Tag: Police

  • ‘Police, EFCC, ICPC, others do not need  permission to probe judicial officers’

    ‘Police, EFCC, ICPC, others do not need permission to probe judicial officers’

    In the past, law enforcement agencies blamed their inability to investigate and prosecute corrupt judges on lack of approval by the National Judicial Council (NJC) or Chief Judges of the states where the judges serve. In this interview with Precious Igbonwelundu, Mr Norrison Quakers (SAN) says no such permissions are required. He also speaks on corruption in the judiciary and judicial officers receiving gifts, among others.

    Corruption in the judiciary has been a burning issue for a long time with many judges facing probe. But nothing has been done regarding serving judicial officers receiving gifts. Is that not corruption?

    Of course, it is corruption and an infraction on Paragraph 6 of the Code of Conduct for public officers. If a judge is found to have bridged his oath of allegiance, he can be sanctioned. The Code of Conduct Bureau is responsible for prosecuting such a judge because he is a public officer. The challenge we have is that the agencies responsible for prosecution are not living up to their responsibilities.

    When an allegation of corruption is made, we have agencies to investigate and once there is overwhelming fact at the completion of investigation, the agency should have the judge arrested.

    I was in court on a certain day before a judge and a lawyer told her to her face “I have done a petition against you. You cannot proceed with this matter.” Traditionally, it is unheard of. The late Justice Kayode Eso once said that during their time, when a lawyer makes far-reaching allegations against a judge, he is sent to prison, but today, when a lawyer makes far-reaching allegations against a judge, the judge says “go to hell”.

    So, what that suggests to us is that there is provision for a platform for a lawyer to make such an allegation. In as much as I do not agree with the conduct of being confrontational with a judge, but for any lawyer who says such things, perhaps he spoke from an informed position of what must have transpired between them.

    It is a known fact that the prosecution agencies cannot arrest any judge without the approval of the National Judicial Council (NJC) or the permission of the Chief Judge of a state where the judge works. So how will these agencies operate?

    We must remind ourselves that the Chief Judge is an administrative head of a court. The agencies of government saddled with the responsibility to investigate do not need their approval to investigate judges. All that is required is a notification that complain has been made against a judge and the enforcement agency is investigating that judge.

    The outcome of that investigation is also not given to a Chief Judge, but to the NJC to take disciplinary measures such as dismissal or suspension against the judge. For a judge indicted for corruption or criminal offence, his punishment is double- first he will face the NJC’s administrative punishment of either a suspension or dismissal and then, he also faces prosecution by law enforcement agencies. Prosecutorial agencies act mainly on complain and so, once these complains are made to them, it is done with utmost confidentiality until the facts are unraveled.

    Is it right for a serving judge to write and launch a book or launch one written in his/her honour such that politicians/litigants with matters before them attend and make public donations?

    Following the provisions of the Constitution, it is wrong. Books written or launched in their honour are gifts and as stated earlier, the Code of Conduct for public officers frowns at it. If you launch a book, the tendency is that you will not be able to draw the line between those who have matters before you and those who do not, except for notorious cases. If that is the case, then, it is not out of place to allege compromise. What is the essence of the maiden of justice wearing a blindfold? It is to dispense justice without fear or favour.

    What if you have a matter before you and suddenly realise that one of the parties in the suit was perhaps the highest donor during your book launch? What happens? Ordinarily, the rule of natural justice says a judge should let go of a matter he has an interest in. But as human beings can a judge shut his eyes to someone who attended his book launch and gave him money?

    That is why that provision is there to ensure that under no circumstance should a public officer accept gifts in connection to the performance of duty. So, I think it is wrong.

    In addition to the book launch issue, it is also wrong for judges to compile and publish judgments they delivered for money. If a judge is gifted to write, it is good because I know a particular sitting judge in Ogun State. A fantastic judge and auhor; sometimes, I wonder how he finds the time to write. He has written several books, but has never done a book launch. His books are available in court premises and at notable bookshops.

    He is not even involved in the sale of the books. He writes them and gives them to publishers to sell. There is also a judge of a Court of Appeal who is also an author. He is a professor of law, highly cerebral, but has never launched any of his books.

    But some judges have developed the habit of doing a compendium of the judgments they have delivered and organise a book launch. Those judgments being put together, either by the judges or those who did it in their honour, do not belong to the judges especially for sitting judges.

    As public officers, they are being paid salaries with tax payers’ money to conduct proceedings and deliver judgments. Whatever they come up with belong to the state and cannot be given out without the permission of the state.

    But at retirement, a judge can do a book launch for posterity in which some of his judgments may be reproduced. People like Lord Denin and a few others did, though not the way we now make it appear.

    As a people, we like to abuse things in this country. It is not out of place for a retired judge to launch a book, nor is it out of place for a serving judge to write a book. It is in avoidance of infractions of the provisions of law that is why public officers are discouraged from engaging in such activities.

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo started this practice while in office with the launch of his presidential library with corporate giants, who made public donations in attendance. It is very wrong, and clearly an infraction of the constitution. But nothing was done about it. Who will go for instance, to arrest the then president that launched a presidential library? The corporate giants that donated at the event were people who ordinarily had no business being there because some of them were contractors to the government, but what happened? Our laws are being abridged with impunity and no one does anything about it. Whatever is given to a representative of an institution while in office, according to the Code of Conduct, belongs to that institution.

    Would you say there is no head way in fighting corruption in the judiciary?

    I won’t say there is no head way in addressing corruption in the judiciary. When we talk about the judiciary, we should not limit it to judges. There are three major stakeholders in the administration of justice. They are judges, lawyers and prosecutorial agents.

    We must not isolate the judges in alleging corruption. Now, who corrupts the judges? You could have a situation where a judge is inherently corrupt, no doubt. But who fuels the corruption? It is either a lawyer or an enforcement agency/agent that fuels the corruption.

    However, it is not as bad as it used to be. We are not there yet, but the current Chief Judge of Nigeria, Justice Aloma Mukhtar has done quite a lot. Mind you, corruption has been institutionalised in our system and it is not what an individual can clear. She has done her bit by trying to sanitise the system. Under her watch, many judges are being investigated, some have been shown the door and also lawyers have been disciplined.

    So, I won’t say corruption in the judiciary has continued unabated. It is difficult to completely eradicate corruption, but it can be managed and reduced to the barest minimum. What I think is happening now is the more you look, the less you see.

    How do we solve the problem?

    What I think we should do is strengthen the National Judicial Council (NJC) and the law enforcement agencies. Also, the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) needs to set up a strategy that will be responsible for keeping the court under some watch. There is a young man (lawyer) who has been trying to keep the system under some watch through his magazine. Rightly or wrongly, some of us have come to also see some of those things he has been blowing whistles about. Irrespective of how stakeholders in the judiciary see him, the question to ask is if his work is effective. I think he has not done badly. Because once the young man is around certain quarters, people are mindful of the things they do or say. We need to have a watchdog of the judiciary so that once something goes wrong, there are whistle blowers who will give the information to appropriate quarters.

    Once such a facility is put in place, people will sit up and confidence will return to the judiciary.

    Are you saying people do not have confidence now?

    I can say the society still has confidence in the judiciary. In some cases, you have judges who are fearless and allow justice take its cause. But my fear is because of the allegations of corruption and the role the NJC is playing by accepting all kinds of petitions, some judges are now afraid of doing justice for fear of petition.

    A lawyer loses a case before a judge, instead of filing an appeal; such a lawyer writes a petition against the judge to the NJC. However, I would not say the situation is completely bad. The CJN at her swearing in, I remember, said corrupt judges would be investigated and handed over to prosecution agencies and I think she has been living up to her words.

    You and I know that a man is presumed innocent until proven guilty. Once the facts are established after thorough investigation, the persons involved would be handed to the enforcement agencies since the NJC does not have prosecutorial powers.

    Is there a law forbiding judges from fraternising?

    There is no particular law per say, but there are judicial ethics and rule for judicial officers in terms of interaction. That is where the National Judicial Institute (NJI) and the NJC come in. Part of the training and re-orientation of judges is to inculcate those values in them. In the past, you do not find judges in social circles because it is part of their training and orientation. They imbibe these things at the NJI and they also have Code of Conduct of judicial officers handed down from the institute. When a lawyer is appointed a judge, the first place he is sent to is the NJI to imbibe those values.

    With the way judges are seen at social gatherings and dinners with some of them drinking or fraternising, will it be wrong to say those rules are no longer handed over to them?

    We must understand that judicial officers are also humans. Though, once a lawyer is elevated to a judicial officer, he/she is expected to make sacrifices, one of which is not being sociable. It is a price they pay for being judicial officers. It is personal, inherent and a self decision that must be made by each individual elevated to a judicial officer, whether as a magistrate or a judge.

    Some of us cannot go to the bench because of our nature. We know who we are. Once you take and accept that decision of being a judicial officer and swear the oath of office, a line is drawn and you have selected to live an isolated life. The only people that can relate with you are probably your family and very close friends. You must be far from the social circles because you do not want to be influenced when you find yourself in such gatherings.

    A cousin of mine once said she saw a friend of hers (Justice Nwodo of blessed memory) at a function and she noticed the judge was isolated from the crowd. It was a social function, but justice Nwodo did not interact. My cousin said out of curiosity, she walked up to her and asked if she was a judicial officer and she said yes. It was a gathering to honour their close friend, but she was just secluded and eventually left unannounced in the course of the ceremony. That is a judicial officer.

    Those who are garrulous and friendly, I cannot on the basis of the conduct of a particular judge; say what they are doing is wrong. It amounts to who you are. Can you draw the line? There are people like Justice Uwais, who can be smiling and at the same time insist on his position. You cannot on the basis of your friendship with him, influence him. With a smile, he will tell you no. Then, for some of them, it is only now that they are retired that they interact with the society as a whole. For me, the vices in the judiciary these days are more of human errors than the laws.

    So how do we address these vices?

    I think those who observe the excesses should report and let the NJC and NJI recall the judges for refresher courses. The judicial office is like a tunnel and the journey through the tunnel cannot be cut short at the middle. The officers must work through the tunnel to the end and must be very sensitive, sensible and extremely careful.

    Like I said earlier, we need to have whistle blowers, not necessarily for the purpose of punishment, but as corrective measures. We cannot afford to continually showcase our judiciary to the worlds as being corrupt because it will drive away investors. Monitors should be put in place to nip in the bud those who fuel corruption or influence judges.

    Do you think it is right for politicians to play a role in the appointment of judicial officers?

    In so far as the executive plays a role in the appointment of judges, there will always be loyalty problems. There is a human element involved. If someone is responsible for my elevation, as a human being, I will be eternally grateful to that person. Some politicians will do it and not want a favour in return, whereas, others will do it and use it as an avenue to achieve their selfish aims. It still boils down to the kind of people we are. We must learn to do things without expecting a reward or benefit. We are in a very vindictive society such that someone can take advantage of his or her position to do another wrong. When a politician is influential to a judge’s appointment and needs a favour from the said judge, once the judge declines, the politician starts looking for a way to pull the judge down. I think it is time we stopped the executive from playing any role in the appointment of judges, but the constitution will have to be amended in order to achieve that. We also need to cage human tendencies, until we get to a point where a judge can look a litigant in the eye and do justice, no matter who he is, we have a long way to go.

     

  • Good example

    Good example

    • A judge’s rape verdict against the police should serve as corrective to a sadly soaring crime

    There has been an incredible increase in reported rape cases in recent years. What is not known is whether there has been an increase in rapists or merely the reportage. Regardless of the argument, the statistics on rape from all corners of the country show a potential epidemic. And our society needs to urgently tackle the scourge.

    Worse is that pedophile rapists have unleashed their venomous libido on infants and children, and the grim reaper is in deaths and the physiological and psychological traumas of the surviving victims and their loved ones.

    To sooth a hurting victim, a federal high court has awarded exemplary damages in the sum of N10 million to a two-year old infant, who was raped by a police corporal. In an action brought pursuant to the fundamental human rights of the victim, the court awarded the exemplary damages against the police corporal and his employers, the Nigeria Police Force. We commend the judge, and the counsel to the victim, for this innovative way of bringing a rapist and the institution that he serves to account. We also urge the Attorney General of the Federation to ensure that the police are not allowed to frustrate the execution of the judgment.

    While the corporal is entitled to appeal the judgment, we hope that the police will not waste public funds in pursuit of an appeal. What the institution needs more than an appeal is to apprehend their employee rapist and diligently pursue criminal prosecution with the support of the office of public prosecution, to ensure that the corporal gets his fair due under the criminal justice system. For, while we applaud the civil action that gave the victim a deserving financial benefit, we have not lost sight of the crime against the society, which deserves no less an exemplary punishment upon conviction.

    What the police as an institution should further do, is to engage its staff in remedial workshops and training for them to be equipped to deal with this scourge. The officers and men must appreciate that investigating and prosecuting rape cases as we have seen from the court trials, require delicate handling. So, there is need for specialised training. As we have also advocated on many occasions, there is the urgent need for modernisation of the laws on rape and other sexual offences. Under our criminal and penal code, the excruciating procedure for the proof of rape is anachronistic and dehumanising for the victims, and so should be amended.

    We have also advocated for the provision of lesser sexual offences that require lesser rigorous technicalities to prove. The Lagos State government has shown direction in this regard. We also in one of our interventions advocated for an increase in the jail term for rape to 25 years, but not the death sentence. So, we restate the need for comprehensive amendments of the state criminal laws across the country and also the criminal and penal code, to stem this descent to perfidy by a significant proportion of our society.

    We urge other victims to take the example of this case. While the society should pursue vigorously the rapists in a criminal trial, the victims should be assisted by their relations and the civil society to institute civil actions. We appreciate that the trauma of a rape cannot be paid for monetarily, but most times, the victims require medical attention and other forms of treatment to assuage their losses; the court should come down hard on the rapists whenever the action merits it.

  • Drunk policeman shoots Chairmanship aspirant

    The death of a former Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) chairmanship aspirant, Femi Awoyale Saturday triggered wild protest in Oro, Ifelodun local government area of Kwara state.

    The late Awoyale was said to have been accidentally shot by a drunken policeman drafted to a hotel in the town during the Friday 14th St.Valentine’s Day celebration.

     Already a combined team of anti-riot policemen and soldiers drafted to the community has restore law and order.
    It was gathered that at about 11:15pm on the fateful day, fun seekers had converged on Topmost Hotel with late Awoyale before the incident.
    The management of the hotel had reportedly  invited policemen to provide security for the Valentine fun seekers.
    An eyewitness said that the rowdiness of the fun seekers woke the alleged drunk policeman from his sleep and he shot twice into the air to scare away trouble makers.

    As soon as the pandemonium from the fun seekers, it was gathered that the policeman allegedly hit the butt of his gun on the wall. In the process the gun thundered, discharging its bullets which hit the politician’s on the chest.
    The eyewitness said “he didn’t know that the bottom of the gun had hit the wall and bullets were released and hit Awoyale in the chest, came out of him again and hit the wall.”
    Attempts to revive the victim via first aid proved futile as he gave up instantly.
    The body of the deceased has been deposited at the University of Ilorin Teaching Hospital (UITH) mortuary.

     The State command’s spokesperson Ajayi Okasanmi confirmed the incident.
    He said the said policeman has been arrested, adding that he is currently undergoing orderly interrogation at the command headquarters in Ilorin, the state capital.

  • Police arrest man for killing girl friend

    The police in Anambra have confirmed the arrest of a 27-year-old man suspected to have beaten his girl-friend to death in Onitsha.

    The command’s Public Relations Officer, Mr Emeka Chukwuemeka, told reporters that the suspect was arrested while attempting to run away after the incident.

    “A full scale investigation has commenced on the matter to unravel what really happened,’’ Chukwuemeka said.

    A resident of No. 46 Old Market Road, where the incident happened, told journalists on condition of anonymity that the suspect was in the habit of beating his girl friend even though the girl refused to let go of the relationship.

    “It happened last night when we started hearing the usual beating and cry from their corner.

    “At a time, it appeared that he noticed that his lover was no longer responding, so, with the help of his mother and some neigbours, they rushed her to a hospital where she was confirmed dead,’’ the witness said.

    The incident reportedly happened around 12:30 a.m. on Tuesday.

    Following the development, some residents of the compound left their homes for fear of arrest.

     

  • Police kill two robbery suspects

    Determined to curb insecurity in Kebbi State, officers and men of the Kebbi State Police Command have intensified action against criminals.

    As a result, it has shot dead two armed robbers whose bodies were paraded to newsmen. The command also displayed one AK. 47 gun and two cell phones recovered from the robbers.

    The Deputy Commissioner of Police Muhammad Mustafa, who briefed newsmen in Birnin Kebbi, said the incident occurred at the early hours of Friday between Marafa and Koko in Fakai Local Government Area.

    “The three officers that killed the robbers were the divisional police officers from Sakaba, Ribah and Bena who were on their way to attend the monthly conference with the Commissioner of Police in Birnin Kebbi, the state capital.

    “They road was blocked by the robbers who opened fire on the police officers who returned fire. Two of the robbers were shot dead while three others escaped into the bush,” Mustafa said.

     

  • Customs denies report of shoot-out with police

    THE Nigerian Customs Service (NCS) has debunked media report of a shoot-out said between its men and the police. While reacting to the report of the shoot-out, which allegedly took place along the Lagos-Badagry expressway, the Public Relations Officer, Federal Operations Unit “A”, Ikeja, Uche Ejesieme(DSC), said, “We wish to state categorically that the incident in question was just a minor misunderstanding which did not degenerate into a shootout as insinuated in the media. “We wish to reiterate that the Nigeria Customs Service has a robust working relationship with other security agencies, particularly the Nigeria Police Force, and therefore the mere fact that an incident which involved a policeman in mufti and some Customs officials does not suggest any kind of acrimony between the two government agencies.” Speaking further, he said, “It is instructive to note that the symbiotic relationship between the Nigeria Police Force and the Customs remains intact, as both agencies are ultimately working harmoniously for the interest of the nation.” Meanwhile, the new Customs Area Controller in Ogun State, Mr. Haruna Mamudu, has declared that there would be a total war on smuggling activities in the state. Speaking during a media briefing on the efforts of his command at curbing smuggling activities, Mamudu said that, “my men are well prepared and mobilised to confront and stop their vicious operations in Ogun State.We are conducting the war on smuggling of rice and frozen poultry products with utter vehemence.” “We have so far seized 9,871 bags of rice worth N59 million and 5,431 worth N21 million.The mence of motorcycle smugglers of rice is worrisome.We have so far impounded hundreds of the motorcycles.” Some suspected fraudsters, Austin Movor and Peter Patrick, who were arrested for faking customs’ papers and documents were also paraded. He promised to strengthen and nurture the Ogun/Guandong Free Trade Zone in Igbesa as a revenue generation platform.

  • Protest: Police did not compromise, says LASU

    Protest: Police did not compromise, says LASU

    The management of the Lagos State University (LASU), has refuted the report that the police may have compromised in the attacks by students of the university on the institution’s Administrative Block I three weeks ago.

    The management was reacting to a story by this medium on Thursday last week with the title: ‘Counting the cost of LASU riot.’

    In a letter signed by the university’s Head of Information Dr Sola Fosudo, and made available to The Nation on Tuesday, the management claimed that most of the reporter’s findings were concocted as they did not represent a true position of the situation.

    The university students had, three weeks ago, protested over the management’s refusal to open the registration portal for them ahead of their rain semester examination, attacking some of the university’s facilities in the process.

    “The authority notes with dismay that most parts of the report dwelt on the opinion held by the writer towards the students’ protest in the university and as such the facts were highly diluted and misrepresented,” Fosudo said.

    “The university management at no time or forum blamed the police for the role they played before, during and after the students’ protest. The management wishes to state that it enjoyed the full and prompt cooperation of the police hence the statement credited to the Acting Director (CIPPR), that it ‘the police compromised’ was absolutely incorrect.”

    The management said it immediately contacted the police on Wednesday, January 22 when the students began the protest as against the report that the Vice-Chancellor Prof John Obafunwa never did. Fosudo also said Obafunwa never walked out on the protesting students.

    The letter further faulted the claim in the said report, that the appeal made by the Dean of Students Affairs Prof Akinyemi Kabir that management should consider the students’ plight and reopen the portal, was rejected.

    “It is also pertinent to add in the write up that, indeed, some students were not prepared to write the 2012/2013 rain semester examination apart from the few ones who were genuinely agitating for the re-opening of the registration portal,”

    The letter further affirms the management’s stance to ‘transform and reposition’ LASU, adding that management would not hesitate to rise against any report to undermine its integrity.

     

  • IGP to appear before Senate over Rivers crisis

    The Inspector General of Police (IGP), Mr. Mohammed Abubakar, will appear before the Senate on Tuesday, February 11th.

    Senate Leader, Senator Ndoma-Egba said that the appearance of Abubakar followed the resolution of the Senate that the police boss should appear to tell the lawmakers what he knew about the unending political crisis in Rivers State.

    Sources however said that the resolution was informed by the report of the Senate Committee on Police Affairs on the alleged shooting of the Senator representing Rivers South East, Magnus Abe, by the police at a rally.

    Findings showed that the committee report claimed that contrary to wide spread reports the Nigeria Police does use rubber bullets.

    It is not yet known whether Abubakar’s submission will be made in public or at a closed door sessio

  • ‘Court can restrain police from making arrest if right will be violated’

    ‘Court can restrain police from making arrest if right will be violated’

    A judge of the Federal High Court, Justice Okong Abang has said the police cannot arrest a person on the basis of a petition alleging criminality where there is no evidence.

    Making such arrest, according to him, would amount to the violation of the fundamental rights of the persons being arrested.

    He said where such a situation exists, the court can make an order restraining the police from making such an arrest.

    Such order, the judge said, would be an exception to the principle that the court cannot restrain the police or security agency from discharging their statutory responsibilities.

    The judge made the observations in judgment he delivered on a suit filed by a chieftain of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Ogun State, Prince Buruji Kashamu against the Inspector-General of Police; Director-General, State Security Services; the Comptroller-General, Nigeria Customs Services; the chairman, National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA); the Attorney-General of the Federation and former Ogun State Governor, Gbenga Daniel.

    Kashamu had urged the court to restrain the respondents from intimidating, harassing, arresting, detaining or prosecuting him on the basis of “false allegations” contained in a petition to the agencies by a group.

    In the petition, it was alleged that Kashamu was implicated in a drug case, arrested and convicted in the United States (US) and United Kingdom (UK) for drug-related offences and money laundering, that he escaped from prison to Nigeria after serving five years, and duped a bank in Benin Republic of about N1billion naira.

    “My duty in this judgment is to ascertain whether the respondents can act on the petition by investigating the applicant that may lead to his arrest and detention and possibly, arraignment and prosecution, which may also affect his fundamental rights to personal liberty and freedom of movement,” the judge said.

    According to him, under Section 35 (1c) of the 1999 Constitution, the respondents have the statutory duties to investigate the applicant based on the petition by inviting him, which may lead to his prosecution.

    However, if the applicant feels that the allegations have been investigated before and cleared and that the issues have been litigated before and cleared, and if he believes that his fundamental rights to personal liberty is likely to be contravened, he can approach the court for redress, the judge said.

    “Since in this case the applicant has been able to show in his application that the first to fifth respondents have the power and are entitled to act on the petition, it is my view that his suit has disclosed a reasonable cause of action against the first, second and fifth respondents,” the judge said.

    In restraining security agencies from arresting Kashamu, the judge reasoned that if indeed, it is true that the applicant has been cleared of all allegations contained in the petition, then what was the basis of writing it since it may lead to the violation of the applicant’s rights?

    “The police or any security agency cannot be restrained from discharging their statutory functions…Nobody, I mean nobody, no matter how highly placed in the society can use the court of law as a shield, otherwise the society will descend into a state of anarchy where criminals will becomes lords unto themselves.

    “However, the turning point in this judgment based on the peculiar facts of the case, my Lords, which is the distinguishing feature from the principle of law stated above is that the powers of the first to fourth respondents to investigate, arrest, detain or prosecute a person in discharge of their functions must be exercised subject to the provisions of Section 35 (1c) of the 1999 Constitution.

    “That is to say a person must have committed a criminal offence or suspected to have committed a criminal offence before police can exercise their powers in investigating him, failing which a court of law has jurisdiction to restrain the first to fifth respondents from interfering with the fundamental rights of a citizen.

    “Having regard to the facts presented before me, and the fact the court cannot be seen to look for evidence elsewhere other than what is adduced by the parties, it is my view that there is no evidence before me that the applicant has committed any of the offences mentioned in the ill-motivated petition.

    “There is no allegation that he is reasonably suspected to have committed any of the criminal offences mentioned in the petition. I think the court can restrain the first to fifth respondents from acting on the allegations contained in the petition only which may lead to the violation of the applicant’s fundamental rights to personal liberty and freedom of movement.

    “This is an exception to the principle that the court cannot restrain the police or security agency from discharging their statutory responsibilities. This is a case based on its peculiar facts and circumstances,” the judge held.

     

  • I was deceived by the charm a native doctor gave me — Teenage suspect in police net

    I was deceived by the charm a native doctor gave me — Teenage suspect in police net

    A TEENAGER and suspected leader of a 10-man robbery gang, Adeyanju Adebambo, and four other members of the said gang have been arrested by the police for allegedly robbing a female student of Senior High School, Okota in Isolo area of Lagos. Sixteen-year-old Adebambo, a native of Onitire community in Lagos, who claimed to be a tricycle operator, was arrested along with Kehinde Smith (18), Onyebuchi Okorie (18), Elijah Ojo (15) and Abiaka Samuel (18). Five other suspected members of the gang identified as Kehinde Senior, Solomon, Victor, Sako and Akeem, are, however, at large.

    But Adebambo has denied being an armed robber, saying that he is an SS 1 student of Itire High School combining his studies with commercial tricycle business to fund his education and help his parents in the education of his younger ones.

    He said: “I am not an armed robber. It was only one of us called Onyebuchi who robbed a female student of her Nokia phone. I was recruited by one Kehinde, a tailor and close friend, to go to Central High School, Okota to fight the boys who were claiming to be our superiors in the area and had wounded one of us.

    “We had been fighting like that and the police would not arrest any of us because we never robbed anyone. After beating up our victims, we would quietly return home hoping and believing that no policeman would dare come after us. Otherwise, our parents would storm the police station to demand an explanation for our arrests. They have the phone numbers of senior police officers in Lagos who they would call and none of us would be detained. But up till now, none of our parents has come to ask why we were arrested.”

    Adeyanju, who was caught with a charm, said the charm was given to him by a native doctor called Baba Rashida. But he believed that he was deceived by the said native doctor. “He said with the charm, I would never be arrested by the police, but here I am in police net. I will never trust a fake native doctor again,” he said.

    Narrating his journey into police cell, he said: “I was sleeping in our house in the morning and Kehinde came and woke me up. He said we should go to the school to fight one Spako. I asked why and he said Spako threw a stone at Sunkanmi the previous day as we were returning from school and wounded him. He had agreed to pay me the sum of N1, 500, which is the sum I deliver to the owner of the tricycle on a daily basis.

    “On getting there, I discovered that about 10 of us had been invited. And to my greatest surprise, it was not what we discussed about that they were doing. They started behaving like armed robbers, beating people and snatching phones and handbags.

    “The robbery actions started when one of us, named Onyebuchi, collected a Nokia phone from a female student of the school. The girl’s cry that she had been robbed of her phone and the robber trying to kill her with a knife attracted the attention of other students who pursued us and caught us at Cele Bus Stop on the Mile 2-Oshodi Expressway.

    “Some members of the National Union of Road Transport Workers (NURTW), who were loading buses at the junction, helped the students to arrest us and handed us over to the police in Okota. So, I am not the gang leader. I was hired to follow them.”

    Asked why he thought their parents had not stormed the police station as expected, he said it was because the parents knew that robbery was involved. “Onyebuchi robbed the girl of her phone and beat her up,” he said.

    On the charm that was found on him, he said Baba Rashida, who gave him the charm free of charge, was his cousin based in Sango-Ota, Ogun State. He said the only condition he gave him was that he should not eat any food cooked with palm oil or salt any time he wanted to go for an ‘operation’. He said the charm was meant to make it impossible for him to sustain wounds from bullets, dagger, sword or any dangerous weapon. “And if the person wearing the charm hits an opponent with a blow, the opponent will crumble like a pack of cards.

    “I am not sure that the police would be able to catch him because of his charm. People know him as a great juju man. He is capable of disappearing when he senses danger. If he sees policemen, he will disappear. They call him the wind that cannot be trapped.”

    Asked how much he got from the robbery operation that took place at the high school in Okota, he said he was not involved in the robbery.

    He said: “It was Onyebuchi who robbed, I only got the N1,500 promised me, being the money I should deliver to the owner of the tricycle I work with. I did not know that my members were armed with dangerous weapons. Everything turned out like a film to me. I did not know that they would act like that.”

    Another suspected member of the gang, Kehinde Smith, said he trained as a tailor, adding that he uses one of his mother’s rooms as a workshop.

    He said: “I did not know that Onyebuchi would rob the school girl. I went there to fight and not to rob. I collected the knife I held from one small boy. When we got to the school, we waited till they closed. We were expecting the guy that wounded our friend, Sukanmi. His name is Spako. We wanted him to come out so that we would beat him up, but some of my members lost control, to the point that one of them named Onyebuchi started robbing people. He robbed a girl of her phone and her cry attracted other students who pursued us.

    “I am not a robber. I can never rob. I went there to fight and not to rob. I am from a decent family. This is my third time of engaging in such a fight. It was Onyebuchi who brought us into this trouble.”

    Onyebuchi, who claimed to be a native of Ebehigo community, Ngwaokwala, Imo State and a trained auto mechanic, however, said their mission to the school was not just to fight but also to rob.

    He said: “They are all liars. We went there to fight but could also collect phones and money. Any of us could collect phones. It is because it was only one phone we had collected before they started pursuing us that they are telling lies against me. If we had not been pursued, they would have collected more than 10 phones.

    “I did not go there with any knife. I collected the knife from the opposing side as we were fighting. Whenever we fight, we collect something from the enemies. When they are defeating us too, we would run and they would like to collect our phones, weapons and anything we came with.”

    The fourth suspect, Elijah Ojo, a native of Awe village, Oyo State, who claimed to be a generator repairer, confessed to the crime, saying: “We usually fight and collect handsets. I will not follow them again, especially now that I know that our action is criminal.”

    The fifth suspect, Abiaka Samuel, an indigene of Imo State, said he took exception to the phone that was collected. “We went there to fight and, all of a sudden, some of us started robbing. It was a big surprise to me. I would not have followed them if I knew that some of us are armed robbers,” he said.

    Narrating his ordeal in the hands of the suspects, one of the victims, Taiwo Quadri (17), an SSS3 student of Central High School, Okota, said: “One of my junior ones, Tosin Bajela (15) and others were going home after school at about 1.30 pm when we suddenly saw some boys who were looking aggressive. One of them called the girl and ordered her to hand over her phone to him but the girl refused. He pointed his knife at her and forcibly removed the phone from her and ran away.

    “One of our students saw him and ran after him. We pursued the thieves up to Cele Bus Stop where they attempted to run across the expressway, but some NURTW members saw them, apprehended them and took them to the policemen attached to an Armoured Personnel Carrier (APC) at the bus stop.

    “They later took them to Okota Police Station and handed them over to the Divisional Police Officer, a Chief Superintendent of Police (CSP) Ibrahim Adamu, who addressed us and detained the suspects for investigation while we were asked to come back the following day to collect our phones.”