Tag: Police

  • Police kill  abductors of Lagos council chief

    Police kill abductors of Lagos council chief

    Seven among the suspected kidnappers of the Chairman of Ejigbo Local Council Development Area (LCDA), Lagos State, Mr Kehinde Bamigbetan, have been killed by the police , it was learnt yesterday.

    Two others were arrested alive by the crack team that carried out the operation.

    Those arrested are: Ogbonna Emenike, 27 and Uchenna Nwanyu, 25, who were paraded alongside the bodies of their deceased members by Lagos Police chief Umar Manko in the afternoon, yesterday.

    A combined team of the State Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS) led by Superintendent (SP) Abba Kyari killed the suspects at Agbara, a Lagos suburb, shortly after they abducted an Indian, Vivex Chagrani and brought him to the hide-out early yesterday.

    The Indian was said to have been kidnapped in Ikoyi area of Lagos on his way back from night outing.

    The victim was rescued unhurt during an exchange of gunfire with the police when the two were arrested.

    It was learnt that two other suspects were shot in the leg.

    One of the suspects, Nwanyu said:  “My boss and his wife told me that they were into drug trafficking. I was surprised to see that he is the leader of the kidnapping gang.”

    Recovered from them include four AK 47 rifles, 28 AK 47 fully loaded magazines, over 1,000 live ammunition, army uniforms, one CRV Sports Utility Vehicle (SUV) marked, ABC 106 AE and a Nissan Pathfinder marked, No. AGL730AZ.

    Manko said: “Based on painstaking follow-up, surveillance and tracking of Ghana-based Nigerian kidnappers who kidnapped Ejigbo Local Government Chairman, Hon. Kehinde Bamgbetan, a sitting Federal High Court Judge and another notable individual in Lagos, O/C SARS, SP Abba Kyari led a team of crack detectives to a suburb in Agbara, Ogun State, where the kidnappers have their camp.

    “After 72 hours of waiting in an ambush, Kyari and his team cordoned off and stormed the house where all the kidnappers had gathered at about 3am. As a result, seven of them were fatally wounded during heavy gun battle between the kidnappers and SARS operatives”.

    He said two of the gang members were arrested with arms charms and operational vehicles among others.

     

  • Rivers council chairmen blame police for insecurity

    Council chairmen in Rivers State have blamed the Commissioner of Police, Mr. Mbu, for the worsening security threats in the state.

    Speaking at a joint briefing in Port Harcourt, the Caretaker Council Chairman of the troubled Obio/Akpor Council, Hon. Chikordi Dike, alleged that the police were at the council premises when the bomb exploded.

    According to him: “I want to place it on record that the so called explosion that occurred happened before the police.

    “They were in the premises of the council. On my arrival to the council, I met all of them there.”

    The chairman of Okrika Local council, Hon. Tamuno Williams, regretted that crime has increased in the area following the inability of the Police Commissioner to tackle the situation with zeal.

    He said: “Basically, we are working with the DPO and the JTF but we recall that even yesterday there was pipeline vandalism.”

  • Police foil kidnap on Ilesa-Akure road

    Police foil kidnap on Ilesa-Akure road

    The police have foiled the kidnap of three persons (two men and a woman) on the Ilesa-Akure road.

    One of the victims is a driver in one of the ministries at the Osun State Secretariat on Gbongan road in Osogbo.

    The victim, who pleaded for anonymity, said he was coming from Ilesa, his home town, and was on his way to work on Monday when the incident occurred.

    He said around 5:30am, he and the other victims boarded a Gallant Mitsubishi car by the road side in Isokun area of the town.

    The victim said: “We even rushed to beat others to enter the car. There were two people in the car, including the driver, when we entered and we did not suspect anything.

    “Immediately we entered the car, the three of us slept off. At a point on the Akure-Ilesa highway, a police team stopped the car and demanded to know why three of us were sleeping.

    “The policemen saved us because they insisted that we should be woken up. When the kidnappers woke us up, one of us asked where we were and the police said it was Akure road. They arrested the two men and took us to a police station in Akure, Ondo State.”

    The victim said the kidnap suspects confessed that they were assisted by an herbalist in Ekiti State to carry out their nefarious act.

    He said the herbalist was arrested on Monday and granted bail on the same day.

    The victim’s boss, who is a director in the ministry, said he was worried when the driver did not report to duty.

    He said he phoned him many times and became more worried when his phone kept on ringing without a response.

  • Police plan special unit to support NESREA

    Police plan special unit to support NESREA

    The Nigerian Police Force is to create a special unit to assist the National Environmental Standards and Regulations Enforcement (NESREA) in its enforcement drive, the News Agency of Nigeria reports.

    The Inspector-General of Police, Mr. Mohammed Abubakar, made the plan known when the Director General of NESREA, Dr. Ngeri Benebo, paid him a courtesy visit in his office.

    A statement issued by the Chief Press Secretary of NESREA, Mr. Sule Oyofo, said Abubakar stressed the need for an effective synergy between the organisation and the police to fight environmental offenders.

    Abubakar lauded the development of the Police Environmental Curriculum developed by NESREA, adding that “it will assist in training officers, who are in the police colleges.’’

    He said the training was necessary “so that when they come out, they already know what they are supposed to do with regard to environmental laws.”

    Abubakar said the Nigeria Police Force was prepared to create a special unit of liaison officers dedicated to assisting NESREA in its enforcement activities.

    “I will set up a unit for them and it will be permanently there and the unit will have a better understanding of what you need them to do.

    “From there, we will replicate this in the states. Each state command will have a unit and they will be part and parcel of your organisation.

    “You tell them what to do and the commissioners of police and zonal AIGs (Assistant Inspectors-General of Police) will take it up from there,” he said.

    While briefing the IGP on the curriculum earlier, Benebo said the aim was to give police officers and men improved understanding of environmental issues as obtained in other parts of the world.

     

     

     

  • Police arrest nine for Oyo  NURTW boss’ murder

    Police arrest nine for Oyo NURTW boss’ murder

    The police in Oyo State have arrested nine suspects in connection with the murder of the Unit Chairman of the Agbeni branch of the National Union of Road Transport Workers (NURTW), Mr. Rafiu Adebayo.

    Adebayo, a.k.a. Ola Ruffy, was murdered near his home on Sunday night at Apaana, Foko in Ibadan, the state capital.

    The suspects are Kazeem Adegbite, Azeez Adebayo, Saheed Ismaila, Ikudaisi Kudus, Abibu Ogundeji, Adio Saka, Aliyu Adejumo, Saheed Dauda and Kasimu Olaniyi.

    Police spokeswoman Olabisi Okuwobi-Ilobanafor said the suspected mastermind of the attack, Moshood Oladokun, is “on the run”.

    She said: “We advise him to turn himself in now because he can only hide, he cannot run away. We will fish him out soon if he refuses to show up.”

    Oyo State NURTW Chairman Taofeek Oyerinde warned members of the union against resorting to violence to avenge their colleague’s death.

    Oyerinde said the union would allow the law to take its course, adding that the police have started investigating the matter.

    The killing of Adebayo marked a break from the relative peace that has reigned in the state capital in the last two years.

    It was gathered that the late Adebayo went to the Obafemi Awolowo Stadium (formerly Liberty Stadium) on Sunday afternoon to watch a ram-fighting competition.

    On his way back around 4:30pm, sources said he ran into a crowd following a popular masquerade, Iponriku, and some hoodlums took advantage of the rowdiness to attack him.

    He was reportedly shot in the thigh and stabbed four times in the head.

    One of the late Adebayo’s associates, simply identified as Fatai, was with him when the incident occurred.

    Fatai said he tried to rescue him, but he was also attacked.

    Adebayo died at a nearby hospital. His remains were deposited at the Oke-Ado Hospital, Ibadan.

  • Cheapness of student life! ‘Wetin you carry’ by FRSC and Police again!

    The death of five students of NANS and the numerous deaths of students across Nigeria and particularly in the last month are truthfully mostly preventable tragedies and demonstrate the cheapness of life in Nigeria. They are not what parents expect when they borrow save up money to pay for students to go to university or for National Youth Service Corps (NYSC). No parent expects a coffin, an unbelievable burden. Such tragedies remind me of the discussions I often have with enthusiastic students of higher institutions about their reason for them visiting off campus businesses and professionals. These visits are all in efforts to raise sometimes ridiculously outrageously high sums of money, from N300,000 to N3,000,000 recently, as ‘donations’ for student activities like Annual Faculty Weeks etc. The female students often unintentionally expose themselves to moral impropriety all to raise money while their parents have paid good money and offered many prayers for their studies and think they are at lectures or revision. Instead, they are out begging for ‘stupid’ money.

    Nigeria is dangerous enough for us all but students endanger their lives unnecessarily out of bravado, carelessness, needless travel, speeding and an ‘I will live forever’ attitude. Just last week a group of students overtook my car at high speed on the murderous and mislabelled Lagos-Ibadan expressway.

    Why cannot higher institution students be taught to keep students activities ‘within realistic student budgets’ and not mimic adult budgets and quality and expect money to fall from heaven without any of their own money being involved. In our days in University of Ibadan in the late 60s and early 70s, we as students, funded our own activities with our money. Institutions must actively support student activities more in kind if not in cash and provide venues and infrastructure free as a strategic ‘anti-cultism’ measure to assist good or moral student activities. The patrons of these student bodies fail to advise them to make student budgets realistic and more affordable for the targeted long-suffering donors harassed by numerous unrealistic financial demands. And this happens year in, year out.

    Students should learn, and be taught during induction month, to plan and execute their plans as students, at student level, with student funds. That is why they are students. Instead of using printers, as students, they should write out their placards and posters. We participated and recruited 50 students to write 500 posters in one or two hours, cheaper than using professional printing. Students are students. They should act like students. Students should not act beyond their station and mimic National Assembly members who have millions to spend on trivia like congratulatory and obituary adverts and brochures and buntings.

    Buntings are an adult extravagance that students can design themselves if they have to instead of paying high end costs. Talking of buntings, most venues are fine as they are and do not need buntings. The buntingmania in Nigeria must be curbed. What country’s citizens will be so irresponsible as to cover designer chairs, polished wood panelling, Italian marble, imported artwork and high imposing ceilings with yards of cheap ribbon material crisscrossing the ceiling and obstructing the view of even churches. We cover N1-5000 chairs in N300 rags called chair-covers and cover millions naira walls with N100/yard ribbons of reused material.

    The Lagos-Ibadan road, mislabelled expressway, appears demonised or at least jinxed, as it seems to be getting worse. Will it ever get better? The initially ‘heroic’ efforts of Berger and RCC have petered out as presumable government has failed its own end of the bargain which was not a ‘bargain’ but a lucrative contract. No money, no performance! But it is only in Nigeria that a serving government with billions of naira earned daily would be so callous as to expose millions of its citizens to the easily patchable hazards of the road – deep and wide potholes, narrowing to one lane and lethal road edges. Add to that left hand driving by slow vehicles and uncontrolled speeding particularly by commercial vehicles and you have the deadly mix of road deaths that characterise that road and defy solutions, making contractors and FRSC look like incompetents.

    The police are back on the streets with a vengeance. It seems that police checkpoints are creeping back into several states ‘through the back door’ including Oyo State as Zonal and state commissioners relax the order from the IGP. The police onslaught against tinted windows has been surreptitiously extended to reintroduce ‘wetin you carry ‘. The IGP needs to keep the police service on the straight and narrow. We said ‘No’ to checkpoints and it remains ‘No’. The need for widespread and comforting ‘Police Presence’ is necessary as a deterrent. That need can be fulfilled by static and mobile teams without resorting to checkpoints except in specific crime fighting incidents. The IGP introduced the police to modern police tactics. He should weed out those who are there for retrogression and checkpoint corruption. The harassment of the public, families with small children even on their way to and from church on Sundays and of danfos full of tired passengers by overzealous and unsupervised Federal Road Safety Commission (FRSC) and the police should be curbed. Nigerian citizens have rights and FRSC and police harassment is wrong. Of course police and FRSC do some good work but that work is spoilt by these strong-arm, heavy handed roadside roughing up tactics.

  • Lawyer petitions police over okada rider’s ‘killing’

    Lawyer petitions police over okada rider’s ‘killing’

    General Secretary of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA), Emeka Obegolu, has written a petition to the Inspector-General of Police, Mohammed Abubakar, over the alleged unlawful killing of a commercial motorcycle operator (okada rider), Joachim Izuagbachukwu, in Anambra State.

    Writing on behalf of the Obeledu Progress Union, the lawyer urged Abubakar to investigate those behind the alleged murder.

    He said the deceased, on May 30, about 2pm, went to have lunch at the Old Motor Park Spare Parts Road, Nkpor.

    As he was alighting from his motorcycle, a security team, the Scorpion Squad, said to be affiliated to the Anambra Vigilante Services, allegedly started shooting sporadically into the air without justification, in an open show of power.

    “The sporadic gunshots hit and killed Mr Joachim Izuagbachukwu on the spot, in his prime,” Obegolu alleged.

    According to him, policemen from Ogidi Division arrested one of the team’s leaders.

    “The people of Obeledu Community are of the belief that only an investigation led by a crack team from the Force Headquaters can unravel the identities of the members of the team, investigate the circumstances of their engagement with firepower and prosecute them for murder of an innocent, law-abiding citizen.

    “We trust that your intervention will also serve as a deterrent to the promoters of vigilante services and also serve a notice to them that everybody must operate under the law in a democratic society.

    “The era of proliferation of vigilante armed services in Anambra State must be checked and brought under control,” Obegolu wrote.

     

  • Police recover N30m vehicles from robbery suspects in Oyo

    The police in Oyo State yesterday paraded 12 suspects for armed robbery, receipt and the sale of stolen goods.

    The robbery suspects are Olabode Seun (27), Oyeyipo Ayomide (26), Olanrewaju Ayomide (23), Olatide Oladapo (37), Abiodun Ojulari (32) and Afolabi Akeem (30).

    Those who allegedly received and sold the loot are Isaac Nwose (42), Segun Adeyale (39), William Asu Atta (47), Patrick Ogah (35), David Umar (39) and Babatunde Oretuyi, who claims to be a lawyer.

    Commissioner of Police Muhammed Indabawa told reporters at the Police Command Headquarters in Ibadan, the state capital, that 13 vehicles worth N30 million, three guns, 15 handsets and eight laptops were recovered from the suspects.

    The cars include a Toyota Highlander Sports Utility Vehicle (SUV) marked LND 758 AG, belonging to a retired Rear Admiral; Honda Accord marked LND 130 AT; Honda Accord EOD marked EPE 986 BD; Toyota Corolla marked LN 690 EKY; Honda Accord marked Osun FDY 119 AA; Toyota Corolla marked Lagos LSD 120 BF; Honda Accord marked AP 835 ZAR; Toyota Camry marked Kwara AA495 SHA and Toyota Camry marked FST 226 BH.

    Others are unregistered Range Rover; Honda Crosstour; Toyota Highlander SUV and Toyota Camry.

    Indabawa said on May 27, a retired Rear Admiral reported that five armed men stormed his Ogbomoso home and dispossessed him of five handsets, one laptop, N18,000 and a Toyota Highlander SUV valued at N500,000.

    He said a Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS), led by a Deputy Superintendent of Police (DSP), Olusola Aremu, investigated the complaint and arrested the suspects.

    Indabawa said the robbery suspects have confessed to many “bloody robbery operations” in the state.

    He said their confessions led to the arrest of the suspects, who allegedly received and sold the stolen items.

    The commissioner urged residents to be cautious of where they park their cars and to report suspicious movements to the police.

  • Three robbers killed in gun duel with police

    •Six others arrested for robbery, kidnapping

    It was indeed a harvest of breakthrough for Ebonyi State Command of the Nigeria Police over the weekend as three robbers from two different gangs fell to the superior firepower of the command’s gallant and vigilant officers after separate gun battles.

    Three other gang members were equally arrested.

    The police also arrested four members of a notorious robbery and kidnapping gang that has been terrorising the state.

    A statement by police spokesman, DSP Sylvester Igbo, said one of the armed robbers killed had engaged the police patrol team in a shootout along Abraham Enyita Street in Abakaliki, the state capital, after robbing a guest house in the area.

    “In the ensuing battle, one Henry Chukwu popularly known as ‘Drama,’an ex-student of Ebonyi State University, sustained bullet injuries and later gave up the ghost while being taken to the hospital,” Igbo said.

    Three members of the gang, namely: Emeka Esegor, Ude Oko and Nwokporo William were arrested while various items including double barrel revolver pistol, machetes, locally made shot gun, axe, cartridges were recovered from them.

    Also two yet-to-be-identified gunmen on a Kymco motorcycle were killed by the police bank patrol and DCP patrol teams at Ishieke area of the city after another gun duel.

    The robbers, according to Igbo, had opened fire on policemen on duty at a branch of one of the new generation banks along Ogoja road and made away with an assault rifle with 20 rounds of ammunition of one of the officers.

    But the police bank patrol team and DCP patrol team gave a hot chase to the robbers.

    “In the exchange of gunfire, one policeman was shot at the shoulder while two of the robbers were caught by the flying bullets and later died on the way to the hospital.”

    Items recovered from them include an AK47 riffle snatched from the policemen at the bank, four rounds of ammunition, four rounds of ammunition, GSM Handsets, an ATM card, the sum of ninety thousand four hundred and eighty naira, a Kymco motorcycle.

    The command also said it arrested one John Uguru, a.k.a. ‘Solo,’ kingpin of a notorious kidnapping ring responsible for the kidnap of one Lydia Uduma at OsoEdda, Afikpo South local government area of the state and later rescued at Amasiri, Afikpo South Council last month.

  • Jonathan didn’t order police officers’ dismissal – Presidency

    The Presidency on Thursday refuted reports in some national newspapers claiming that President Goodluck Jonathan ordered dismissal of top police officers.

    A statement signed by the Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publication, Dr. Reuben Abati maintained that the media reports were deliberate attempt to cause anxiety and disaffection amongst the top hierarchy of the Police Force.

    It reads: “Reports by sections of the media today that President Goodluck Jonathan has ordered the sacking of top police officers are untrue and most misleading. The Presidency views the highly sensationalized reports as a deliberate attempt to cause anxiety and disaffection amongst the top hierarchy of the Police Force through the willful misrepresentation of President Jonathan’s remarks at the swearing-in of the new Chairman and members of the Police Service Commission.

    “The swearing-in ceremony at which President spoke on Wednesday was directly covered by members of the State House Press Corps and as a significant number of them rightly reported, the thrust of the President’s remarks was that the new Chairman and members of the Police Service Commission should strive to effectively discharge their statutory function of enhancing discipline and efficiency in the service by ensuring that performance, competence and merit are the primary criteria for career progression in the force.”