waidi denied being involved in the torture of the victims, saying that he was at home when security guards attached to the market called him that they had discovered persons behind the stealing of missing pepper and tomatoes in the market.

    Waidi added: “When I got to the market, I was taken to their home. I found out that it was a little girl. I left instructions that they should hand them over to the police since I was rushing down to Alausa in Ikeja for a meeting. I didn’t even know the extent of what the security guards did to the woman and her children until I saw the video. I was not the person that committed the crime; it was the security guards.”

    Nike Salami, 16, half-sister of the late Juliana said Waidi lied as she recounted how Waidi repeatedly kicked her mother, after others had stripped her naked.

    “They said they would cut off my mother’s head. They told our landlord to give us quit notice, that we were thieves. They sent us out of the area and we went to live at my mother’s village,” said Nike. Mrs. Ajoke Agoma praised Dr. Joe Okei-Odumakin for “relentlessly pursuing the case.

    Okei-Odumakin, who said she had visited the late Juliana’s grave in Benin Republic, added: “We also wanted to prove a point that jungle justice does not pay.”

    The Director of the OPD, Mrs. Omotola Rotimi, who said the case file would be forwarded to the Directorate of Public Prosecution, vowed: “We’ll ensure that justice is done in this case.”

    Mba said the police would work with other security agencies, in the distribution of the pictures of the wanted four, so that people could alert the nearest police wherever they sighted them.

  • IGP to seek support on intelligence, counter-terrorism in U.S

    IGP to seek support on intelligence, counter-terrorism in U.S

    The Inspector-General of Police, Mr. Mohammed Abubakar, would during a visit to the United States seek the support of international security agencies on intelligence gathering and counter-terrorism.

    According to a statement issued by the Force Public Relations Officer, Frank Mba, on Friday in Abuja, Abubakar is expected to visit the United Nations headquarters in New York between October 21 and October 25.

    “The IGP is expected to discuss the challenges militating against effective and efficient deployment of the Nigeria Police personnel and equipment for peace-support missions.

    “He would seek the support and collaboration of the UN towards addressing these challenges,’’ the News Agency of Nigeria quoted the Force spokesman as saying in the statement.

    According to the statement, efforts being made to improve the performance of the Nigeria police contingents in sub-regional, regional and UN peacekeeping missions would be discussed.

    The statement said that during the visit, the IGP would meet with officials of U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation and New York Police Department.

    It said that he would also meet with State Department officials to exchange ideas and strategies on intelligence gathering and counter-terrorism measures.

     

     

  • Frank Mba and tinted glasses

    SIR: I wish to commend CSP. Frank Mba for his recent illuminating write-up on the use of tinted glasses.
    The write up has educated the public about the use of tinted vehicle glasses. What is puzzling however is while the punishment for using tinted glasses is N2,000.00 the cost of obtaining a permit for it is said to be N25,000.00. This is astronomical and appears unreasonable. This high cost will discourage people from applying for or obtaining the said permit.
    It is also said that the permission can only be issued by Police Headquarters in Abuja. The issuance of the permit should be reduced to about N5,000 or less and vested in Police Commissioners at state level. It is should not be a basis for raising funds for the police.
    Permit for cars with factory made tinted glasses should not be made prohibitive as many of them are gifts from friends and relatives.
    • Yemi Olajide
    Akure
  • Security agents search for kidnapped French family

    Security agents search for kidnapped French family

    Security agents were in a “massive manhunt” Friday for the kidnapped members of the family after Paris said the abductors had likely separated the victims into two groups.

    “As long as there are rumours of their cross-border movements, then security agencies must be intensely searching for them,” police spokesman Frank Mba told AFP, adding that there was a “massive manhunt.”

    He, however, could not provide few other details on the operation to free the family, which includes two parents, four children aged 5 to 12 and an uncle, including who may be the suspects behind the abductions on Tuesday.

    The family was abducted while visiting a national park in Cameroon by six armed suspected Islamists on three motorbikes.

    On Thursday, French President Francois Hollande said the family members were probably being held in two groups.

    Cameroon authorities said the victims were then taken over the border into Nigeria’s northeast, a restive region where insurgents from Islamist extremist group Boko Haram and criminal gangs have long operated.

    While French officials have named Boko Haram as the likely culprits, a splinter faction of the group known as Ansaru, which has risen in prominence in recent weeks, appears to have focused on targeting foreign hostages.

    Ansaru claimed the December kidnapping of a French national in northern Nigeria and the abduction of seven foreigners from a construction site in Bauchi State at the weekend.

    In statements, Ansaru has protested against France’s efforts against Islamist rebels in Mali.

     

  • 33 police commissioners redeployed

    33 police commissioners redeployed

    The Inspector-General of Police, Mr Mohammed Abubakar, on Thursday ordered the re-deployment of 33 senior police officers to various commands and formations nationwide.

    This is contained in a statement in Abuja by CSP. Frank Mba, Deputy Force Public Relations Officer, Force Headquarters.

    The statement said that 16 commissioners of police in charge of state commands were swapped while 17 were re-deployed to formations across the country and the force headquarters.

    According to the statement, the exercise is part of ongoing efforts to reposition the force for greater efficiency.

    The I-G urged the officers to adopt proactive and aggressive crime fighting strategies and to continuously initiate policies that would strengthen the values of policing.

    Abubaker also enjoined them to take all measures in tackling corruption in its ramification.

    Those who swapped offices are Sabo Ringim, Kebbi; Musa Daura, Kano; Moses Saba-Ndagi, Ebonyi; Johnson Ogunsakin, Kwara; E. Ibitibituwa, Enugu; Hilary Opara, Kogi; Jubril Adeniji, Taraba; Mohammed Indabawa, Oyo; Mohammed Katsina, Imo and Usman Abubakar, Abia.

    Others are Olufemi Ogunbayode, FCT; Dorathy Gimba, Osun; Foluso Adebanjo, Edo; Mbu Joseph, Rivers; K. Shodipo, Cross River and Patrick Dokumor, Ondo. (NAN)