Tag: Prison

  • Our three-month ordeal in Turkey’s maximum prison -Nigerian students detained over coup saga

    Sent to Turkey for university education by parents who wanted the best for them, two young Nigerians recall the horror of being bundled into Silivri Maximum Security Prison where they joined Turkish military personnel, civil servants, professionals and other suspects detained over alleged involvement in Turkey’s July 15 military coup. They are among scores of Nigerian students who came home without being allowed to collect their graduation certificates, academic transcripts, electronics and other items which the Turkish authorities said they would return only after the completion of investigation early next year. They spoke with Assistant Editor, JIDE BABALOLA, in Abuja. 

    It was almost four months since Mohammed Abdullahi and Hassan Danjuma Adamu were detained by security agencies in Turkey in the wake of a military coup that rattled the country in July this year, but they still appeared somewhat dazed by the experience. The two Nigerian students were picked up from their hostels and detained for three months in Turkey’s maximum prison over their alleged involvement in the aborted military coup of July 15, 2016.

    Although they are happy to be home, the two young men, who grew up in homes where moral and religious instructions predominate, are still enmeshed in confusion. They had travelled to far away Turkey dreaming to complete their education, after which they will undergo the compulsory one-year national youth service and begin earning a decent living and making their families proud. On the contrary, however, they found themselves in handcuffs, dumped at Silivri Maximum Security Prison.

    In the aftermath of the July coup, the Turkish government had launched a crackdown that led to the imposition of an emergency rule, which in turn hardened the climate of official impunity. While the Turkish Justice Minister, Bekir Bozdag, has fiercely denied widespread allegations of abuse of detainees amid mounting criticism from Western governments and international rights groups, the European Commission’s annual progress report concerning Turkey’s increasingly unlikely membership in the European Union (EU) alleges unjust treatment of randomly detained persons.

    “There were reports of serious human rights violations, including alleged widespread ill treatment and torture of detainees. The crackdown has continued since and has been broadened to pro-Kurdish and other opposition voices,” the commission alleged.

    New York-based Human Rights Watch’s most recent report basically agrees with EU’s observations, citing at least 13 credible cases of torture since the attempted coup. And the Turkish press is scarcely documenting the alarming spike in allegations of ill-treatment, as most critical outlets have been shut and many critical journalists locked up on the flimsiest of terror charges.

    The two young Nigerians tasted a bit of this at a time when Hakan Cakil, Turkish Ambassador to Nigeria, said reports of Nigerians arrested in his country were exaggerated, insisting that Nigerian students were safe.

    Then, there was the issue of the Muhammadu Buhari administration’s refusal to accede to the Erdogan administration’s request that Nigeria should shut down schools linked to followers of Muhammed Fethullah Gülen, the US-based Turkish preacher, former imam and writer, who was once a critical ally in facilitating Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s political success.

    Mohammed Abdullahi, who studied Mathematics and Computer Science at Bahçeşehir University in Istanbul, Turkey told The Nation his story when asked to explain how he got ‘involved’ with the July coup.

    He said: “I was sleeping soundly in my hostel when the constant noise of helicopter propeller in the sky woke me up. I did not even have the faintest idea that something like a coup was going on in the city. I only got to know about it from the updates that some friends were adding on Facebook.

    “Later, on July 28, the person that sweeps the apartment that we were living in reported to the police that the building belongs to the Jamaat (linked to the Hizmet movement, followers of Gülen’s doctrines) which was branded as an armed terrorist group by the police. So, the police came and took us to the police station, we were interrogated but there was nothing found on us.

    “The next day, they took us directly to the court, and from court, they took us to prison straightaway. We were in the Maximum Security Prison for three months and were not allowed to see anyone except for those of us who had family members around. It was after one and a half months that someone came from the Nigerian Embassy. He talked to us and assured us that they were working on our issue and Alhamdulillah, we are out now.

    “We were detained with soldiers and other civilians who were also accused (of involvement in the coup), and there were people with different cases. In our own case, the allegation was that we were members of an armed terrorist group,” he stated.

    The Nation learnt that the ‘crime’ of the students, which turned them into ‘suspects’ for the Turkish authorities was probably that of living in a hostel that belonged to the Hizmet movement, which is now labelled an “armed terrorist group” in spite of its dependence on intellectual debates, humanitarian activities, quality education and inter-religious dialogue to galvanize people.

    “Thus, we were ‘suspects’. Right now, our computers, phones and our electronics are with them. They said we should wait till January 10 when the emergency situation will be over, and then they will send them to us.

    “In the prison, they normally brought lunch and dinner, and there was hot water for some hours in the day time. There was a canteen, and we wrote if we wanted to buy something from the canteen. They would bring the list and the price tags for you.

    “I was lucky I had some money, so we were able to survive on that throughout our stay there.

    “Officials at the Nigerian Embassy in Turkey tried their best and even our friends outside too, even though I do not know what exactly each person did to draw attention to our plight. You can’t imagine how happy we were when a Nigerian embassy official came. Before then, for two good months, my friend and I were only seeing and interacting with the Turkish ‘suspects’,”

    Recalling his own experience, Hassan Adamu said: “We were there for three months but were allowed to call our families just once. It was really difficult because I had never imagined myself in prison. I am a student. My father sent me to Turkey to study and then this happened.

    “On the 15th of July, that was when it happened. I was actually going to play football because my friend invited me. I went to my hostel to dress up and go to the field but suddenly realised that I forgot my glasses and the house key in school,” he said as he explained the genesis of his troubles.

    Having grown up in a home where much premium is placed on good behaviour, diminutive Adamu, who can be easily mistaken for a secondary school student, still feels some nightmares and psychological trauma.

    Although he was only waiting to collect his graduation certificate and study transcripts after completing his bachelor’s degree in Computer Studies at Bahçeşehir University in Istanbul, Yobe State-born Hassan Adamu was arrested by the Turkish police on July 28.

    “It is true that I was really scared and we were in a police cell for 14 days before we were taken to a stinking prison with no proper ventilation, where we met several Turkish soldiers and other professionals accused of involvement in the coup,” he said.

    Although there was not even a tiny shred of evidence to implicate Hassan and Mohammed, those who arrested them found no need to give any specific explanation to justify the broad accusation levelled against the Nigerian students. Briskly, they were made to pass through the rounds at the court and then taken in handcuffs like every other suspect to Silivri Maximum Security Prison.

    Officially known in Turkish as Silivri Ceza İnfaz Kurumları Kampüsü, the approximately 11, 000 capacity prison, according to www.wikipedia.org, is a high-security state correctional institution complex in the Silivri District of Istanbul Province in Turkey.

    “Covering an area of 437,000 m2 (4,700,000 sq ft) and stretching over 955,354 m2 (10,283,340 sq ft) land, the prison complex is composed of nine blocks, one open and eight L-type closed correctional institutions having a total capacity for 10,904 inmates,” it stated in its description of the state of the facility in 2008 when it was completed.

    According to Hassan Adamu, some of the prison officials made futile recommendations that security agents should rather deport the students as the facility was not meant to accommodate foreign prisoners. “They made us to do frog jump, and hit us in the back in the process,” he recalled.

    According to the somewhat shy young men, soldiers and civilians accused of coup plotting along with convicts with various criminal career backgrounds populate the prison. “There were many people accused of committing various offences. Our own case was that we were members of (Fetullah Gülen) Armed Terrorist Group because of the school and hostel we lived in.

    Founded by Enver Yucel, who was President of the World Education Entrepreneurs Association, President of the European Test Preparation Center Union and also a member of the Board of Trustees of New York University’s Steinhardt School Dean’s Council; the Bahçeşehir Uğur Education Foundation, which runs Bahçeşehir University, was once accused by some online groups of being part of the Gulen Charter Schools USA agenda to “dominate education worldwide”.

    Enver Yucel had great success in increasing the number of educational institutions to 200, currently providing education to more than 150,000 students worldwide. In 1994, Mr. Yücel established Bahçeşehir K-12 Schools, which provide ‘an intensive, comprehensive and analytical education to qualified, multilingual, analytical thinkers as graduates’.

    Furthermore, in 1998, he established Bahçeşehir Uğur Education Foundation (BUEF), which provides educational funds to students who are studying at Uğur Education Institutions or other such institutions, but who do not have sufficient financial resources to continue their education.

    Notwithstanding such aims and the benefits to Turkish citizens and others around the globe who enjoy scholarship and the benefits of quality education, all such pro-Gülen educational organisations, including the ones established in Nigeria have been branded as enemies by the Turkish government. Hence, the abortive request that President Buhari should help cripple such ventures by closing down the schools immediately.

    “I have never heard that the Turkish schools in Nigeria have done anything illegally since the time they began operation in Nigeria; I attended one of such excellent schools so, I see no reason why the school should be closed.

    “Rather, I want President Muhammadu Buhari to take serious action over how Turkish authorities treated Nigerians who were studying there. Apart from us, they deported about 50 students and most of these students were not even allowed to take their transcripts.

    “President Buhari should not let the matter die like that. He should take serious action,” Mohamed said.

    In spite of their horrible experience, which runs contrary to their parents’ expectations, the two young men may still have cause to thank God that their ordeal ended after three months. Reports indicate that pregnant Buket Buyukcelebi, a female researcher at Kilis University, who was sacked and jailed three months ago under an emergency decree, most likely over alleged links to Gülen, is being held in an overcrowded Gaziantep prison with her 13-month-old son.

    Some 20 other detainees suspected of links with Gülen are said to have committed suicide in suspicious circumstances and the Turkish press reported that an engineer accused of leaking state secrets on behalf of Gulen, was found dead in his cell in Kirklareli prison on November 10.

    Altogether, www.turkishpurge.com which has been keeping tabs on verifiable aspects of the crackdown that followed the July military coup in Turkey states that 105, 097 have been sacked, 76, 485 suspects are being detained, 2, 099 schools, dormitories and universities have been shut down while 6, 337 academics have lost their jobs, 3, 640 prosecutors and judges have been dismissed with 186 media outlets shut down and 144 journalists arrested.

    “In any case, we are just happy to be back home in our country, Nigeria,” Hassan said.

  • Kwara prison personnel put on alert

    Officials of the Nigeria Prison Service (NPS) in Kwara State have been put on the red alert following alleged riot  by inmates at two different prisons in the state.

    At least six inmates were said to have died while about five are on danger list following injuries sustained in the melee.

    The incidents, according to a prison source, occurred at Mandala Prisons on Ilorin-Alapa road and Oke-Kura prisons in Ilorin metropolis.

    It was learnt the inmates, who were in the condemned inmates’ cell, protested the substandard quality of their food.

    “It has become a culture of the condemned inmates to enact a riot scene yearly, especially when December is approaching, with the ulterior motive to cause a jail break,” the source said.

    He added that while the Mandala prison scene was brought under control, the Oke-Kura episode recorded deaths.

    Minna Zonal Comptroller Musa Maiyaki has visited the state for a firsthand information.

    The source said while the comptroller was addressing prison operatives, inmates regrouped and attempted to cause trouble.

  • Pastor remanded in prison for impregnating teenager

    An Abeokuta Chief Magistrates’ Court on Wednesday ordered the remand of a 48-year-old pastor, Micheal Adeniran, in prison custody for allegedly impregnating a teenager.

    The magistrate, Mrs Oriyomi Sofowora, ordered that the accused be remanded for the facts of the case to be stated.

    She then adjourned the case till Nov.30.

    The accused, whose address is unknown, is facing a charge of sexual abuse.

    The prosecutor, Insp. Kayode Emnmanuel, told the court that the accused committed the offence in June at El- Bethel Church, Ita Aka, in Abeokuta, Ogun.

    Emmanuel said that the accused, a pastor at El- Bethel Church, sexually abused a 17-year-old girl, which resulted into pregnancy.

    The prosecutor said that the pastor failed to take responsibility of the teenager in the last six months of his impregnating her.

    The prosecutor said that the offence contravened Section 32 of the Child Rights Law of Ogun, 2006.

    The accused, however, pleaded not guilty.

  • Prison relocation

    •News of possible relocation of the Ikoyi Prison in Lagos has positive implications, and may well be the much-needed fillip for the country’s prison system  

    Reports quoted the Lagos State Commissioner for the Environment, Dr. Babatunde Adejare, as saying that the 61-year-old Ikoyi Prison had outlived its usefulness where it is currently located. He provided information about the envisaged relocation during an interaction with reporters after monitoring the October edition of the monthly environmental sanitation exercise in Ikoyi-Obalende Local Council Development Area of the state.

    It was in the context of environmental management that he said:  ”We also visited Ikoyi Prison to see the challenge there. I can assure you that we will tackle it. We will see how we would work with the Federal Prison Service to ensure that we provide sewage system.”

    However, according to the commissioner, beyond the question of environmental pollution and the undesirable consequences, there is the question of locational irrelevance. Adejare said: “There is a larger thing coming into play soon; that is relocation of the prison. The facility had passed its usefulness. The most valuable land in Africa is there. We should not have such in that location. We are discussing with the Federal Government to deal with the relocation. In the interim, the Lagos State Government will provide the prison with better sewage system.”

    Indeed, it is a measure of inevitable social dynamism that the Ikoyi Prison is now considered out of place in a place it has occupied for over half a century. There is no doubt that the locality in which the prison is situated has evolved over time, and has acquired a prosperous character. It is, therefore, unsurprising that there is a conflict between location and locale.

    But the matter is much more complicated than success being uncomfortable with the presence of the prison as a metaphor for failure. The reality is that Ikoyi Prison, like many other prisons across the country, needs a new lease of life, which cannot be guaranteed at its present site and in its present condition.

    It is on record that the members of a Senate Committee on Interior who toured prisons in the country noted in their report that “a majority of the cells leak during the rains and the perimeter walls and some cells have, in some cases, collapsed.” The report also said: “In many of the prisons visited, the committee was moved by the plight of the inmates; many of the cells meant to accommodate about 50 inmates were found to accommodate about 150 inmates, all cramped together.”

    Chief among the problems facing the country’s prisons is the issue of congestion, which continues to overstretch prison facilities resulting in deplorable conditions within the prison walls. It is noteworthy that the Prisons Service records, as of August 29, showed a total inmates population of 63, 000, with 17,897 (28 per cent) convicted while 45, 263 (72 per cent) were awaiting trial.

    It is a helpful development that the Federal Government is collaborating with the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) to substantially tackle overpopulation in prison yards across the country. UNODC Country Representative Ms. Christina Albertin, shed some light on the partnership at a workshop on effective implementation of non-custodial measures in Nigeria, which was held in Abuja in August. According to her, the justice project aimed at supporting improvement in prison conditions across the country was being funded by the European Union and being implemented at the federal level and in nine states:  Anambra, Bayelsa, Benue, Cross River, Imo, Kastina, Lagos, Osun and Yobe.

    The bottom line is that the country’s prison system urgently needs to be modernised in line with the demands of the modern age, with a view to realising the noble objective of reformation of the inmates.

  • Pastor sent to prison for alleged N85m fraud

    The Federal High Court in Lagos yesterday remanded the General Overseer, Christ Glory International Gospel Center, Ikorodu, Chris Anyalebechi, in prison for alleged N85million fraud.

    He was arraigned by the Special fraud Unit of the police on a two-count charge of conspiracy and obtaining money under false pretence before Justice Babs Kuewumi.

    The police said the cleric between April 2014 and last March, conspired with others now at large to obtain the money from Nestor Nwankwo of Zicozeen Nigeria Limited.

    He allegedly promised to buy a used ship for the company and sell it in parts or scraps on its behalf.

    The charge reads: “That you, Pastor Chris Anyalebechi, General Overseer, sometimes between April 2014 and March 2015, in Lagos, within the jurisdiction of the Federal High Court, by false pretence and with intent to defraud, obtained the sum of N85 million from a company known as Nestor Nwankwo of Zicozeen Nigeria Limited, by representing to the company that you will purchase for the company a used ship or vessel and sell same in parts or scraps on behalf of the company, a representation you knew to be false.”

    The alleged offence contravenes Section 1(1)(a)(3) of the Advance Fee Fraud and other Related Offences, Act, 2006.

    Anyalebechi pleaded not guilty.

    Prosecution counsel Effiong Asuquo, a Chief Superintendent of Police (CSP), urged the court to remand the accused person in prison custody pending trial.

    Justice Kuewumi ordered that the cleric be remanded in prison custody.

    He adjourned until October 17 for trial.

  • ‘Police asked me to bring N1.2 million or rot in prison’

    ‘Police asked me to bring N1.2 million or rot in prison’

    A victim of police abuse in Rivers State, Chima Okoye, is in court demanding N100m for illegal detention. Court documents show the rot in the policing system and established that Okoye was wrongly accused and detained, reports  PRECIOUS DIKEWOHA, Port Harcourt

    Chima Okoye, a taxi driver and a graduate of Mechanical Engineering from the Abubakar Tafawa Belewa University, Bauchi, Bauchi State, was arraigned by the Rivers State Police command before the Magistrate’s Court sitting in Port Harcourt on June 24, last year for alleged murder.  He was later freed by the court after the prosecution claimed the family of the deceased had forgiven him. Before then, his family had coughed out monetary bribe.

    A charge sheet prepared by the Rivers State Police Command reads: “That you Okoye Chima Emmanuel ‘M’ 36 years on the 11th day of February, 2015 Olu-Obasanjo Road in Port Harcourt Magisterial District did unlawfully killed one Omorogbe Anthony by hitting him with a motor jack on his head which caused his death and thereby committed an offence punishable under section 319 (1) of the criminal Code cap, 37, vol 11 laws of Rivers state of Nigeria.”

    Okoye insisted that he never killed Omorogbe. “We only had an argument,” he said.

    He added that he was the one who reported Omorogbe to the police only for him to be detained. Omorogbe was allowed to go home, he said.

    Okoye alleged that police changed the charge against him after he told them that he was going to sue and expose them for using bad boys to extort money from commercial drivers.

    “I was arrested by the police because I refused to give the area boys who were working for the police officers’ bribe,” he said.

    A copy of the court order from Magistrate’s Court of Rivers State dated August 18, last year before his Magistrate U.V. Erekosima of the Senior Magistrate’s Court 10,  gave directive for the accused to be released from prison custody.

    In that suit, Inspector Asoluka Chiedozie was the prosecutor. B.C. Obi was the lawyer to the suspect before he was dropped after the suspect accused him of conniving with the police to defraud his family of N550, 000.

    Magistrate Erekosima said: “This matter is for the consideration of the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) advice.  I have received the advice dated the 12th of August, 2015 received by the court on the August 17, 2015. The advice has reference No. MJ/DPP/236/VO1. XLXX11/403 and was written by Adiele Omereji, State counsel, for the Director of Public Prosecutions

    ”The brief facts of the case, as per the findings of the writer are that, there was a fight between the suspect and the deceased over carrying of passenger that  both the suspect and the deceased were taken to the police station and that the family of the deceased has sworn to an affidavit for the withdrawal of the case. That DPP opines, inter alia, that the charges against the suspect be dropped and the suspect be released from prison custody. Following the DPP’s advice, it is hereby ordered that the accused person be released from prison custody. This charge is hereby struck out from the court’s case list.”

    After regaining his freedom, Okoye dragged some officers to the High Court.  They include: Mr. Harrison Akpoguma (former Divisional Police Officer) and Inspector Charles Oliseh.

    On March 24, Justice R.I Ahiakwo of the Rivers State High court declared that the suspect was illegally accused of the crime he did not commit.

    The judge also condemned his detention for over six months in prison and the extortion of N150,000 and another N550,00 to secure his release.

    The Judge noted that the suspect was threatened by the police with fresh  arrest should he be sighted anywhere within Rivers State, adding that the continued seizure of his Toyota Corolla car with registration number AN 925 NSH is not only illegal but constitutes a violation of the applicant’s fundamental rights.

    Okoye,  who is  claiming  damages of N100 million,  said: “ I used my car to run part-time taxi in the early hour of the morning and in the evenings at the close of my daily engagements. On the 11th of February, 2015 at Olu-Obasanjo Road at about 6:45 am where I stopped to pick a passenger only to be disrupted by two touts who came to extort me and I decided not to yield to their demand.

    ”They molested me and damaged my windscreen. One of them ran away while the other tout was held back by the help of a passenger who accompanied us to Olu-Obasanjo Police Station and left. I entered a complaint against the tout who claimed to be Anthony Omoregbe to be charged for assault and malicious damage of my property.

    “Instead of the police to detain the tout, one  Inspector Oliseh  who earlier told me that Omoregbe is working for them began to praise him for doing a good job and told me that he charged the matter as ‘two fighting’ and detained the two of us. After four hours or more, Anthony Omoregbe was taken out on bail, but I was left in the cell. At about 5: pm, I was brought out from the cell to call someone to take me out on bail which I declined on account of being the complainant. The IPO (Inspector Oliseh) told me that he would place a charge on me and I would find it difficult to extricate myself if I dared them.

    “Afterwards, he brought free bail bond which he asked me to sign, and I did . He asked me to go and come back the next day for my car without giving me reason. I demanded to see the DCO (Deborah) to inquire from her why the car was seized instead she walked me out of her office. I left the station at about 7:30pm. I had to put a call to one Barrister  Obi and he asked me to see him the next day. On my way to see Mr. Obi, I got a call from the police station with the GSM no 08186354544, telling me that the DCO asked me to come and carry my car.

    “For me, I have decided to forgive the officers which made me to return to the station by 3:30pm. As soon as I entered the station, Corporal Ugochukwu asked me to go and see the DPO. As soon as I entered the corridor, Corporal Ugochukwu barricaded the entrance behind me and accosted me to the D.P.O’s office and pushed me in. Inside the office, there were four persons, which include the DPO; SP Harrison Akpoguma, DCO Deborah, Inspector Oliseh and  Corporal Ugochukwu. In the presence of these officers, the DPO allegedly accused me of killing the tout with my jack and he died on the previous day, that he died in the hospital. I replied: ‘how can a man  I brought to the station, who you allowed to go scout free be described as a dead man?’ Then I told him that I needed an autopsy to ascertain the cause of his death.

    ”The DPO replied me by saying that instead of me crying and being remorseful for killing somebody I was requesting for an autopsy. He ordered Inspector Oliseh and Corporal Ugochukwu to handcuff me and put me into the cell without knowing that I entered the cell with my phone. I then phoned some persons and sent text messages on my plight. Before the arrival of my lawyer, Corporal Ugochukwu came to the cell and told me that they searched my trouser pocket but could not see my phone. I replied him that I left it at home. He then asked me how would my people know that I was in detention. I told him to  get me a  pen and paper to put down the names and numbers they would like to contact.”

    Okoye went on: “At about 6:30 pm Corporal Ugochukwu came to the cell, and asked me to come out with the handcuffs on my hand. I asked him to allow me get something from the cell. I then brought my phone which I gave to him; he then began shouting. He went on to interrogate me on how I was able to beat their intelligence and entered the cell with the phone without them seeing it. He later put me into their Hilux van and zoomed
    off to the State CID. When we got there, Inspector Oliseh  told me that they did not want any case. He said the tout has three people in the university and two in secondary school under his care. That, I should call my people to bring N1.2 million to end the matter or I will rot in prison.”

    That was on February 12, last year, a day after Omorogbe allegedly died. He spurned their request and he was dumped in the cell. No statement was taken from him until the third day when he was shown a faked photograph depicting the tout as dead. Okoye again demanded for autopsy report and pleaded with them to charge the matter to court.

    ”When I communicated with my lawyer he told me that he went to the mortuary and saw the corpse of the said Anthony Omoregbe. The next day he came to the State CID and he told me that it was because of my inability to accept that I was guilty that I was still in detention. That I should know that court was not on session. At that point I decided not to be relating with my lawyer. Meanwhile the police removed my vehicle jack without my consent and made photograph of it and showed it to my people that I used the jack to kill the tout. One Sergeant Thomas also told my father that they were instructed to kill me since I killed somebody that they should hurry up and pay the N1.2million. I told my people to forget their antics; that it was a set-up.

    “My father told me that prior to that time of coming to the State CID, he was taken to a church at Ada George Road, Rumueme in Obio/Akpor Local government Area where grey-haired men and women who gathered in the church discussing on how to take the corpse to Delta State. I replied my father not to bother about anything that I would rely on the court to get my freedom and not to pay anybody.

    ”On the 50th day at the State CID, the then Deputy Commissioner of Police, Benjamin Wordu (now retired) visited  the cell where I was  and I alerted him that I was illegally detained. He asked me of my name, the name of my IPO and the charge against me. He immediately ordered one Inspector Oxford to take the details and that by Monday he would have audience with me. On the very Monday I was before the Deputy Commissioner in the presence of SP Rita Abbey Inoma and the Inspector Joseph. I narrated to them what happened but nothing was done as I expected.  Maybe because they realised that matter was against the police. That was how he ordered that I should return to the cell.”

    Obi, the victim’s former lawyer, told The Nation on phone that he was aware of the case but because he is one of the respondents in the suit  he would not like to speak.

    When this reporter visited Olu-Obasanjo Police Station, a source said all those involved had been transferred except Inspector Oliseh. While the reporter was discussing with a woman police officer, an officer entered the station and the woman police officer pointed at him and said: “This is Oliseh, you can speak with him”.

    The man responded: “Who you are? Why are you here? Why do want to see me?”

    “I am a journalist,” the reporter quietly replied.

    Before the reporter started discussing with Inspector Oliseh, he protested that as police officer he has no right to grant an interview. He also noted that he was aware of the court judgment, adding that whatever he did was under instruction. He then pleaded with the reporter to do a thorough job and be careful on the kind of investigations he does.

    Rivers State Police Public Relations Officer Omoni Nnamdi, a Deputy Superintendent of Police (DSP),  did not reply to our enquiries as at the time of going to press.

    Certainly, this is not the end of the matter. All eyes are on the court to resolve it.

  • Abakaliki attempted jailbreak: No prisoner escaped, says NPS

    The Controller-General, (CG) of the Nigeria Prisons Service (NPS), Ja’afaru Ahmed has confirmed that no prisoner escaped during the attempted jailbreak in the early hours of last Thursday in Abakaliki, Ebonyi State.
    Ahmed disclosed this while addressing the press during a courtesy visit to the Governor of Ebonyi State, David Umahi.
    The Controller General, who had earlier inspected Abakaliki prison stated that trouble started when prison officials were about to carry out routine cell-search in the morning but the inmates in a particular cell resisted the exercise.
    According to a statement issued in Abuja by the NPS spokesman, Francis Enobore, the prison boss said: “They suddenly became riotous, broke other cells and released the inmates. They eventually broke into the workshop to arm themselves with dangerous weapons and severely attacked some staff trapped in the yard while others made for the main gate and pulled it down.”
    “Meanwhile, the prisons Armed Squad and men from other security agencies on guard outside the perimeter fence were firing warning shots to deter the rampaging inmates but a number of them rushed out to escape.
    “The bold attempt was resisted by the combined team of armed personnel who presented what would have turned into a catastrophic security situation had the inmates succeeded in escaping.

    “Regrettably at the end of the fracas, six prisoners died and 10 others were injured. Six prison officers were severely injured. However, both staff and inmates are responding to treatment with some already discharged from the hospital.”
    The Controller General, the statement further explained has set up a 3-man panel to carry out a detailed investigation into the incident in order to establish both the immediate and remote causes of the riot.
    He commended the officers and men of Abakaliki Prisons for successfully foiling the attempted jailbreak and also thanked officers of other security agencies that promptly responded in resisting the jailbreak noting that such synergy was essential in maintaining peace and good order in the society.
    He also thanked the Governor for his assistance and timely visit to the prison.
    Ahmed said: “Routine cell-search is a tradition in the prison usually carried out as a proactive security measure to ensure that prisoners do not keep dangerous items that could aid escape or compromise the safety of their fellow prisoners or staff. It is the near abandonment of this practice that has largely been responsible for the recent escape of prisoners in Kuje, Koton Karfe and Nsukka prisons.
    The CGP promised to continue to support field officers in the onerous task of securing prisoners in safe and humane.
    He also assured that reformation and rehabilitation of inmates will be pursued with the required vigour in order to stem the vicious circle of repeat offences among ex-convicts.

    Abakaliki prison was built in 1946 with an installed capacity of 387 inmates but as at Thursday 18th August 2016, the prison had a population of 920 prisoners out of which 811 are awaiting trial Prisoners.

    The ring leader of the jailbreak had spent about nine years awaiting trial.

  • NGO donates mattresses to prison inmates

    NGO donates mattresses to prison inmates

    Trustees of the African Ultimate Human Development Trust, a non-governmental and non-profit organisation, paid a visit to the inmates of the Kirikiri Maximum Security Prison, Apapa Lagos.

    The trustees, led by Chief Seun Alli (President) and Chief Adesina Alli (Vice-President) included Sir Festus Olu Coker (Treasurer), Mrs. Taiwo Akinsiku (Secretary), Mr. Feyisayo Alli (PRO) and Mr. Femi Omoniyi (Legal Adviser). They donated a large number of mattresses and blankets for the comfort of the inmates.

    In his appreciation speech, Mr. Seye Oduntan, the Deputy Comptroller of Prisons in charge of Kirikiri Maximum Security Prison, referred to the gifts as an answered prayer. He remarked that it was as if the prison’s authority requested the items from the visitors. He called on all good- spirited individuals and organisations to donate materials for skill acquisition and books for the prison’s library as some inmates are undergraduates of the National Open University of Nigeria (NOUN).

    Mr Oduntan also said the facility was in dire need of functional vehicles to convey the inmates to and from various courts within Lagos State for quick dispensation of justice. He appealed to the public to assist the government.

  • Three drug suspects remanded in prison

    Three drug suspects remanded in prison

    Justice Babs Kuewumi of the Federal High Court in Lagos yesterday remanded Emeka Paul Ezeanya, 56, and two others in prison for alleged cocaine and heroin trafficking.

    The others are Edwin Obi and Rashidat Olanike AbdulRasheed.

    Ezeanya is standing trial for alleged of cocaine trafficking, Obi is accused of heroin trafficking and AbdulRasheed is said to have smuggling cocaine and heroin.

    The charges were preferred against them by the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA).

    The prosecutor, Mr Austin Nwagu, informed said Ezeanya was arrested by the NDLEA after he was found with 1.47 kilogrammes of cocaine at the Murtala Muhammad International Airport in Ikeja, Lagos.He said the defendant was a passenger on a plane from Brazil to Dubai, United Arab Emirates (UAE), which made an emergency landing in Ikeja.

    Mrs. Juliana Emabo who is prosecuting Obi alleged that he was arrested with 1.575 kilogrammes of heroin, at the Murtala Muhammad International Airport, last May 3, on his arrival from Dar es Salaam in Tanzania.

    AbdulRasheed, her prosecutor, Mr Abu Ibrahim said, was arrested at the same airport, last May 18, with 970 grammes of heroin, and 155 grammes of cocaine, during an outward clearance of passengers on an Ethiopian Airline Flight to Guangzhou, China, through Addis-Ababa.

    The defendants denied the charge.

    Justice Kuewumi ordered them remanded in prison after rejecting their oral bail applications.

    Ezeanya will be in custody till September 29; Obi and AbdulRaheed were remanded till September 28 and October 19.

  • Edo: Man remanded for defiling minor

    Edo: Man remanded for defiling minor

    A 22-years-old man, Osamudiamen Sylvester, has been remanded to prison custody for allegedly defiling a 10-year-old girl.

    Osamudiamen was remanded by an Oredo Magistrates Court sitting in Benin City.

    State Prosecuting Counsel, Mrs Osasu Ewemade, told the court that the accused allegedly had carnal knowledge of the teenager on July 3, at No. 1 Ekhator Street, Off Siluko Road in Benin.

    The accused pleaded not guilty of the one count charge preferred against him.

    Presiding Chief Magistrates, Mrs Igho Braimoh, in her ruling said application for bail would be consider in the course of trial.

    Braimoh remanded the accused to Oko prison and adjourned the case till July 20, for hearing.