Tag: Police

  • Who will rescue the police?

    The recent spate of kidnappings across the country has once again exposed the incompetence of the Nigeria Police. Particularly galling is the resort by police to lies, to cover up the enormous institutional challenges, the police face, instead of asking for help. The most recent embarrassment, was the claim by the Inspector-General of Police (IGP), Solomon Arase, that his men rescued Chief Olu Falae, kidnapped late last month, by marauding Fulani cattle herdsmen, in Ondo State. But, according to Chief Falae, the former secretary to the Federal Government, he was “let go the day after ransom was collected”, and the Chief spent four days with the kidnappers, before his release.

    As a face-saving measure, after the freed Chief told the world what happened, the IGP released a statement, saying: “As professionals, it is our conviction that the unprecedented and massive deployment of police resources and men to support search and rescue operations put pressure on the criminals to release the elder statesman.” In essence, what the IGP subsequently admitted is that the police did not actually spring the Chief from his abductors, as he earlier claimed, but that the Chief was released following the pressure on the bandits, by the police.

    So, why did the IGP release the earlier false report that his men had following the directive of President Muhammadu Buhari (PMB), successfully rescued the eminent Yoruba traditional ruler, from his abductors? Fear? Insecurity? Psychological disorder? Why the false claim? For this column, while the traumatised victim of the kidnap, deserve our collective sympathy, the greater sympathy goes to the police. Indeed, this column recommends that the federal government should set up a committee of psychologists, sociologists and related disciplines, to understudy the Nigeria police, and recommend ways to rescue it, from this cover-up syndrome.

    As a rule of thumb, the immediate reaction of the police to any unwholesome or inefficient conduct, by any member of their rank and file, is to cover the tracks. That reaction is instinctive, even when the action is manifestly criminal, and abundantly committed in bad faith. The commonest and most gruesome occurrences are what is commonly referred to as “accidental discharge”. An ‘accidental discharge’, can roughly be described, as a terminology used by the police to justify, either a clandestine or intentional or reckless shooting of a victim, most times at police checkpoints, or at other police action spots, for insignificant or no just cause.

    When such a shooting happens, the police authority will most times, without any investigation, even a wish washy one; issue a statement exculpating their own official, and indicting the victim. Nearly at all such times, the police public relations officer, will without any iota of guilt, lie that the shooting occurred in the line of their official, discharging his/her police duties. Where, however, arising from public pressure for justice, the culprit is hauled to account for the so called ‘accidental discharge’, the police will reluctantly change the story, and admit negligence of their official, without any reprimand for those who earlier wholesomely misled the people and the state.

    This scenario is not a one-off occurrence, it is rather the standard practice. Perhaps the commonest explanation for such behavioural pattern, could be a sense of insecurity. Job insecurity? We know that until the advent of democracy, the police were treated like scums by the marauding military regimes. This hangover seems to have refused to go away, even with the advent of democracy, since 1999. The result is a police afflicted by low morale. While one can sympathize with the lower ranks, it is worrisome, if the highest ranking police official, feels it is necessary to lay false claims, apparently to keep his job.

    The possibility of job-insecurity or any other form of insecurity affecting the integrity of the police officer, should be discouraged by the president and other high officials of state, who are in superior positions of influence to the police. Whatever makes the police feel or act inferior to their stature under the law of the country, should be tamed. In the Falae instance, while the IGP is obligated to obey the directives of the president to mobilize, to free the Chief; he should be encouraged to speak-up, if there are any impediments or challenges or limitations to his capacity to deliver, on the directive.

    For instance has the governments at all levels, particularly the federal government, provided the requisite technology to the police, for it to be able to quickly track down marauders, as in the case of Chief Falae? Does the police formations have the latest Global Positioning System (GPS) technology, to track and pin point the location of the telephone signals, with which the criminals were demanding for ransom, for instance? Has the federal government provided the resources to train and equip special police squads that the IGP can swiftly deploy for counter-insurgency, anti-kidnapping and anti-robbery assignments?

    If the Federal Government is remiss, in getting the police ready, to answer to nationwide emergencies; then it will amount to a presidential joke, for this president or any president to order the IGP to solve any criminal offence that embarrasses the federal government, like Chief Falae’s kidnap, within a time frame. Well, unless the IGP at his employment interview, had offered himself up, as a sorcerer, in addition to his other trainings.

    In fairness to PMB, his government is not responsible for the massive fraud, represented to Nigeria, recently, as the installation of security gadgets, in major metropolises across the country, to aid effective policing. But to have efficient policing, across Nigeria, the best of men and materials, must be put in place, soonest.

     

     

     

  • Police arrest 69 suspected rustlers

    The Kano State Police Command said yesterday that it had arrested 69 cattle rustlers and other robbers in the last one month.

    Police Commissioner Muhammad Katsina, who spoke when he visited Gidan-Kare village in Sumaila Local Government, said residents deserted the village following attacks by bandits.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the police commissioner was in the village to assess the security situation and map out strategies to rid the area of the menace.

    Katsina said of the number arrested, 46 suspects were among the most wanted bandits, while the remaining 23 suspects were arrested for cattle rustling.

    According to him, the police also recovered 20 goats and sheep, 31 rifles and pistols, 240 cartridges of ammunition and 68 cattle of which 30 had been returned to their owners.

    Katsina said the police  apprehended a notorious leader of a robbery gang popularly called Datti Rodi at Gani village.

    “The leader has about 200 members who have been terrorising the community,” he said.

    Katsina said the suspects were cooperating with the police in their investigations and that they would soon be arraigned.

    The police chief attributed the successes within one month to the resilience of his men and the onslaught on the hoodlums.

    He advised those who fled their villages following the activities of bandits to return, as the command had put in place measures to ensure safety.

    Katsina said the command would soon deploy more policemen in the villages to enhance security.

  • Police Commissioner dies in U.S.

    The Commissioner of Police and Commandant, Nigeria Police College, Ikeja, Tunde Sobulo, is dead.

    Mr. Sobulo died on Friday in Atlanta Georgia, United States of America, after a protracted illness.

    The eldest son of the late Commissioner, Robert Sobulo, who confirmed the death, said he got the news around midnight Nigerian time.

    He said his sister, Laila, who was with their father in the U.S., called to inform him of his death while he was already sleeping in Nigeria.

    He said his father would be buried in Atlanta Georgia after a family meeting currently going on.

    “The vacuum my father’s death has created cannot be filled in the family and his profession.

    “He was dedicated to the police profession and his family. He was an operational person.

    “He usually says to me: think, when you think, you carry out the action,” he said.

    The immediate younger brother to the late police chief, Kamarudeen Shomide, described Sobulo as a great loss to the family.

  • Power outage: Police arrest protesting youths

    The police in Ondo State have arrested 15 youths, who “protested” 13 months blackout in the southern senatorial district, which comprises six local governments.

    It was gathered that the youth are members of a group, National Revolutionary Vanguard (NRV).

    The group’s coordinator, Sayo Onukun, directed his members to stage a peaceful protest.

    As NRV members in Odigbo Local Government were preparing, some mobile policemen allegedly invaded their office in Ore and arrested some of them.

    The mobile policemen were led by CSP Adesina from the Ore Police Division.

    A police source said the arrested youths were cult members, who were out to disrupt the peace.

    They were later transferred to the Special-Anti Cultism section in Akure, the state capital, where they were “detained and tortured” before being released on bail.

    But Onukun said none of his members were cultists, addng that the police only acted in that manner to prevent the youth from protesting.

    However, NRV members from Okitipupa, Irele, Ilaje, Ese-Odo and Oke-Igbo were allowed to protest.

    The protesters carried placards with various inscriptions while singing solidarity and anti-government songs.

    Some of the placards read: “Osibodu restore our light”; Reverse the privatisation of NEPA now!”; “Enough is enough”; “People of the South are suffering”; “Where on earth do communities owe electricity bills?”;”10 months of blackout is hell” and “No to blackout in our land”.

    The youth blamed the Benin Electricity Distribution Company (BEDC) for the blackout.

    They decried the hardship caused to their economic and social lives.

    The protesters noted that the electricity company claimed that the communities were cut off from the National Grid due to the alleged vandalisation of its infrastructures by miscreants.

    Last month, the Benin Electricity Distribution Company (BEDC) said the communities owed over N1.9 billion.

    The Chief State Head, Edgar Earnestin, said the indebted communities would remain in blackout until they settled their debt.

    He explained that the money was part of the accumulated debt incurred from the defunct Power Holding Company of Nigeria (PHCN).

  • HID: Police, others meet on security ahead of funeral

    The Assistant Inspector General of Police Zone 2, Lagos, Bala Hassan, Ogun State Commissioner of Police Abdulmajid Ali and some senior police officers will meet today to deliberate on the security strategies to be adopted during the funeral of Mrs. Hannah Idowu Dideolu (HID) Awolowo.

    Expected at the meeting in Abeokuta, the state capital, are some members of the family, security agencies in the state, government officials, including the consultant on security to the state government, Olayinka Balogun.

    During the meeting, avenues will be explored on how to incorporate into a larger security committee ,groups and individuals relevant in the planning of the security arrangements for the funeral.

    The matriarch of the Awolowo family and Yeye Oba of Yorubaland died on September 19 at 99.

    She will be buried on her 100th birthday – November 25, according to her eldest daughter, Mrs Omotola Oyediran.

    Police spokesman Olumuyiwa Adejobi said Hassan had visited the Awolowos’ Ikenne home to have on-the-spot-assessment of the environment towards adequate deployment of security operatives before, during and after the funeral.

    A member of the House of Assembly, Adebowale Ojuri, has condoled with the family.

    Ojuri, representing Odogbolu in the Assembly, said Mama Awolowo’s death elicited sadness and joy from him.

    He said it is sad because it is not a comfortable thing to lose a family pillar, but at the same time joyful because Mama  Awolowo lived a fulfilled life.

  • Police intensify ‘stop and search’

    Police intensify ‘stop and search’

    The police yesterday ordered massive stop-and-search activities in and around the Federal Capital Territory, Abuja.

    This is coming as the National Emergency Management Agency {NEMA) confirmed that 15 persons were killed while 41 others sustained injuries as a result of the twin suicide bombings in both Kuje and Nyanya on Friday night,

    In statements issued by both agencies, they urged citizens not to panic and gave assurances that the situation is under control.

    “Following a coordinated rescue operation at scene of multiple explosions in both Nyanya and Kuje, which are satellite towns of Federal Capital Territory Abuja, so far fifteen (15) persons lost their lives and forty one (41) injured were evacuated to Nyanya Hospital, Asokoro General Hospital and National Hospital Abuja.

    “In Nyanya two (2) dead were recorded while 21 injured. In Kuje thirteen (13) persons lost their lives and 20 injured,” NEMA stated on its website.

    Accounts from NEMA, officials and eyewitnesses indicate that the two suicide bombs in Kuje, about 40 min (39.1 km) from Abuja via Airport Road (also called Umaru Musa Yar’Adua Road), happened in the same location within minutes of one another.

    The two bomb blasts in Nyanya which occurred earlier before the incident in Kuje were also said to have gone off within minutes of one another.

    In conflicting accounts given by some residents of Kuje, they asserted that close to 18 persons may have died with forty others sustaining severe injuries.

    Lamenting the bombing incident that happened near his church, St. Kizito’s Church, Mr. Titus Aremu stated that he has been hearing people talking about the suspicions that a young lady who was wearing hijab was one of the suicide bombers but there is no proof.

    Bodies dripping with blood, shattered limbs, and other body parts were among the gory evacuations moved to Nyanya Hospital, Asokoro General Hospital and National Hospital Abuja yesterday night.

    In a statement signed by the acting Police Public Relations Officer, ACP Olabisi Kolawole, she stated that two suicide bombers – a male and a female – carried out the suicide bombing in at least one of the two locations.

    “The Inspector-General of Police Solomon E. Arase, following the bomb blasts that occurred in Kuje and Nyanya areas in the Federal Capital Territory, Abuja, has assured residents and the entire country not to panic as the Nigeria Police Force is prepared to do all within its reach to ensure adequate security of lives and property.

     

    “IGP Arase said those that did these dastardly acts, did so in shame of cowardice, saying no matter their aim, Nigeria will not accommodate terrorists’ acts.”

    While the twin bombings in the satellite towns have generated concerns in Abuja, the loss of lives and injury they caused was not enough to dissuade night crawlers in the federal capital from their usual weekend fun.

    Night life went on unhindered as many of the nightclubs located in Wuse had considerable patronage on Friday night while many parents and their children visited amusement parks.

     

  • Two suicide bombers responsible for Abuja blasts – Police

    Two suicide bombers, a male and female carried out Friday’s bomb blasts in Abuja.

    The Force Spokesperson, ACP Olabisi Kolawole disclosed this in a statement in Abuja on Saturday on the blast that occurred in Kuje and Nyanya areas of the Federal Capital Territory.

    He quoted the Inspector General of Police, Solomon Arase as saying that the perpetrators of the act did so in shame of cowardice.

    Arase however assured that no matter the aim of the bombers, Nigeria will not accommodate terrorists’ acts

    He however urged Nigerians to be vigilant at all times and report any suspicious persons or objects to the nearest Police Station or any other security agencies for prompt intervention

    Following the blast, the Inspector-General has ordered a stop-and-search operation in and around Abuja.

    The Police chief also directed the immediate deployment of Police Explosives Ordinance Disposal Units (PEODU) to the scenes to prevent further damage.

     

     

  • Falae:  Police probe  ransom  payment

    Falae: Police probe ransom payment

    •IG: our operation led to ex-SGF’S release

    The police have queried the Falae family for paying ransom to the abductors of the former Secretary General of the Federation, Chief Olu Falae.

    The Inspector-General of Police (IGP), Solomon Arase, maintained that police operations put pressure on the kidnappers.

    On Monday, Falae, in an interview, claimed that his family paid ransom to his abductors.

    The Force yesterday in a rejoinder captioned: “Re: Ransom Payment By The Family of Chief Olu Falae” claimed that it was not privy to the payment of the ransom. It noted that it does not encourage the payment of ransom.

    The police, however, noted that it will investigate the ransom payment and determine how the money was paid.

    In the rejoinder, the police noted that it will be interested in widening its investigative scope to explore the lead on how payment was made and to whom such payment was made.

    The police, in its investigations, also want to know if the payment was perfected through bank transactions.

    In the rejoinder, the Force claimed to have the capacity to track such transactions and would be liaising with banks to enable it track the cash and apprehend the perpetrators.

    The rejoinder highlighted some of the some of the roles the police played in the rescue of the former finance minister.

    It reads: “Our approach was a professional response to what we saw as a crime against a respected national personality.

    “The police, under the leadership of IGP, deployed our unique intelligence and operational capabilities, including police helicopters, for aerial surveillance.

    “Our intelligence and operational teams, comprising Intelligence Response Team (a Special Anti-Kidnapping Unit), conventional and mobile policemen were deployed for rescue operation.

    “They followed the path from the point of kidnapping at his farm at Ilado, on Igbatoro Road in Akure, Ondo State and trailed the hoodlums through bushes to Owo.

    “In the process, we were able to identify the major actors and currently high level police activities are being emplaced to apprehend and bring them to justice.

    “As professionals, it is our conviction that the unprecedented and massive deployment of police resources and men to support search and rescue operations put pressure on the criminals to release the elder statesman.”

    On the payment of ransom: “As a law enforcement agency guided by rule of law and professional ethics, we do not under any circumstance encourage the payment of ransom to kidnappers or other criminals.

    “Whatever the family did as regards payment of ransom was outside the knowledge and consent of the police and at this point, we wish to advise that in future, families who fall victims of such acts should rather work closely with the police component of the rescue initiative so that we can achieve the primary purpose of rescuing the victim alive.”

    Support for Arase

    A non-governmental organisation, Free Society Nigeria, has condemned the incessant kidnaps in the country.

    A statement by its Media and Public Affairs Director, Demola Williams, said it was sure that “with the current policing strategies being deployed by the Inspector General, Solomon Arase, the nation would soon overcome kidnapping”.

    The statement said: “We sympathise with the Falae family for the trauma it went through.

    “We, however, wish to call on Nigerians to cooperate with the police so that collectively we can stamp this menace out of our society.

    “We, particularly, wish to condemn attempts by some persons and groups to blame the Akure incident on the IG. We dare say this because, from our enquiries with the police, Arase never supported nor paid any ransom and was not aware that any ransom was paid to Falae’s kidnappers.

    “We found out that the IG relocated to Ondo State with his team to track down Falae’s abductors as his responsibility demands and in obedience to the directive of President Muhammadu Buhari.”

     

     

     

     

  • Police chief warns criminals

    Ondo State Commissioner of Police, Mr Mike Ogbodu has warned criminals to leave the state because there is no hiding place for them.
    Addressing reporters at the command’s headquarters in Akure, the Ondo State capital shortly after assuming duty, the new police chief urged members of the public to join hands with the police in the fight against crime. The former Commissioner of Police, Isaac Eke, has been transferred to the Force headquarters, Abuja.
    Ogbodu expressed his determination to fight crime in all parts of the state, even as he cautioned his men not to indulge in criminal acts.
    According to him, he was in the state with the aim of projecting the vision of the Inspector-General of Police, Mr Solomon Arase, assuring that community policing would be given a priority henceforth. He called for the people’s support in the fight against crime.
    He assured that the state would be peaceful throughout his tenure, adding that the state police command would not tolerate indiscipline among police officers.
    Ogbodu also advised residents to report all criminal activities and suspected criminals to the police for proper investigation and actions.

  • Police arraign man for ‘defaming’ Amosun’s wife

    •SSG: Amosun didn’t order his arrest

    The police in Ogun State have arraigned Emmanuel Ojo Adediran in a Magistrate’s Court at Abeokuta for allegedly defaming Governor Ibikunle Amosun’s wife, Olufunso, on social media.

    Adediran, who pleaded not guilty to the eight-count charge, was granted a bail of N1million by Chief Magistrate Anthony Araba.

    Adediran was arrested last Saturday at Ibara, Abeokuta, the state capital, after formal complaints were lodged with the police and the Department of State Service (DSS) by the government.

    Adediran was accused of disseminating on social media, false news with intent to malign Mrs. Amosun and punishable under Section 516 of the Criminal Code Laws of Ogun State (2006).

    The offence was said to have been committed on his Facebook account, alleging that Mrs. Amosun was arrested in London for money laundering.

    Adediran was also accused of assaulting a police officer, Katibi Biliamin, with intention to resist or prevent lawful arrest.

    Secretary to the State Government (SSG) Taiwo Adeoluwa yesterday denied that the governor ordered Adediran’s arrest.

    Adeoluwa said the governor was in Saudi Arabia for Hajj when the story broke.

    The SSG represented the governor at the Independence lecture tagged: Nigeria @ 55: The pains, gains and prospect at the Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ) secretariat, Ibadan, the Oyo State capital.

    He said the report was unfair to the governor.

    According to him, the government reported the case to the police.

    Adeoluwa said the police were professional and the governor could not intervene in their investigation.

    “Governor Amosun has just returned to Nigeria from Saudi Arabia and some newspapers yesterday published a story that the governor ordered a blogger’s arrest.

    “I can say authoritatively that the governor did not order anyone’s arrest. We know we are vulnerable to all forms of allegations as a government but we have to carry the police along no matter what.

    “We thought it was a story we could ignore but we have to react when some papers began to celebrate the story.

    “It is extremely unfair for any newspaper to publish such story without thorough investigation. It is unfair to the profession. Such story is unfair to the governor and it is unfair to Ogun people.”