Tag: IGP

  • Police deploy 400 in Liberia, Sudan

    The Nigeria Police yesterday contributed additional 400 officers and men to peace-keeping operations in Liberia and the Sudan.

    The police officers and men are part of the nation’s contribution to the United Nations (UN) Mission in Liberia (UNMIL) and the African Union – United Nations’ Hybrid Operation in Dafur, Sudan (UNAMID).

    During the pre-deployment and competence demonstration in Abuja yesterday, Inspector-General of Police (IGP) Mohammed Abubakar said the police contingents were on similar missions in a number of countries.

    According to him, Nigerian policemen and officers are in Cote D’Ivoire, Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Guinea Bissau, Haiti, Liberia, Sierra-Leone, Somalia, South Sudan and Sudan.

    Abubakar assured the contingents that the police authorities had made adequate provision for their welfare, material and logistics support.

    He advised them to be good ambassadors of the Nigeria Police Force and the country.

    The highpoint of the occasion was the tactical demonstration by members of the contingents on operational skills and tactics on crowd/riot control and other ancillary policing strategies in line with UN standards.

  • IGP on the G7 meeting invasion

    IGP on the G7 meeting invasion

    The question the Inspector General of Police (IGP), Mohammed Abubakar, was asked to respond to by the House Committee on Police Affairs was simple: who ordered the Asokoro Divisional Police Officer, Nnana Amah, to invade and disrupt the G7 governors’ meeting at the Kano governor’s lodge some two weeks ago? The answer was equally simple though downright disturbing. No one sent Mr Amah, the IGP replied. The DPO was simply doing his job, he deadpanned.

    It will be recalled that two Sundays ago, Mr Amah had led dozens of policemen to invade the G7 governors’ meeting in Abuja. According to a source at the meeting, the DPO had asked the governors to disperse or be arrested. The governors, five of whom were present at the meeting, would not disperse, but instead dared the DPO to arrest them. The invasion led to an altercation in which a chafing governor would have taken the unprecedented step of pushing the DPO out of the meeting had he not been restrained. The invasion alarmed the country, and was widely condemned by everyone with a sense of decorum. However, like all who dare to oppose the Jonathan presidency, the chafing governor is today under siege, with two of his sons detained for alleged financial malfeasance.

    If Mr Amah’s effrontery alarmed the country, the response of the IGP was even more troubling, and the inability of the House Committee to pin him down with poignant and unnerving questions did in fact signpost the decline of Nigerian democracy. According to the IGP, “The DPO was not sent by anybody…As the officer-in-charge of the area, he had the right to know what was going on in his domain…He is the DPO of the area; if anything happens, he would be held responsible. He was doing his job.” He further explained that what the rest of us described as disruption of meeting was in fact nothing of the sort, and that we were all misled by media reports of the event. Alas, the IGP pretends to teach us English by redefining the word ‘disruption.’

    Worse, by making light of Mr Amah’s grievous assault on civil liberties, the police boss attempts to rewrite the constitution, remould Nigerian democracy, and redefine the charter on human rights. But the IGP’s not-so-clever response shows very clearly why Nigeria is now a police state, why the police commissioner in Rivers State willfully defies the state governor without fear of retribution, why increasingly the police’s view of liberty is at variance with whatever liberty is vouchsafed to citizens by the constitution. And by handling the IGP last Thursday with kid gloves, the House Committee on Police Affairs also indicate clearly how complicit the National Assembly has become in the subversion of the constitution by a resentful and vindictive Jonathan presidency.

    The fact is that though the IGP honoured the House invitation, he provided no explanation to show by what authority the police could disrupt the governors’ meeting or embarrass them, even if it was clear the governors met to ensure President Goodluck Jonathan did not contest in 2015, or if he did, not to win a single vote. The police, Dr Jonathan, and the faceless and shameless power mongers pulling the strings behind the thick presidency cloak of Aso Villa remind us of Germany in the 1920s and 1930s as Adolf Hitler’s Nazi party prepared the ground for fascism. The IGP is obviously no longer in full control of the police, for he seems to us a man of much grander character than the actions the police evince today. More and more, he will find himself justifying his men’s lawless actions, perhaps assured that in the process, and irrespective of what he thinks or not think, believes or not believe, he is pleasing the presidency and defending his increasingly untenable position.

    More humbling, and faced with a fascist presidency, we have on our trembling hands a considerably weakened National Assembly without a full understanding of the role of a legislature in combating autocracy. For whatever this weapon in our hands is worth, the Senate seems to have lost its zest for lawmaking and for checking the excesses of the executive; and the House of Representatives has sensed the futility and loneliness of rising up stoutly in defence of civil liberties. They could not question the IGP to get his understanding of what the duties of a DPO were, and whether those duties included in any way the assault on the people’s liberties as contained in the constitution. They let the IGP off lightly by refusing to get him to quote the relevant parts of the constitution that empowered his officers to insult democracy and deny or circumscribe lawful association and assembly of the people.

    Last year we started with a defiant commissioner of police proving to be more powerful than a state governor; now we have one DPO looking five governors in the face and telling them to shape up or ship out. Under the military, such effrontery could never be countenanced. In a democracy, it should never be imagined. But under the nose of a president who took oath to defend and protect the constitution, we are experiencing these clear and catastrophic assaults on civil liberties. Who can tell what will happen as the 2015 general elections draw near, when a desperate president egged on by faceless fascists take on everybody and the constitution? Who can tell what other abuses the president’s men will enact, and what other institution, other than the police, they will destroy or render contemptible?

    Already, the campaign for state police has become almost unchallengeable, even unanimous. Whether a sovereign national conference is held or not, it is certain that the enthusiasm with which the police have lent themselves to be used to undermine the constitution has ensured that they cannot survive as they are constituted today. It is a question of time before the police are decentralized. When that happens, it will be good riddance to bad rubbish. For with the appalling excesses of the Jonathan government, no one is persuaded that a state government is likely to behave more unreasonably with the police than the federal government now heedlessly does.

    Whether the already enfeebled National Assembly, which embraces partisanship to the detriment of the sanctity of the constitution, survives the impending Jonathan onslaught remains to be seen. They failed to understand the issues involved in the Rivers affair, where a few members of the House of Assembly plotted against the majority and then somehow manipulated the National Assembly to employ disingenuous neutrality instead of principled engagement. More and more, Nigerians are beginning to understand that this certainly isn’t the kind of legislature the country needs. Whatever they earn, if they could at least be firm and principled, the country would be grateful that though they cost a pretty penny they are nonetheless useful. Today, however, they look like an appendage of the executive, frightened, cowering and shell-shocked.

    Mr Amah is likely to get away with his audacious challenge to the country’s democratic tenets. After all, his senior counterpart in Rivers is getting away with murder. In the face of such distressing exhibition of partisan policing, the IGP hides under semantics, and the National Assembly feigns ignorance, if not sickening amusement. Maybe, in quiet resignation, we should wait for the other shoe to drop. When that happens, let us hope it will not be too late to stir ourselves, too late to reclaim the country from the hands of those intent on destroying it, and too late to feel alive once again and be proud of this corner of the earth the good Lord has placed in our clumsy hands to tend.

  • Descent into fascism?

    Not a few Nigerians are worried at the way governance is drifting in our country under the guise of politics. Even more are annoyed that President Goodluck Jonathan seems unperturbed by this descent and may in fact be enjoying it. And unfortunately at the centre of this fall is the Nigeria Police.

    Penultimate Sunday seven state governors from the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) were meeting at the Kano State Governor’s Lodge in Abuja when midway or thereabout into their deliberations, the Divisional Police Officer (DPO) of Asokoro Police Station, Chief Superintendent of Police (CSP) Nnanna Amah barged in and ordered them to stop and disperse immediately claiming he had orders from above not to allow the meeting.

    Understandably the governors, members of a breakaway faction of the party called new PDP were shocked. This was how Kano State governor, Rabiu Kwankwaso, the host, described the event: “We were discussing in my sitting room when the DPO came in and asked us to disband. We were discussing how to approach Mr. President and come up with a stand when invited, but this meeting was disrupted by a DPO. We didn’t offend anybody, but like criminals, a DPO was sent to disrupt our meeting.” Kwankwaso went on to say that not even when Nigeria was under military rule did anything like this happen.

    The DPO did not disclose who it was ‘above’ that gave him that order, but in the Nigerian situation it is safe to assume that the order came from the Presidency via the Inspector-General of Police Mohammed Abubakar.

    The rabidly pro Jonathan camp will vehemently deny this and even call anybody that suggests this was the situation names. But whatever they chose to say would not remove the fact that the Nigeria Police under IGP Abubakar has been used more as agents of oppression and suppression of any view(s) and action(s) that are not in tandem with the second term project of Dr Jonathan.

    How do you explain the situation in Rivers State where the Commissioner of Police Mbu Joseph Mbu enforces the law the way it suits his political paymasters? He is in open confrontation with the State governor, Chibuike Rotimi Amaechi, one of the G-7 governors and opposes virtually everything the government is doing or wants to do that involves the people gathering. He has banned every political rally or gathering of the sort, disrupting such where the governor and state government are involved yet allowing the Grassroots Democratic Initiative (GDI) of Amaechi’s main opponent and Coordinating Minister of Education, Nyesom Wike to meet freely and canvass for support. But anything gathering for Amaechi must be prevented or disrupted even if violently. This has been going on a long time and both the president and the Inspector-General are conspiring to remain silent fuelling belief that they are solidly behind CP Mbu.

    Just last week the IGP announced a ban on rallies and gatherings around and at airports nationwide. The announcement came on the back on the police preventing Amaechi’s supporters from going to Port Harcourt international Airport at Omagwa to welcome visiting leaders of the opposition All Progressives Congress (APC) who were in Rivers State to woo the governor and his supporters into APC. Meanwhile the First Lady Dame Patience Jonathan who goes about with almost a battalion of policemen each time she visited home (Port Harcourt) and her supporters have free access to the airport.

    The Abuja police action against the G-7 was not the first time. The police had, not too long ago, similarly gone to the Sokoto Governor’s Lodge in Abuja to stop a gathering of the governors, but were not so lucky, as the governors fixed that venue as a decoy and actually met at a secret location. Known members, supporters and sympathisers of the new PDP are being similarly harassed routinely by the police in Abuja and the Ministry of Federal Capital Territory. The FCT authorities have threatened to demolish properties being used by the new PDP either as party secretariat or for meetings. In Bayelsa, Gombe and a couple of other states, nPDP leaders and supporters are being hounded by the police.

    All these are happening under the president’s watch and the Commander-In-Chief and his Inspector-General of Police are seeing nothing wrong here and saying nothing. PDP elders and the Bamanga Tukur faction are enjoying it. As long as the shoe is on the other foot no problem; but there is a problem here. Our democracy is under threat. Freedom of association, freedom to dissent, freedom of choice et al are being trampled upon by Jonathan’s police just to drive fear into the opposition and make Nigerians submissive to the president’s 2015 ambition.

    Nigeria is gradually being turned into a police state where opponents of government are either haunted into submission or punished for cooked up offence(s) using the apparatus and agents of state. This is the way of fascists. Although this looks like stretching the argument too far, the signs are there that President Goodluck Jonathan could lead us down that road if he is not called to order. And the only body that can do that is the National Assembly. But can this Assembly do it? Yes, if the will is there.

    But I have my doubt if this will ever happen. This National Assembly is sharply divided. While the House of Representatives might be willing to call the president and his IGP to order, the Senate often acts with too much restraint at times bordering on total submission to the will of the president. Not a few Nigerians believe that this Senate, when the chips are down, will always side with President Jonathan even at the risk of this democracy.

    But for how long can and should the senate continue to shield the president and tolerate his excesses? At what point would the Senators act and stop this culture of impunity that is the hallmark of Jonathan’s presidency. Make no mistake about it, the president is a gentleman, as all have acknowledged, but he is grossly incompetent. Doing the routine things alone would not make Jonathan a great leader neither also would he’s being nice. Taking major political decisions in the interest of the state, even if such hurt personally would put him up there as one of our finest; and he can start by calling the IGP and his boys to order, or rather allow the police to work without political interference. He should also rein in the excesses of his supporters especially his Ijaw kinsmen; and not forgetting Madam, the First Lady.

    A good place to start would be in Rivers State where a combination of his wife’s interest, the inordinate ambition of the Coordinating Minister of Education Nyesom Wike, his own second term interest and the uncompromising stance of state governor, Rotimi Amaechi are threatening the peace and security not only of the state but also the wellbeing of Nigeria’s democracy. In between put in a partisan police commissioner and you get the picture of what is going on in Rivers State.

    Some of these the president acknowledged in his speech at the centenary celebration of Port Harcourt last week, but he should not just stop at the talking, he should walk his talk and do the needful and douse the tension, not just in Rivers state but also nationwide. He should be mindful of how he uses the police lest we fall into fascism. State governors are not ordinary Nigerians to be harassed by the police just because they disagree with the president. Enough of this, Mr President.

  • NLC  to IGP: Call Rivers Police chief to order

    NLC  to IGP: Call Rivers Police chief to order

    The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) and Trade Union Congress (TUC) have urged the Inspector-General of Police (IGP), Mohammed Abubakar, to call the Rivers State Commissioner of Police, Mr. Joseph Mbu, to order over the tear-gassing and brutalisation of new teachers in Port Harcourt.

    The teachers gathered at the instance of the State’s Universal Basic Education (UBE) Board to receive their letters of posting.

    In a statement by its Acting General Secretary, Comrade Chris Uyot, the NLC  said the call by the Congress is necessary as the the conduct of the police was unnecessary, shameful, ill-advised, contemptuous, illegal and a throw-back to the missioner to order to protest the tear-gassing and brutalisation in Port Harcourt of newly-recruited teachers in Rivers State.”

    “We are inclined to believe Mr. Joseph Mbu, the State Commissioner of Police, who directed this heinous attack was not acting at your behest because we recall you came into office with a new code of conduct which Nigerians applauded.

    “We also demand the posting of Mr. Joseph Mbu out of Rivers State for free and unfettered investigation but especially for his excesses, and his inability to inspire confidence in the contending parties in the state.”

    The labour leader however said: “Need we remind overzealous, blood-thirsty and sycophantic officers like Mbu that we are old enough as a nation and sufficiently experienced as citizens of this country to know that it does little good when an officer of his rank compromises his institution or code of conduct in order to appease insular and selfish motives”.

    Also  the Secretary General of the TUC , Comrade Musa Lawal  said the anti-workers’ activities of the police over the Obio/Akpor Local Government Secretariat in Rivers has resulted in work stoppage and non-payment of workers salary for three months, inflicting untoward suffering to working families whose bread winners work in the local government.

     

     

     

  • IGP warns police on excessive use of force, arms

    IGP warns police on excessive use of force, arms

    The Inspector General of Police, Mr. Mohammed Abubakar, has warned all police personnel against excessive use of force and unjustifiable application of lethal weapons contrary to standing rules of engagement.

    He gave the warning in a circular addressed to all Zonal Assistant Inspectors General of Police, Command Commissioners of Police, Heads of Department and Formations across the country.

    Abubakar warned that officers who violated the rules of use of weapons would be punished, according to the circular a copy of which was made available to journalists on Friday

    The IGP urged officers and men of the force to be mindful of the constitutional rights of the citizenry, while performing their statutory duties.

    The News Agency of Nigeria reports that Abubakar reminded the AIGs and CPs that the ban on road blocks subsists and should therefore ensure strict enforcement.

    He restated his commitment to reforming and returning the police to the path of professionalism in line with international best practices and the transformation agenda of the Federal Government.

    He also expressed the resolve to rid the force of all forms of corruption, and charged the personnel to desist from such practice.

    Abubakar enjoined them to abide by the Code of Conduct and Professional Standards for members of the force.

    He called on the X-Squad, an internal Police Department that monitors enforcement of discipline within the force, to step up its monitoring of the personnel to stem corrupt practices in the force.

     

     

  • How to tame corruption, by IGP, Akanbi, Agabi, others

    How to tame corruption, by IGP, Akanbi, Agabi, others

    Inspector-General of Police (IGP) Mohammed Abubakar; pioneer Chairman of the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC), Justice Mustapha Akanbi and two others have suggested ways the nation can effectively tackle corruption.

    Abubakar and a senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN), Abiodun Layonu, advocated an increase in the funding of anti-graft and related agencies.

    Justice Akanbi and a former Attorney-General of the Federation (AGF), Mr Kanu Agabi (SAN), said the anti-graft fight required the support of all for the nation to succeed in stopping impunity.

    They spoke in Abuja at the public presentation of the maiden edition of the ICPC Law Report, a compilation of 21 cases (criminal and civil) which the commission prosecuted and won in court.

    Abubakar said for the nation to succeed in its anti-corruption fight, the agencies saddled with the responsibility must be well funded.

    “How do you fight corruption when you are not well paid, not well trained and not well motivated?” he queried.

    The IGP said the fight against corruption was difficult because it require the commitment of all.

    He stressed that to succeed in the anti-graft war, the anti-graft agencies’ personnel must be committed.

    The police chief said such workers were faced daily with temptation in the course of their duties.

    To succeed, Abubakar said such workers should be well motivated, well trained and well paid.

    He called for enhanced collaboration among agencies involved in the fight against malfeasance and other vices to boost their performance.

    Justice Akanbi urged public officers to operate with the fear of God and be committed to their duties.

    The former President of the Court of Appeal, who recalled the challenges he encountered in ICPC‘s said early days, the commission’s major problem was funding.

    “You cannot run an anti-corruption body if you are not well funded,” he said.

    Justice Akanbi, who headed the ICPC between 2000 and 2005, attributed the successes he recorded to the non-interference in the commission’s activities by the three Attorneys-General of the Federation under who he served.

    He frowned at the reported insistence of the incumbent AGF to oversee ICPC‘s activities. Justice Mustapha said the decision could cost the commission its independence.

    He praised the ICPC leadership for the Law Report, which he said would serve as a legacy for future generation.

    Justice Agabi, who reviewed the Law Report, published by ICPC and a private organisation, argued that a few people were leading the nation corruption war.

    He called for coordinated efforts to end acts of malfeasance and impunity in the country.

    “No effort was too much to fight corruption. Unless we, as a nation resolve that we are guilty and change our ways, we are going nowhere.

    “The problem we are having is just from a few people. And they will not prevail. Evil will not prevail. In this country, we behave as if we do not have ears. But on the last day, when God calls you to either His right or left hand side, would you not hear?” he said.

  • IGP and the Sgt. Omeleze case

    IGP and the Sgt. Omeleze case

    SIR: The news was hot as television stations aired the video of a police sergeant in uniform soliciting through mobile phone, for a bribe of N25,000 from an alleged suspect. As expected Nigerians did not withhold their indignation and disgust at the despicable scenario.

    Every institution is infested with bad-eggs; these Judases have chronic ailment that only flushing them out of the system is the only remedy before prosecuting them. No right-thinking Nigerian would not thumb-up for the Inspector General of Police, Mohammed Dahiru Abubakar in his determination to combat the odious problem of corruption in the police. When the news of Sergeant Omeleze got to him, he immediately ordered for his arrest and after investigation approved of his sack.

    The amount of clean-up exercise being conducted by the Inspector General of police is a clear indication that with time, the desired police force would be attained. Was it not just last month of July that over 193 police officers including an Assistant Inspector General of Police(AIG)were arraigned to face the police high command disciplinary committee in Abuja?

    We have we suddenly forgotten how on his assumption, he stopped the nagging corruption at road-blocks, a feat that was near impossible with previous IGPs. It is on record and heart-warming to note that promotion and posting which hitherto were clouded with corrupt practices are now based on ability and records of officers. It is only a corrupt leader that would turn the other eye when issues of corruption is alleged, not MD Abubakar that many of us know.

    The Nigeria Police predates many other security institutions in the country. If the truth must be told, there is no personnel of the police that is a foreigner neither were they imported from the Mars and so, it can be argued that every one of them is a true reflection of the corrupt society in which they operate. Nevertheless, majority of the personnel have high integrity and like their civilian counterparts are not tainted with the virus of corruption.

    It is not a sound argument to classify all security personnel as corrupt and bad. This is why the government of Nigeria frowns at the label foreign countries place on every Nigerian traveller as corrupt and bad. A reference point is the police contingents annually sent on foreign mission abroad, you hardly hear or receive any evil report about any of them.

    What the Police need is cooperation, not condemnation

    • Ben Okezie

    Lagos

  • IGP orders ‘water-tight security’ for Eid-el-Fitri

    IGP orders ‘water-tight security’ for Eid-el-Fitri

    The Inspector-General of Police, Mr. Mohammed Abubakar, has ordered officers in charge of zonal and state commands to take measures to ensure “water-tight security’’ before, during and after Sallah celebration.

    The order is contained in the IGP’s goodwill message to Muslims which was made available to journalists on Wednesday in Abuja.

    Abubakar directed Assistant Inspectors-General of Police in charge of the 12 zonal commands to ensure increased surveillance, patrol and tactical police presence on the highways and places of worship.

    According to him, such surveillance and high police presence should be extended to recreation parks, strategic and other vulnerable areas.

    The IGP also directed the commissioners of police in charge of states to adequately deploy personnel to guarantee free flow of traffic and safe passage of travelers through their domains.

    “Highway patrol teams working in conjunction with other law enforcement agencies are equally directed to take adequate measures in preventing road accidents and rendering assistance to travelers, particularly those in distress,’’ the News Agency of Nigeria quoted the IGP as saying in the message.

    Abubakar congratulated all Muslims who participated in the Ramadan fasting, and prayed for the peace and security of the country.

    He urged them to imbibe the principles and teachings of Prophet Muhammed.

    He assured Nigerians of adequate security throughout the celebration, adding that the police were working round the clock to ensure that.

     

     

  • IGP wants AIGs to curb rising crime wave

    IGP wants AIGs to curb rising crime wave

    The Inspector General of Police, Mr. Mohammed Abubakar, on Thursday in Abuja charged Assistant Inspectors General of Police in charge of Zonal Commands to redouble efforts in fighting rising crime.

    Speaking at a meeting with the AIGs, Abubakar stressed the need to redouble efforts to tackle the rising wave of crime and criminality across the country.

    “I urge you to pay more attention to the incidences of rising crime wave across the country; daily situation reports bear testimony to this phenomenon,’’ he said before they went into a closed-door session.

    “In spite of the emergency rule in Adawawa, Borno and Yobe, the insurgents still inflict untold hardship on peace-loving resident of these states.

    “The explosion in Sabon-Gari area of Kano metropolis on 29/7/13 is another painful reminder that the war against terrorism is not yet over.

    “I hasten to add that you must redouble your efforts and restructure the existing crime-fighting architecture at your disposal to ensure that the zones, commands and formations under your watch are kept secured,’’ the News Agency of Nigeria quoted the IGP as saying to the senior police officers.

    Abubakar directed the AIGs to collaborate with sister security agencies in their jurisdictions in the war against crime, noting that security was multi-tasking in nature and that a single security agency could not handle it alone.

     

  • Family of detained businessman sues IGP, others for N1b

    Where is Lagos businessman Boniface Okonkwo? This is the question members of his family are seeking an answer to.

    They said he was arrested by Police which have chosen to maintain silence about his whereabouts.

    Okonkwo’s family has taken the case before the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) High Court, seeking among others, an order compelling the police to release him unconditionally and N1billion “compensatory damages” against the defendants, for his “illegal arrest, unlawful detention, torture, embarrassment and continued detention.”

    Okonkwo was said to have been seized from his 1 Amusa Street, Ilasamanja, Mushin, Lagos home on July 13 by men of the Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS) Force Criminal Investigation Department (FCID), Force Headquarters, Abuja.

    The applicant alleged, in a supporting affidavit to the fundamental rights enforcement application filed by his lawyer, Godstime Onyeakosi, that some policemen stormed his house in a commando fashion, shot into the air to prevent the intervention of his neighbour and manhandled him before taking him to Lagos State Police Command, Ikeja, where he was briefly detained and later told why he was arrested.

    The detained businessman’s brother, Sylvanus, stated in the supporting affidavit that the police told them that his brother was arrested upon a petition written to the IGP by a firm, Fortress Solicitors, who claimed to be acting for a businessman, Emeka Offor.

    He stated that the substance of the petition was to the effect that Okokwo allegedly “authored a defamatory matter concerning Emeka Offor and published same to the whole world, particularly Oraitife indigenes all over the world, using the internet.”

    Sylvanus averred that his brother has been in police detention, in an unknown location, since July 13 when he was seized from his house in Lagos. He said although Okonkwo was earlier taken to the Lagos Police Command, they were told he has since been moved to Abuja, with all his means of communication, including his telephones confiscated.

    He further averred that prior to his arrest, Okonkwo had received a letter dated June 28, 2013 from the law firm of Jeph C. Njikonye & Co, requesting him to among others, retract the alleged defamatory publication against Offor, in national dailies and the internet within 24 hours, failing which he would be sued.

    Sylvanus said the letter, purportedly written on behalf of Offor, also requested Okonkwo to unequivocally tender apology to Offor and publish it in the same media.

    He stated that his brother responded to the letter, denying any wrong doing and faulting the author’s claims.

    He stated that since his brother was taken to Abuja, nothing has been heard from him. He said the police has refused to contact his family about his whereabouts; his state of health, and whether he is still alive or dead.

    Sylvanus stated that efforts by the family to locate him has yielded no fruit.

    “His relatives have visited all known police stations in Abuja, especially, the Ant:-Robbery Unit of the FCID, Abuja. But every attempt to see the applicant (Okonkwo) was rebuffed by the police.

    Sylvanus also raised fears about his brother’s health, his many businesses that have been left unattended to, among others. He argued that the petition allegedly being investigated by the police and on which basis his brother was being held, is frivolous and meant to witch hunt the applicant.

    He contended that continued detention of the applicant without trial, amounted to a violation of his rights as guaranteed by the Constitution.

    Named with the IGP as respondents include the Deputy Commissioner of Police, SARS, FCID, Abuja and Offor.

    The applicant is praying the court to declare his arrest and continued detention as unlawful, unwarranted and gross abuse of his right to freedom of liberty and dignity of persons.

    He also seeks an order of perpetual injunction restraining the respondents and their agents from further re-arresting, detaining or torturing him and in any way disturbing his lawful movement and activities.

    Offor has denied knowlegde of the applicant’s arrest and detention.

    His lawyer, Jeph Njikonye admitted writing the June 28 letter, asking the applicant to retract “his defamatory publication.”

    He told The Nation that he was not aware of any development thereafter. He also denied knowledge of the suit.

    “Yes, we authored the letter of June 28. We also warned him of the possibility of our client seeking legal redress. But I am just hearing from you that he has been arrested.

    “We are also not aware he has gone to court, because we have not been served with the processes.

    There is no problem, if we are served and we are instructed by our client to react, we will not hesitate to do that,” Njikonye said.