Tag: Police

  • Police avert explosion targeted at worshippers in Borno

    Tragedy was Friday morning averted by  Police Anti Bomb Squad at the popular Custom Market popularly known as Gamboru Market where  Improvised  Explosive Devices(IEDs) were  de-mobilized.
    Apparently, the two IEDs were planted near the market and a Juma’at mosque to kill innocent worshippers and traders a security source told The Nation.

    Witnesses informed that some shops including lock up stalls and other open shops near the market were destroyed but no life was lost in the explosion which triggered a deafening sound that sent panic in the neighbourhood.
    Abubakar Sani Audu, a trader in the market disclosed that the attention of the Civilian JTF was drawn to the discovery of the explosive who latter called the anti bomb squad to de-mobilise the explosives.
    “The civilian JTF immediately called the Anti Bomb Squad and the army. They cordoned off the area and swung into action.

    “They detonated the first blast but the impact suddenly ignited a second one which nobody knew was there. We are happy nobody was affected,”  Audu said.

    Gamboru  market is next to both size and patronage  to Monday Market within the metropolis where over 30 people were killed and several others injured on Monday this week.

  • Police blame DSS for bungled Ogwuche case

    Police blame DSS for bungled Ogwuche case

    The police authorities have rejected responsibility for the bungled prosecution of the alleged mastermind of the April 14 Nyanya bust station bombing, Aminu Sadiq Ogwuche.

    Rather, the police said the Department of State Security (DSS) should take responsibility for the shoddy handling of the case.

    A Federal High Court in Abuja had, during the week, struck out charges brought against Ogwuche for what the court described as lack of diligent prosecution.

    In a statement issued on Thursday by the Force Public Relations Officer, Emmanuel Ojukwu, the police insisted that the DSS was the prosecutor in the case.

    The statement said: “For the record, at no time did the Nigeria Police arraign the suspect in court for terrorism related offences. Moreover, the purported prosecution/arraignment by the police could not have happened as the police could not prosecute a suspect it never arrested, never investigated nor had in its custody.

    “It is therefore grossly erroneous, mischievous and malicious to impute lack of diligent prosecution to the police. The Nigeria Police Force is manifestly and positively committed to the will of Nigerians to rid the nation of violent crimes like terrorism. Many of our officers have paid the supreme sacrifice on account of this.

    “The police, while respecting the rights of the media to publish, however appeals that due diligent check be observed to ensure that misleading information is not disseminated to the reading public.”

    According to Ojukwu, the police only processed extradition procedures in respect of the suspect but never filed terrorism charges against him.

    The statement continued: “It would be recalled that the Department of State Security (DSS), that had intelligence on the Nyanya Bombing and was investigating it, made a formal request to the Nigeria Police to assist in extraditing one Aminu Sadiq Ogwuche to Nigeria from Sudan, through the Interpol channel of which the Nigeria Police is well versed.

    “It was at this stage and for this reason that the Nigeria Police Force filed charges against the suspected fugitive Aminu Sadiq Ogwuche, based on information that he fled to Sudan.

    “The filing of charges against the suspect is a legal procedure to enable the Nigeria Police formally request the Sudanese authorities to grant Nigeria’s extradition request in respect of the suspected fugitive.

    “For the records, copy of filed charge(s) against a fugitive must be appended to documents in support of extradition request made to the host country, which in this case, is Sudan.

    “These facts were made known to the court when it insisted on the production of the accused even before his extradition to Nigeria.

    “Following Ogwuche’s extradition which the Nigeria Police accomplished successfully, the DSS, obtained a court order to remand the suspect for an initial period of three months in line with the Prevention of Terrorism Act and also liaised with the office of the Attorney-General of the Federation to undertake his prosecution.”

     

  • Why I took to armed robbery, by musician

    Why I took to armed robbery, by musician

    A 25-year-old musician, John Sunday, yesterday told the police in Lagos that he took to armed robbery in order to raise money to launch his album.

    He was paraded with Onyekachi Oshomi (24), by Commissioner of Police Kayode Aderanti.

    “I am a musician from Ikofepepe in Akwa Ibom State. We were three in the gang, but one is on the run. I needed money to launch my album, Tureke Reggae; that is why I went into robbery. I was targeting N100,000,” Sunday confessed.

    Aderanti said on November 21, at 10pm, he got a tip-off that some robbers were planning to unleash terror on Lagos. He said he directed the Officer-in-Charge, Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS), Abba Kyari, a Superintendent of Police (SP), to go after them.

    “With two decoy teams, they stormed their hideout and arrested Onyekachi Oshomi and John Sunday with a revolver pistol. During interrogation, they confessed to the crime including snatching of several cars within the metropolis. Efforts have been stepped up to arrest those that are still at large,” Aderanti said.

    Onyekachi, who hails from Enugu State, said: “I was a commercial bus conductor. We were operating on the Agege Total-Oshodi route. I just got married, but my wife is still in the village. I was looking for money to feed her whenever she comes to Lagos; that was why I went into armed robbery.”

    The Police Public Relations Officer (PPRO), Ken Nwosu, a Deputy Superintendent (DSP), also displayed some  fake police vests, two AK47 rifles and  ammunition recovered from the suspects.

  • Gunmen kill mobile policeman, passenger in Bayelsa

    Gunmen in separate incidents, killed a mobile policeman and a boat passenger in Bayelsa State.

    The Nation gathered that the mobile policeman was killed along the Akenpai 1 area of the state capital by unidentified gunmen who also stole his service rifle.

    The mobile policeman who was shot dead at about 7am on Monday at his duty post was identified as a corporal.

    Residents of Akenpai said the deceased, who hails from the Ekeremor Local Government Area of the state, was shot at close range.

    An eyewitness who identified herself as Comfort said the gunmen laid ambush for their victim and caught him off guard.

    “He was shot from behind,” she said.

    The acting Public Relations Officer, Mr. Lawrence Eboka, confirmed the incident.

    He said; “The deceased was shot dead and his rifle carted away. We are making all efforts to apprehend the killers and recover the stolen weapon.”

    In another development, gunmen numbering five suspected to be pirates shot dead a passenger in an attack on a passenger boat last Sunday along the Akassa-Yenagoa waterway.

    The bandits, the Nation gathered, who were on masks, also stole other valuables including money, handsets and the fuel line of the boat.

    The boat driver was said to have escaped with gunshot wounds.

    The boat, it was learnt, plies between Bekekiri, a settlement in Akassa axis of Brass Local Government Area, and the Swali Ultra-Modern Market in Yenagoa, the state capital.

    “The corpse of the victim has since been handed over to the Marine Police in Yenagoa. The boat owner is also receiving treatment in Yenagoa,” a source said.

    A security officer attached to a police station in the area, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, confirmed the incident, saying that the pirates invaded the boat at about 9am on Sunday.

  • ‘Over 1000 police families to receive compensation soon’

    Over 1,000 families of Nigerian police officers and men who died or sustained injury during active service between 2012 and last year will soon receive adequate compensation, The Nation has learnt.

    The victims are those who were not covered as a result of the non-payment of insurance premium on the Group Life Assurance Scheme of Federal Government workers to insurers following the enforcement of ‘No premium, no cover’ policy by the National Insurance Commission (NAICOM) in the insurance industry.

    Assistant Commissioner of Police and Head Insurance Department, Nigeria Police Force, Kayode Turner disclosed this in an interview with The Nation.

    He said the Inspector-General of Police Mohammed Abubakar had been working with the Budget  Office to pay the affected families.

    He said following the enforcement of the ‘No premium, no cover’ policy’by NAICOM, the money to be paid to the families cannot be termed as insurance claims any longer but compensation because no premium was paid to the insurers.

    Turner assured that going forward, premium on police Group Life Assurance Scheme will be paid up front.

    He noted that the police presently have insurance cover running for the year, as insurance premium has been fully paid.

    He believes premium should not be tied to quarterly allocation of the budget releases.

    He however stated that NAICOM ought to give a special concession to the police and other security forces in paying their premium owing to the nature of their job and the time when the Federal Government budget allocation is released, knowing full well that premiums are paid from the budget which comes every January after most of these polices may have been due.

    workers in Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs), such as the Nigeria Police Force (NPF), Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), Federal Ministry of Education, and Federal Ministry of Justice, Federal Ministry of Power, among others, who die in active service are not eligible to get compensation.

    The Pension Reform Act states in Section 9(3) that employers shall maintain life insurance policy in favour of their employees for a minimum of three times the annual total emolument of the employee.

     

     

  • Tambuwal: Lawyers fault police invasion of National Assembly

    Tambuwal: Lawyers fault police invasion of National Assembly

    Akin to a scene in a war  movie, scores of  armed security operatives (Police and SSS) last week invaded the National Assembly (NASS) complex and cordoned-off the premises to ‘screen’ entrants into the building.

    The exercise, which had the security agents screening lawmakers and others seeking to enter the premises, was, according to the Inspector General of Police (IGP), Suleiman Abba,  orchestrated by an ‘intelligence report’, which showed that some ‘criminals and hoodlums’ wanted to wreak havoc on the NASS premises.

    Though on recess till December 3, the lawmakers had announced an emergency session for Thursday because of President Goodluck Jonathan’s request for the extension of emergency rule in troubled Northeastern states of Adamawa, Borno and Yobe.

    While the security forces were carrying out the screening, the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Aminu Tambuwal, approached the gate with some of his supporters and colleagues, but they were denied access into the premises.

    Angered by the action of the police, some of the lawmakers tried to pull down the gate while others scaled the high perimeter fence to open the gate for the Speaker and others to enter.

    What ensued after they successfully broke the police’s cordon was a barrage of tear gas canisters thrown recklessly towards the advancing lawmakers. Tambuwal, whose colleagues formed a defensive wall around, was seen covering his nostrils and mouth with a white handkerchief to cushion the effect of the tear-gas.

    The assault, which many have described as an orchestrated plan to prevent Tambuwal from entering the Green Chamber to perform his role as Speaker, is the second attack on him by the Abba-led police since his defection to the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    The first was the withdrawal of his security details 24 hours after he announced his exit from the Peoples’ Democratic Party (PDP) to the APC. Tambuwal challenged the action at a Federal High Court in Abuja.

    However, the NASS could not carry on with the business of the day as the Senate President, David Mark, while shutting down the complex, described the onslaught as barbaric and an application of maximum force.

    Mark, who was said to have been thoroughly teargased, was quoted in a statement by his Press Secretary, Paul Mummeh thus: “This (shutting down of the NASS till today) followed the invasion of the National Assembly by security operatives who thoroughly teargased Senators, members of the House of Representatives, staff and journalists.

    “An embarrassed Senator Mark, who had rushed out to the House of Representatives’ Chamber ostensibly to address the situation on hearing the development, was thoroughly teargased along with his colleagues while returning to his office after conferring with the Speaker, Aminu Tambuwal, and his deputy, Emeka Ihedioha.

    ”After due consultation with his colleagues in both chambers of National Assembly on this ugly development, it was agreed that today’s (Thursday’s) session be suspended forthwith. The Senate President condemned the application of maximum force on parliamentarians and civil servants, who were in their respective offices to do their duties.”

    Coming at a time when seven PDP lawmakers in Ekiti State, acting under heavy security presence, ‘impeached’ the House of Assembly Speaker, Adewale Ominrin, and his deputy, Adedeji Orisalade; as well as the current hullabaloo playing out at the Edo State House of Assembly, observers have expressed dismay on the partisan role of security agencies.

    Although some faulted the lawmakers for resorting to self-help by conducting themselves disorderly and scaling the fence thereby, flaunting the very laws they made; many have described their actions as an act of defiance, which should be commended.

    Analysts insisted that the IGP should avail his men with the provisions of the Constitution to avoid obvious ‘partisanship’ and disregard for other arms of the government. But to lawyers, the IGP has to be sacked with immediate effect to allow for the appointment of a police boss who will be apolitical.

    George Oguntade (SAN) said the IGP must be called to order to avoid anarchy.

    He said: ‘‘It is crucial that Nigerians call the IG to order immediately, particularly in the light of the impending general elections. If this is not done, there is the possibility of a total breakdown of law and order.

    ‘‘The IG needs to take a second look at the Constitution, which clearly spells out the role of the Nigeria Police (NP). He cannot act outside the scope of the constitutional provisions.

    ‘‘The conduct of the NP led by the IG is clearly unacceptable and constitutes a clear and present danger to our nascent democracy. As at today, Tambuwal remains the Speaker of the House of Representatives having not been impeached by his colleagues or removed by a judicial order.

    ‘‘The IG cannot constitute himself into a judge as well as executioner. He had already shown his hand and where his loyalties lie when he ordered the removal of the security details of the Speaker.”

    Renowned lawyer, Funke Adekoya (SAN), said the presence of the police at the NASS complex was an affront on the principles of separation of power and a bad idea.

    She said: ‘‘Whether authorised or not, the intervention by the police was a bad idea. Even if there was a security report as to the breakdown of law and order, they should not have stopped the legislators from entering.

    ‘‘It is that action that has given rise to speculations as to the true intent of their presence; being to stop the Speaker from presiding. If there was a breakdown of law and order in the chambers during the sitting, the officials could legitimately call for police intervention.

    ‘‘Their presence and actions are a clear executive interference with the legislative arm of government and should be roundly condemned by all, who uphold the principle of separation of power as a key underpinning of the democratic process.’’

    Former Edo State Attorney-General Dr. Osagie Obayuwana said the action of the police was evidence of their disregard for constituted authority. He saluted the lawmakers for resisting the police, which tried to deny them access into their place of work.

    Obayuwana said the police’s action showed crudity, lack of discernment and un-professionalism.

    ‘‘I salute the lawmakers for exhibiting the spirit of defiance. The reason stated by the police for the blockade was an afterthought and not tenable. Is the police now ascribing the status of hoodlums to the Speaker and other lawmakers?

    ‘‘From the attitude of the police, they see only the executive arm as constituting government that is why they have no regard for other arms of government. It is not only the legislature that has suffered such embarrassment. Some justices of the Supreme Court have been subjected to humiliation.

    ‘‘Can the police prevent the President from going to his office because of intelligence report? Instead of blocking the gate they should have applied discernment to know who to keep off. It is because of lack of professionalism that people hesitate to go to the police.

    ‘’This is another disgrace the people of Nigeria remember this era for. It typifies the crudity and total lack of discernment of government agencies.

    ‘‘Are the police not supposed to do its investigation discreetly in order to fish out the criminal elements, if truly there was any? Why should they throw away the baby and the bath water? Linking it up with the APC protesters of the previous day further showed the partisan nature of the police,’’ said Obayuwana.

    The former Commissioner further argued that Abba’s refusal to honour the house committee’s summons showed that his loyalty lies solely with the executive.

    He said: ‘‘See how their (police) indiscretion held the nation to a standstill. Even the Supreme Court could not function that day because the chaos occurred at the three-arm zone. Do you know how long people whose cases were adjourned would have to wait?

    ‘‘People will be pushed to extreme measures if the police continue to display partisanship. We are not in a state of anarchy yet but near. The current situation is an example of the fact that our institutions are not functioning as they should.

    ‘‘The lawmakers only exhibited the spirit of defiance against undemocratic tendencies and not anarchy. How can you keep a state official from his place of work? What happened to the police department that uses sophisticated weapons to carryout investigation? Why was such tactics not deployed in this circumstance? That is why I said their defence was an afterthought.”

    A Constitutional lawyer, Fred Agbaje, described the blockade as primitive and an aberration to the principle of separation of power, calling for the removal of the IGP.

    He said: ‘‘The gratuitous attack on the National Assembly by security agents, acting on behalf of the Federal Government, is not only violative and primitive of the cherished principles of separation of power upon which our present democratic experience revolves, but an unpalatable threat to our democracy and the rule of law.

    ‘‘The sanctity of our hallowed parliament cannot and must not, under any guise, be provocatively desecrated by overzealous security agents in such a barbaric and crude manner as done on Thursday.

    ‘‘Hence, the heads of the security/police must be sacked immediately to allow for a smooth democratic growth/rule of law in Nigeria.  Those who detest democracy must never be allowed to come near it as epitomised by the overzealous state security officials, the new Hitlers of our time.”

    Civil rights lawyer, Emeka Nwadioke, condemned the role of the police in attempting to prevent House of Representatives’ members from holding a plenary session to discuss the request by President Goodluck Jonathan for the extension of the emergency rule in three Northeast states. He described the police’s role as worrisome, condemnable as well as a threat to the nascent democracy.

    Nwadioke said: “Since the defection of House of Representatives Speaker Aminu Tambuwal to the opposition All Peoples Congress (APC), the role of the Nigeria Police in the debacle has left much to be desired.

    “The Nigeria Police have increasingly constituted themselves into the judge and jury in the matter, contrary to the express provisions of the Nigerian Constitution, which vests the duty of interpretation of the Constitution on the Judiciary.”

    He called on President Jonathan to wade into the crisis to protect the Nigerian Constitution and “stave off a major constitutional crisis” while strengthening the doctrine of separation of powers, which underpins the Constitution.

    “It is unhelpful that attempts by the Presidency to wash its hands off the debacle have largely been punctured. While Senior Special Adviser to the President on Public Affairs Doyin Okupe asserted that the police were merely enforcing court judgments on defection, police spokesman, Emmanuel Ojukwu, claimed that the assault on the Representatives and the hallowed precincts of the National Assembly was to prevent a planned invasion of the Assembly premises by hoodlums in line with an intelligence report.

    “Nigerians and civil society organisations in particular must join their voices to ensure that this democracy is not truncated. It is also expected that, like his predecessor, the new Inspector General of Police Suleiman Abba, must show courage and a healthy level of assertiveness in resisting attempts to deploy his high office towards unconstitutional ends.”

    For Theophilus Akanwa, the police acted out of place, reprehensibly, illegally and with impunity.

    ‘‘The powers of the National Assembly as it affects the need for the protection of its activities resides with the Senate and the House of Representatives as provided in the Constitution not the IGP.

    ‘‘The IGP needs to take orders from these two chambers vis a vis the Senate President and the Speaker of the House for the sitting of the two houses. If there were any reasons why the House should not have convened, the IGP should have intimated the Speaker and not to ambush him.

    ‘‘It is out of place that a person, who has been elected to occupy the seat of the Speaker, will now seek orders from the police before the House could convene. It has never happened and must not start now because the Speaker defected to the opposition party APC, especially when he has made his plans of gunning for Sokoto State governorship known.

    ‘‘He is the Speaker of the House of Representatives and not PDP speaker and ways of removing him has been provided in the Constitution. ‘Can the IGP tell the world what he has done in Ondo State where the Governor and Speaker defected from the party that elected them to office to PDP? The independence of the legislative arm of government must be allowed to thrive without interference from the executive or the police. I call on the President to immediately remove the IGP for these lapses.”

    Another lawyer, Ikechukwu Ofuokwu, said the police’s action was the climax of executive lawlessness and political insecurity on the part of the PDP.

    ‘‘The conduct of the Nigerian Police on that fateful Thursday, in trying to prevent the Speaker of the House from gaining access into the parliament, is the climax of executive lawlessness and political insecurity on the part of the ruling party.  Never mind that the conduct of the legislators on that day, which could be likened to legislative terrorism, was shameful and a reproach to democracy. Executive interference in legislative affairs at all levels of government is an abnormality and an abuse of the doctrine of separation of power. The conduct of the police on that day I will describe simply as rascally.

    ‘‘What transpired on that day, which is a pointer to what to expect during the 2015 general elections, portends a great danger to our democracy and the rule of law. It is an invitation to anarchy. It is the prerogative of the House to choose its leaders. It is not about calling the police to order; it is about the executive knowing the limit to its powers and stop meddling in the affairs of other organs of government,’’ he said.

     

     

  • Police, residents trade words over arrest

    Residents of Oke-Ado in Ibadan, have cried out over alleged police harassment, arrest and persecution.

    One policeman was killed; 23 others were injured during the attack on policemen and residents by the rampaging political thugs at the weekend.

    Some residents accused policemen of venting anger on innocent residents by entering homes, business areas and mechanic workshops.

    When our reporter visited the area yesterday, the residents claimed some homes have been deserted and all mechanic workshops empty as people fled to avoid “indiscriminate” arrest.

    A resident, Pa Adeogun Ezekiel, called on Governor Abiola Ajimobi to help stop the “persecution” of innocent residents.

    But the police have denied the allegation. Its spokesperson, Mrs Olabisi Clet-Ilobanafor, said those making the allegations have something to hide.

    She said: “Police don’t just do mass arrest. We didn’t enter any home, those arrested were arrested in the crowd. They should not entertain any fear. He who is innocent should not be afraid.

    “They should feel free. Activities are going on at Oke-Ado; people are opening their businesses. It is just mischief. We visited there this morning, and people were going to church.

    “Those who called you are those who perpetrated the crime. And they do not want the police around them. Those arrested are being investigated and we are working towards getting to the root of the matter.

    “So, no one should be afraid. If anyone has deserted his home it is by his own will. It is not because of the police. Those who were arrested were arrested at the scene of the incident.

    “The police, definitely, will not go and arrest hours after the incident. We won’t do that, we practice modern policing.

    “We can’t go and arrest innocent people after the incident. We can definitely arrest based on information. And we are investigating.

    “I want to use this medium to urge innocent members of the public that we are not after them.”

  • NASS  invasion: I am ready for police invitation, says Tambuwal

    NASS invasion: I am ready for police invitation, says Tambuwal

    The Speaker of the House of Representatives, Aminu Tambuwal has said he is ready for questioning by the police or any security agency.
    In a statement on Saturday, Tambuwal who warned the police against being used by one of the arms of government to undermine the others.
    He decried the falsehood perpetrated by the police to justify its invasion of the National Assembly on Thursday.

    The statement reads: “The attention of the Hon Speaker, House of Representatives, Rt Hon Aminu Waziri Tambuwal CFR, has been drawn to publications in the media to the effect that the Inspector General of Police has ordered that he, Speaker, be invited to the Force Headquarters and that he be arrested if he resisted.

    “The Honorable Speaker wishes to state that he is a law abiding citizen of the Federal Republic Ned of Nigeria who has no immunity against arrest and prosecution except ail privileges as may be provided by the Legislative Powers and Privileges Act.

    “Accordingly , the Hon Speaker states for the records that he is available, ready and willing to answer any lawful invitation from any of the Security agencies on any matter for which they may require his attention.

    “The Speaker expresses dismay at the unprofessional conduct of the Nigerian Police in the attempt to stop him from accessing the House of Representatives chambers on the 20th November 2014 to preside over the Special Session of the House on the State of Emergency Extension requested by Mr President, for which he had recalled members from their working recess.

    “Most disgraceful is the false statement later issued by the Police in which they claimed that in the lawful exercise of their duties “ Alh Aminu Tambuwal CFR, arrived the venue with a motley crowd,who broke the cordon, assaulted the Police and evaded due process”.

    “This blatant falsehood coming from a law enforcement agency, that is expected to be neutral and lawful, is unfortunate, to say the least.

    “For the avoidance of doubt, the Hon Speaker came to National Assembly accompanied by Hon Members as is customary during any sitting of the House. They all came with their official vehicles but were disallowed from driving into the premises. Certainly Hon Members, who arrived the precinct of the National Assembly in response to a call to perform an urgent, critical national assignment, cannot be described by any self respecting institution as “a motley crowd.

    “It is important to remind the Nigeria Police Force that as a public institution that provides common services for all the arms of government, they must not allow themselves to be used by one of the arms to undermine the others. “

  • Zimbabwe stadium church service stampede kills 11 —Police

    Zimbabwe stadium church service stampede kills 11 —Police

    Eleven people were killed and dozens injured in a stampede at a stadium in Zimbabwe, as thousands of people at a church service tried to leave through the same exit, police said yesterday.

    Around 30,000 people packed into a stadium in Kwekwe, 213 km   west of Harare, on Thursday evening to listen to Walter Magaya, a pastor who draws huge crowds, Senior Assistant Commissioner Shadreck Mubaiwa,  Reuters reported.

    When the service ended the congregation rushed towards a single exit, in a stampede that killed four people on the spot. Another seven were pronounced dead at a nearby hospital.

    “Police tried to rescue people but they were overwhelmed by the crowds. It is unfortunate that people wanted to rush out, which made it difficult to contain the situation,” Mubaiwa said.

    Mubaiwa said police were still investigating the cause of the stampede. Some people who said they had been at the service took to social media to accuse police and local government officials of opening only one exit.

    Magaya was quoted by the online version of the state-owned Herald newspaper as saying that although the incident occurred after he left, he would take responsibility.

    “This was our event and as a church we have to take the blame for the tragedy,” he was quoted as saying.

  • Reps: Jonathan must go

    Reps: Jonathan must go

    Lawmakers open impeachment battle against President

    Police, SSS teargas Tambuwal, others

    It was like a scene from an action-packed movie.

    Lawmakers removed their shoes and climbed the iron fence to make their way inside the chamber. Teargas fumes choked the environment, drawing tears from the lawmakers’ eyes. Many were shouting and screaming. Chaos.

    That was the scene yesterday at the National Assembly complex in Abuja where the police and other security agents battled unsuccessfully to stop House of Representatives Speaker Aminu Tambuwal from entering the chamber.

    In anger, the lawmakers launched an impeachment battle against President Goodluck Jonathan.

    By evening, no fewer than 130 of them —there are 360 members in the House— had signed a register to back the Jonathan-must-go move.

    Policemen allegedly acting on the instructions of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), Anyim Pius Anyim, and the National Security Adviser (NSA), Col. Sambo Dasuki, locked the gates to the National Assembly (NASS). There were no comments from Anyim and Col. Dasuki yesterday.

    Efforts by the Speaker to enter the complex was resisted by security forces, mainly the police, led by Acting Police Commissioner Wilson Inalegwu.

    The policemen were in combat gears, fully armed. With them were hooded Department of State Service (DSS) personnel.

    Signs of a chaotic day came as early as 7.00am when  early callers were confronted by a new set of armed security personnel.

    No vehicle was spared from being checked as drivers were made to alight from their cars to open their booths. Cars with tainted screens were asked to wind down the windows to ascertain the identity of the  occupiers of the back seat.

    Construction trucks were not spared as policemen climbed inside the drivers’ cabins to check any for any hidden unapproved  objects or persons.

    A Supreme Court Judge who used the road to access the Supreme Court complex could not hide his anger when he retorted after his driver was asked to wind down the passenger side’s windscreen.

    “Why are you people disturbing everybody, aren’t you aware that people have work to go to? I am going to Supreme Court,” he shouted angrily at the police officer.

    The policeman replied: “Sorry for the inconvenience sir. The NSA is aware of why we are here.”

    At about 10.35am,  Aminu Tambuwal arrived at the first entrance to the NASS in his official vehicle, with the House of Repesenatives’ crest and the Coat of Arms accompanied by a convoy of about 50 cars.

    The security men at the first gate made no attempt to stop him.

    At the second and final gate, the convoy was stopped for checking.

    After passing the second gate, the Speaker’s car could not pass the final gate as it was firmly locked. His convoy could not even go through the second gate.

    The Speaker alighted from his car to talk to the police officers on the other side of the gate.

    The Speaker called out to their leader, the FCT Acting CP, Inalegwu, who said he was on the telephone.

    Likewise, none of the policemen, mostly of junior ranks, responded to his introduction as the Speaker of the House.

    At a point, some of the lawmakers who accompanied the Speaker, began banging on the gate, pulling it and threatening to force their ways in.

    The Speaker stepped away to make some calls.

    The pulling of the gate continued but the security men did not bulge, saying they had an order from the office of the National Security Adviser (NSA) to lock the gate.

    At this point, caution took over as some lawmakers continued to talk with the policemen and by a stroke of luck, the gate was partially opened on the order of the FCT Acting CP.

    The Speaker and some lawmakers were  pushed in before the gate was shut again.

    The lawmakers began to scale the tall gate. One after the other, they scalde the gate, saying nothing will stop them from performing their duty.

    On arriving at the scene, just minutes after the Speaker had gone in, the Minority Leader, Femi Gbajabiamila, joined his compatriots in scaling the gate.

    The oldest member of the House, Hasan  El Badawi, made for the 10 feet tall gate, climbed it and jumped into the complex –  to the admiration of his colleagues and others.

    Other lawmakers who accompanied the Speaker include Deputy Minority Leader, Suleiman Kawu, Solomon Adeola, Mohammed Zakari, Samuel Adejare and Biodun Akinlade, among many others.

    The security men made no attempt to stop the lawmakers until they got to the entrance of the Parliament building (White House).

    Meanwhile, lawmakers within the National Assembly had received phone calls that the Speaker was prevented from entering the complex.

    In anger, scores of lawmakers raced out of the White House in the direction of the main gate. But they met the Speaker at the arcade being led in by other lawmakers.

    That was when the police started targeting him with shots of tear gas.

    Before Tambuwal was muscled  into the chamber by his colleagues, teargas canisters were shot at him three times at the entrance of the White House and twice inside the lobby.

    His colleagues rushed him into the Chamber and locked the door.

    For hours, the lobby was filled with teargas fumes. Lawmakers and others were coughing and clutching their noses with handkerchiefs. The fumes permeated offices and committee rooms in the White House.

    Senate President David Mark also got a dose of the security meltdown as he  was locked out for over 30 minutes. He entered the complex through the back gate.

    An angry Mark flayed the Divisional Police Officer in the National Assembly, who on allegedly said the SGF gave the order for the lockdown of the legislature.

    However, on gaining access, Mark got a raw deal when he made to see the Speaker on the Representatives’ wing.

    He was ruffled up by the crowd milling around the Speaker. He was  pushed and shoved by the crowd who claimed that he had foreknowledge of the attack on the Speaker but die nothing to stop it.

    After conferring with the Speaker, Mark returned to his office. He was seen off by Deputy Speaker Emeka Ihedioha.

    Afterwards, the House went into plenary to consider the only item on the order paper the President’s request for extension of emergency rule in Adamawa, Borno and Yobe States.

    The matter was debated behind closed doors.

    On emerging from the plenary, the Speaker, the Deputy Speaker and a host of other Representatives made for the office of the Senate President.

    The Senate President’s office, the Speaker and his team were denied entrance and, after a while, a warning boomed from the public address system, asking those around the entrance to return to their offices.

    The Deputy Speaker left, leaving the Speaker. After a while, the Speaker left. to be joined at the Senate car park  by Ihedioha and over a hundred other members.

    The crowd swelled by the moment and the Speaker left in a motorcade of over 70 cars, with the convoy lined on the side by lawmakers, well-wishers and staff of the National Assembly.

    The Speaker drove out of the complex at about 1.17pm.

    The House condemned the action of the police but promised that it will defend its territory (the National Assembly complex) with all its might.

    Spokesman Zakari Mohammed told journalists at the end of the special plenary that the action of the police was capable of undermining the country’s democracy.

    He said: “We are not criminals, we were sent here by Nigerians that elected us. How can the President give an assignment to the Speaker and at the same time lock him out and tear gassed?

    “Though we see this drama as one of the hazards of democracy, but we have sworn to defend the constitution and our democracy.

    “We refused to be cowered. The National Assembly is not a State Assembly where all kinds of illegalities are perpetrated and there won’t be any response.

    “We condemn the police action in all its entirely, we cannot turn this country into a banana republic; what is important to us is we must continue to uphold the constitution and  continue to do what is constitutionally right.

    “The National Assembly is our territory and we will defend it and resist all attempt to stop,us from doing our work.”