Tag: SARS

  • Suspected SARS officer ‘kills’ LASTMA official

    A suspected officer of the Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS) has allegedly killed an official of the Lagos State Traffic Management Authority (LASTMA).

    The incident occurred yesterday at Iyana-Ipaja roundabout around 6pm.

    The LASTMA official, identified as Rotimi Adeyemo, was said to have flagged him down for traffic issue.

    The officer, it was learnt, got down and warned the traffic official never to stop him again, saying he didn’t have a right to do so.

    During an argument, the angry officer returned to his car, brought out a gun and shot the traffic official at close range.

    People ran for safety after hearing the gunshot.

    The officer, whose identity is yet to be ascertained, was said to have been arrested.

    Eyewitnesses said the officer drove a Sport Utility Vehicle (SUV).

    Read also: SARS reform public hearing ends in Lagos

    “The traffic official, Adeyemo, was controlling traffic at Iyana-Ipaja when he asked the SARS officer to stop so that motorists from Agege could start moving. The man refused to stop and he (Adeyemo) moved away so that he could pass motorists from Agege. The next thing was that the officer brought out his gun and shot him at close range,” a source said.

    It was gathered that the suspected killer was first taken Moshalashi Police Station on Ipaja Road before being transferred to the State Command in Ikeja, GRA.

    The traffic official was rushed to the General Hospital in Ifako-Ijaiye where he was confirmed dead.

    His remains have been deposited in a mortuary in Yaba, Lagos Mainland.

    LASTMA spokesman Mahmud Hassan confirmed the incident.

    He said investigation was on.

     

  • SARS officer shoots LASTMA official dead

    A suspected officer of the Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS) has allegedly shot official of the Lagos State Traffic Management Authority (LASTMA) dead.
    The incident occurred on Wednesday at Iyana-Ipaja round about around 6pm.
    The LASTMA official was said to have flagged him down for traffic issue.
    The officer, it was learnt, got down and warned the traffic official never to stop him again, adding that he didn’t have right to do so.
    In the course of exchanging hot words, the angry officer returned to his car, brought out a gun and shot the traffic official.
    Many ran for safety after hearing the sound of the gun.
    The officer, who’s identity is yet to be ascertained, was said to have been arrested.

    Read also: SARS reform public hearing ends in Lagos

    Eyewitnesses said the officer drove a Sport Utility Vehicle (SUV).
    The alleged killer was first taken Moshalashi Police Station along Ipaja Road before being transfered to State Command in Ikeja GRA.
    The traffic official was rushed to Ifako-Ijaiye General Hospital, where he was confirm dead.
    His remains have been deposited in a mortuary in Yaba, Lagos Mainland.
    LASTMA Public Relations Officer Mahmud Hassan confirmed the incident.
    Hassan said investigation is ongoing and will get on the identity of both the dead traffic official and the officer that shot him.
  • ‘I was tortured by SARS’, Evans tells court

    Kidnap kingpin, Chukwudumeme Onwuamadike alias Evans on Friday narrated to an Ikeja high court how he was allegedly tortured by members of Inspector General of Police (IGP) Intelligence Response Team and the Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS).

    Evans narrated his experience during the continuation of a trial-within-trial at an Ikeja High Court where he is facing trial on a two-count charge conspiracy and  kidnapping.

    He is trial before Justice Hakeem Oshodi alongside five other members of his gang.

    Before Evans’ testimony a five minute 33-second video  recording was played in the courtroom.

    The video recording, showed Inspector Idowu Haruna, a member of the IGP Intelligence Response Team sitting beside Evans cautioning him and taking his statement.

    Evans defence counsel, Mr Olanrewaju Ajanaku,  however disputed the validity of the recording by claiming it was heavily edited.

    Evans while being led in evidence by Ajanaku, described himself as a businessman dealing in haulage and ornaments and resident at No. 3, Fred Soyebode Street,  Magodo Lagos.

    In vivid detail,  Evans described how he was tortured by police officers after his arrest.

    “Insp Idowu Haruna (member of IGP Intelligence Response Team)  took me to Abuja and brought me back to Lagos where I was at the Inspector General (IG) Guest House at Obalende,  Lagos.

    “Sunny the 2 I/C (second in command) to Abba Kyari,  Mr Christian Ugu,  Mr Phillip and other police officers working with them were there.

    “Idowu Haruna brought about 25 sheets of paper and asked me to sign,  that day, my mind told me not to sign because it might be my death warrant.

    “Mr Phillip put his hand in his pocket and brought out a brown hospital card,  he showed it to me and told me to sign it while saying that do you think that we are joking here, he said if anything happens to me here this card covers everything.

    “Mr Phillip said the police will not be held responsible and before I knew Mr Christian slapped me and that was how they started beating me,” Evans told the court.

    The alleged kidnap kingpin gave more details to the court how the police officers tortured him and made him witness executions in a bid to get him to admit to his crimes.

    He said: “Mr Christian Ugu was smoking,  he quenched the cigarette on my hand, My Lord look at my head where they beat me,  My Lord look at my hand.

    “They took me to the backyard of the I. G guesthouse, I sustained injuries on my head and body and Mr Phillip asked the policemen to walk on me and when I started bleeding,  he said you think we are joking here.

    “At the backyard,  I saw some people that I was paraded with, they were wearing leg chains,  some of them had bullet wounds on their legs and Mr Phillip ordered Idowu Haruna to bring a big brown cellotape, handkerchief and polybags.

    “Idowu Haruna forced a handkerchief into the mouth of one of them,  he used the cellotape to tightly tape his mouth and face and put a polybag over his head and cellotaped it and used another poly bag and cellotaped it for the second time and they left the man on the ground.

    “The man on the ground was shaking,  he pissed (urinated) on his body,  he poo pooed (defecated) on his body and after a while he went quiet.

    “Idowu Haruna went to the man and stepped on his body and he was unresponsive and he told me can you see I have travelled him.”

    Evans told the court that fourpersons were executed in the same manner by the police officers in his presence.

    “I was brought before them and I started begging, asking them what do they want me to do and they told me to co-operate with them and I said okay that I will do anything they wanted me to do.

    “Phillip asked them to take me to the house and he asked if I knew the method of killing and I said no, they said that it is called ‘Saddam Hussein’.

    “He said that there is no way an autopsy can predict the cause of death of the five people they had just killed and that those people have travelled.”

    Evans said after witnessing the execution, the 25 sheets of paper were brought for him to sign by the police.

    He recalled  trembling with fear saying that Mr Sunny,  the second in command to Mr Abba Kyari the Head of the IGP Intelligence Response Team asked Inspector Haruna to offer him a can of cold Fanta.

    “When the Fanta was given to me,  I drank it and after a few minutes they brought the 25 sheets of paper for me and I signed them.

    “Some things were written on some of the sheets of paper while some were blank,  that was how I was forced to sign the confessional statements,” Evans said.

    On cross-examination by Ms Titilayo Shitta-Bey,  the Lagos State Director of Public Prosecution (DPP), Evans confirmed his name and the names of his parents and denied knowing the officers before his arrest.

    “I am 38-years-old,  I was born on April 29, 1980, my mother’s name is Mrs Chinwe Onwuamadike and my father is Mr Stephen Onwuamadike.

    “I did not know Inspector Haruna,  Abba Kyari before my arrest. I am the one in the video,  I was cautioned in the video but after the cautionary words,  I was forced to sign.

    “The story I told the court was never an afterthought,  SARS killed more than 30 people in my presence,  the killings took place at the IG guesthouse in Ikoyi.

    “On the day I was arrested I was arrested in my house and I was taken to Ikeja SARS Station,  journalists were there,  they had beaten the hell out of me in my house,  I was interviewed by the journalists on Sunday, a day after I was arrested on Saturday.

    “When I was taken to the Station, there was a field, I was in a car while I was waiting for Abba Kyari to come.

    “Abba Kyari when he came, told me to beg for forgiveness in my interview with journalists  and also to inform the world I had cancer which I don’t have. The police killed one Felix Chinemeri in my presence,”  he said.

    While being re-examined by Ajanaku,  his defense counsel,  Evans said that he had not spoken to journalists before he made his alleged confessional statement to the police.

    Earlier during proceedings, Insp Idowu Haruna was cross-examined by Ajanaku.
    He told the court it took more than an hour to obtain Evans’ statement.

    Haruna denied that Evans changed his clothes because of blood stains from torture before the video of Evans giving his confessional statement was made.

    He denied editing the five minute and 33- second video of Evans  giving his statement to the police.

    “I never threatened to kill the first  defendant (Evans) and I never created fear in him by killing people in his presence,” Haruna said.

    Evans is standing trial alongside Uche Amadi, Ogechi Uchechukwu, Chilaka Ifeanyi, Okwuchukwu Nwachukwu and Victor Aduba.

    They were arraigned on August  30, 2017 on two counts of conspiracy.
    Evans and  co-defendants  pleaded not guilty to the charges preferred against them by the state.

    Justice Hakeem Oshodi adjourned the case until November 23 for continuation of defence in the trial-within-trial

  • SARS Reforms panel to hear 27 complaints, begins sitting

    The Presidential Panel on the Special Anti- Robbery Squad (SARS) Reforms for the North Central Zone has received 27 complaints and will hold public sitting on the complaints from Oct. 22 to Oct. 25.

    The Executive Secretary of the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC), Mr Tony Ojukwu, said this on Monday in Abuja in his welcome remarks at the commencement of the panel’s public sitting.

    According to Ojukwu, the essence is “to increase access to the services of the commission.

    “And to seek accountability where there is evidence to indicate that officers or officials of SARS have been involved in acts amounting to human rights violation in the course of carrying out their law enforcement duties.

    “Also, to provide opportunities for fair hearing to both complainants and alleged violators and to main stream human rights norms and tenets into the operations and administration of SARS in line with global best practices.’’

    The Vice President, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo had, in August, requested the NHRC to constitute the panel to hear and investigate complaints against SARS and to make recommendations.

    Ojukwu said that the specific terms of reference of the panel are: “To investigate the veracity of allegations of human rights abuses and abuse of power made against SARS within the last two years.

    “To independently review and render advice on any value added by SARS, from a public safety and security perspective, and make recommendations to government.’’

    In his goodwill message, DSP Benjamin Okolo, representing the Inspector General of Police Ibrahim Idris, said that the Police would co-operate with the panel and abide by the outcome.

    “We have already started some reforms and we believe that the outcome of this panel will equally enhance what we are doing.’’

    Okolo assured the panel that nobody would be victimised, intimidated or harassed for airing their views or submitting complaints.

    For his part, Mr Idris Bawa of the Nigeria Policing Program (NPP) said the public hearing would add value to reforms in the Police Force.

    In his keynote address, Mr Akingbolahan Adeniran from the Presidency said that the public hearing would enhance all aspects of Community policing for better performance.

    According to him, the aim is to adequately regulate activities of the police and efficiently direct intelligence gathering.

    “We expect the police to appear more as an intelligent driven organisation and work has already started in this area; very soon the police will be more proactive,’’ Adeniran said. (NAN)

  • Reps may summon IGP over detained lawmaker

    – threaten Court action

     

    Members of the House of Representatives were livid on Wednesday over the continued detention of a member, Abubakar Abdulahi Lado ( APC) Niger State.

    They urged the Police authorities to release the lawmaker within 12 hours or the Inspector General of Police, Ibrahim Idris will have to come to the Green Chamber to explain reasons for the incarceration of the lawmaker.

    Members of the House also agreed that since the collective privilege of the House had been infringed on by denying the Green Chamber of the services on the lawmaker, the House should go to court over the issue.

    The resolution of the House was sequel to a motion of urgent National Importance moved by a member, Toby Okechukwu ( APC Enugu) with the title: “Urgent release of Hon. Abubakar Abdulahi Lado representing Suleja Federal Constituency detained by SARS for the past 3 days.”

    While moving the motion the lawmaker said the House is aware of the detention of Hon. Lado by the Special Anti- Robbery Squad ( SARS).

    “The House is further aware of the continued detention for the past three days which action offends the Nigerian Constitution and amount to inhuman and degrading treatment .

    “The House is embarrassed that the intervention of the House leadership was rebuffed by the Nigerian Police ostensibly because it is only. The Governor of Niger state that can give instruction for his release .”

    He said the House was further briefed that the detention arose out of issues related to the APC Primaries which he (Lado) had ab initio notified the Police authorities of efforts to cause crisis by his opponents.

    “The House Is aware that the invitation of Hon. Lado was not through due process and therefore breaches the Legislative Powers & Privileges Act- which require notifying of presiding officer before the member is invited or arrested” he said.

    Read Also: PDP condemns APC’s virulent attacks on Atiku

    Members who spoke including the Deputy Speaker, Yussuff Lasun, Nnena Elendu-Ukejje, Betty Apiafi,Wale Raji, Segun Adekola, Sani Abdul, Albert Adeogun, all agreed that the police had breached the privileges of all, members by the action especially as it was not related to a criminal act.

    They wondered what could be happening to ordinary Nigerians if a lawmaker could be so treated,and concluded that the arrest and detention was meant to keep the lawmaker from participating in the primaries in the state.

    The Majority leader, Femi Gbajabiamila noted that the issue was a fight between supporters of Lado and his opponents and wondered how it became a SARS issue.

    He said he was informed at the SARS office that only the Governor of Niger state can give instructions for the release of the lawmaker.

  • Police nabs fake SARS personnel, 21 others

    The FCT Police Command on Wednesday paraded one Tijani Omeka for allegedly impersonating SARS personnel.

    The Police said the suspect who is a taxi driver operate within Mararaba , Area 1 axis of Abuja and extorts money from his victims.

    On how he was caught, the Deputy Commissioner in charge of Criminal Intelligence and Investigation Department, DCP Salisu Gyadi-Gyadi said he was arrested after the police got a tip off from some of those he had defrauded.

    He said: “The Anti-One Chance Squad on the 11th September 2018 at about 1500hrs acting on a tip off arrested one Tijani Omeka a taxi driver who parades himself as an operative of the Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS).

    “The suspect who often poses as Corporal Tijani to defraud unsuspecting members of the public was arrested at Nyanya, Gwagwalape Phase 1 after a sting operation.

    “We recovered from him one black faz cap with the inscription SARS and a walkie-talkie.”

    On his part, Omeka said: “I found the walkie-talkie from SARS premises on the floor and the cap belongs to one of the Operatives.

    “The policemen are my friends and they usually use my service whenever they go on operation because I’m a taxi driver.

    “I travelled and the cap was with me for about three months because I was out of Abuja. I took my car for repairs with the intention of going to drop the cap and walkie-talkie after they fix my car but I was still at the mechanic when they arrested me.”

    Also paraded were a seven member gang of one-chance operators. They are; Michael Osamor, Obinna Nwovu, Julius Uche, Ike Ugwueke, Christian Nwite, Lucky Nwakona and Joy Hagba.

    Read Also; Police arrest Inspector found with beer bottle

    On how they were arrested, The Deputy Commissioner of Police said: “As part of the renewed commitment by the Command to rid FCT of the activities of one chance robbers, the Command newly created Anti One Chance Squad which is headed by a Chief Superintendent of Police.

    “They smashed three notorious one chance robbery gangs and recovered their operational vehicles.

    “The suspects were arrested on 6th and 7th September, 2018 at Akaraka Gosa and Nyanya axis. The exhibits recovered from them includes, one ash coloured Ford car with reg. no. EL 461 LSD, one blue Golf with reg. no. KUJ 367 TV, one Nissan Almera and some well-trimmed papers.

    Narrating his involvement, Michael Okafor said: “My work is not one chance work, it is open and close business and all we do is to pick pockets. Those who do one chance use weapons but I don’t use.

    “We usually carry unsuspecting passengers and we use the lady amongst us just to convince our would be victims that we are genuine.”

    The Police said the suspects will be arraigned in court upon the conclusion of investigation.

  • I-G orders SARS operatives to wear uniform for identification

    The Inspector-General of Police (I-G), Mr Ibrahim Idris, has ordered members of the Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS) to wear police uniforms with full identification, pending the launch of new FSARS uniform.

    The force Spokesman, Acting Deputy Commissioner of Police (DCP) Jimoh Moshood, said in a statement in Abuja on Friday that Idris gave the order at meeting with critical stakeholders.

    Moshood said that Idris was represented by the Deputy Inspector-General of police in Charge of Operations, Mr Habila Joshak.

    He said that the meeting was convened to brief the stakeholders on the progress made so far in the overhaul of the SARS now known as Federal SARS.

    The Police boss said that the overhaul of SARS was beyond rhetoric as strategic reforms were being implemented.

    He said that the FSARS operatives had been ordered to desist from attending to civil or commercial matters henceforth and focus strictly on armed robbery and kidnapping cases only.

    According to Moshood, the Commissioner of Police in charge of FSARS, Mr Habiru Gwandu, informed the meeting that a human rights desk had been created in the 36 states of the federation and FCT.

    He said that the desks would address cases of infractions against members of the public by FSARS personnel across the nation.

    Gwandu added that the Police had engaged the services of psychologists and counsellors in the ongoing screening of FSARS operatives.

    On his part, the DCP in charge of the I-G’s X-Squad, Amaechi Elumelu, said in the statement that the screening and mobilization of FSARS Operatives would not be business as usual again.

    He said that FSARS operatives would undergo through rigorous orientation including human rights training among other screening processes.

    Elumelu said that the I-G would soon unveil the Custody Records Management System.

    He explained that this system would contain the records of arrests, detentions and welfare details of suspects.

    The commissioner said that this system would discourage arbitrary arrest of people and ensure that suspects were charged to court within 24 hours, in compliance with the law.

    The Acting President Yemi Osinbajo on Aug. 14, directed the immediate overhaul of the SARS. NAN)

  • SARS or FSARS?

    What Nigerians want is wholesale reform

    THE #ENDSARS campaign that swept through the country most of last year appears to be yielding fruit, at last. Barely 24 hours after Acting President Yemi Osinbajo ordered the Inspector- General of Police (IGP) to reform the Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS) that several of its officers and men had been involved in brutalisation of hapless citizens over the years, the IGP rolled out new measures that he deemed would transform the squad.

    The 11-point agenda includes a change of name to Federal Anti-Robbery Squad (FSARS). The reorganisation will see the squad headed by a commissioner of police under the supervision of the deputy inspector-general in charge of operations. The arm of police is no longer empowered to detain, and is to report directly, in the states, to the commissioner in charge of the state command. Civil society groups are to partner with the police in putting a check on the squad’s possible excesses, while telephone numbers of those who could rein in the officers and men are published.

    These are laudable measures if they are carried out sincerely. We hope the Federal Government would not leave the supervision to the IGP’s X-Squad. The presidency should constantly take interest in its operations by putting in place a feedback mechanism from the general public.

    Training is a very important component of the reform. The training currently at the Police College in Lagos, and the Kano-based Police Academy is apparently inadequate. Collaboration with foreign police training institutions is urgently needed to check the spate of armed robbery and kidnapping in the country.

    We agree with Professor Osinbajo that basing investigation of crimes on the barbaric torturing of suspects is unacceptable in the 21st Century. The Nigeria Police Force has to step up its intelligence unit. Modern investigation and the consequent prosecution of suspects are, the world over, based on gathering of intelligence. To make a success of this, the police force must partner with the public. At the moment, the contention that “the police is your friend” is glib. Most Nigerians see the police as a relic of the colonial authorities.

    But it is not enough to blame SARS and the entire police force for the flaws. The men are exposed to danger without adequate protection and equipment. If the public perception is to change, relying on the military to arrest all forms of unrest must stop, and this can only be done when the reform is taken beyond the new name, uniform and kit. Taking the FSARS off the streets and elevating their operation beyond “stop and search” will necessitate adequate deployment of technology in all nooks and crannies of the country. It also entails collaboration with sister security agencies.

    It is gladdening that the reorganisation of SARS is being undertaken at a time the National Economic Council has decided to decentralise and reform the police force. We hope the appointment of the Inspector-General of Police as head of the panel saddled with the task will not stand in the way. As head of the force as constituted at the moment, the IGP is not in the best position to handle the assignment.

    Crimes generally, and armed robbery specifically, have turned Nigeria into the Hobbesian state of nature where life is short and brutish. They must be tackled headlong without subjecting Nigerians to sub-human treatment. SARS or FSARS, a change of name is too cosmetic to tame the monster that the anti-robbery squad has become. A wholesale reform is not what the IGP alone can come up with immediately. So, the Police Service Commission, Police Council and Ministry of Interior should be brought into designing a new body to combat the crimes.

     

  • Premium Times, SARS and rule of law

    LAST Tuesday, Acting President Yemi Osinbajo directed the Inspector General of Police (IGP), Ibrahim Idris, to overhaul the structure and operations of the Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS), a police unit unfortunately more famous for rights abuses than success in fighting robbery and kidnapping. Just one day after, Mr Idris announced a number of measures to restructure and refocus the anti-robbery squad. The measures were of course largely cosmetic, considering that they neither go deep enough nor offer fundamental understanding and revitalisation of the controversial squad. One proof that Mr Idris does not intend a fundamental reform of the squad is the arrest and detention of the Premium Times reporter, Samuel Ogundipe, by the police, with SARS deeply involved, for alleged offences unrelated to robbery and kidnapping. It was clear all along that the squad had achieved notoriety, and the police were content and frequently eager to deploy that fearsome notoriety for objectives that were in many respects unconstitutional and less than salutary and patriotic.

    Mr Ogundipe’s arrest came on the same day the acting president gave the directive on SARS. In a statement issued by his spokesman, Laolu Akande, Prof Osinbajo said: “Following persistent complaints and reports on the activities of the Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS) that border on allegations of human rights violations, Acting President Yemi Osinbajo, SAN, has directed the Inspector General of Police (IGP) to, with immediate effect, overhaul the management and activities of SARS and ensure that any unit that will emerge from the process, will be intelligence-driven and restricted to the prevention and detection of armed robbery and kidnapping, and apprehension of offenders linked to the stated offences, and nothing more. The acting president has also directed the IGP to ensure that all operatives in the emerging unit conduct their operations in strict adherence to the rule of law and with due regard to International human rights law and the constitutionally guaranteed rights of suspects. The operatives should also bear proper identification anytime they are on duty.”

    The directive is unambiguous. In fact, one of the sentences contained in the directive to the police is poignantly specific. It orders the reformed squad to restrict itself to the “prevention and detection of armed robbery and kidnapping, and apprehension of offenders linked to the stated offences, and nothing more.” Nothing in the allegations against Mr Ogundipe, not to talk of the charges filed against him in court, suggests robbery or kidnapping. Yet, SARS played a leading role in his distress. Indeed, many analysts who grudgingly welcomed the directive to reform and restructure the squad showed deep scepticism about both the capacity of the police leadership to carry out the ordered reforms and the willingness to remedy the damage the squad has done to policing in Nigeria. The sceptics were even more afraid that going by the appointments made into police leadership over the years, the law enforcement agency did not seem able to demonstrate the emotional and intellectual capacity to reform the entire Force, especially the squad they love to describe as dreaded.

    Less than 24 hours after the presidential directive to restructure and revitalise SARS, the police hierarchy immediately announced wide-ranging measures to demonstrate their compliance. They did not give themselves time to study the problems they were being asked to manage and reform, and they also took no time to empanel some of their best brains — surely they have them — to meet minds on the abuses Nigerians had complained about, and which the presidency latched onto to order fundamental remediation. Instead, more officiously than substantially, the police hastily centralised the operations of SARS under a commissioner of police answerable to the IGP in the mistaken belief that one of the squad’s weaknesses was the lack of high-level supervision. The police hierarchy then listed a number of measures that do nothing but tinker with the structure and operations of the squad along lines that had proved nugatory in the past years.

    The cosmetic police measures, more than anything else, indicate that it will be business as usual. The treatment meted out to Mr Ogundipe, the arbitrary freezing of his bank account, the hostility of the SARS operatives who interacted with the Premium Times editors, and the intimidation of the detainee and his media establishment all point to the fact that fundamentally nothing has changed or will change in the structure and operations of the police to elicit the new police envisioned by the acting president. The problems of the police are deeply fundamental, and involved the anomalous and inoperable political structure of the country itself. Neither the acting president nor the police boss has suggested in words or actions that they acknowledge this problem. Even as far as tinkering goes, the police, as currently constituted, are not properly managed, supervised and funded to deliver the change the country desires.

    The directive on SARS is unlikely to deliver more than a short-lived cosmetic change. Mr Idris cannot give what he does not have, and his men are too far gone to help him or help nudge the Force in the right direction. The police will continue to expose a few of the bad eggs in their midst, but they have proved incapable of asking themselves why the corruption and brutality in SARS and the wider police establishment subsist, or why these maladies have proved difficult to tame for so long. Even the presidency has been incompetent to ask itself why the police have been unamenable to change, why the military have nurtured a culture of brutality over the decades, as the 2015 Zaria killings illustrate, and why the Department of State Service (DSS), especially under its immediate past director-general, perpetrated appalling abuses right under their noses.

    This is, however, not to say that Premium Times could not have managed the story that pitched them against the police better. Publishing the bromide of the IGP’s official report barely a day after it was submitted to the acting president seems to be sailing near the wind. Premium Times could have paraphrased the outcome of the investigations, intentionally omit some of the details, and attribute items of the report to sources within or close to the police hierarchy. It is not clear whether it was altogether a wise idea to slam everything on their web site.

    Nevertheless, the media in Nigeria must be grateful that Premium Times baited the police and helped to expose their dilatoriness, not to say their incompetence and lack of professionalism. When the smoke of battle clears, the media are likely to embark on rigorous self-examination to help them determine whether in the circumstances and chronology of events surrounding the IGP’s interim report on the DSS invasion of the National Assembly, the news reports and journalistic investigations, complete with evidence of bromides of official letters, were well handled.

    Given their customary haughtiness and lack of vision, the police are unlikely to embark on that beneficial and extraordinary self-scrutiny.

    Even though Prof Osinbajo has understandably not taken far-reaching measures on SARS as an ailing subset of the police, he must be commended for broaching the topic and doing something about it, no matter how ephemeral, and regardless of the vacillations of the past. Given his law background, it is doubtful whether he does not appreciate that it will take more than a directive and a few suggestions to get the police performing its role in accordance with the rule of law and the constitution. He must know that very fundamental measures are required to birth a new and effective Police Force.

    The presidency of which he is a ranking member has done little to midwife the change required in that law enforcement sector. After all, the long-standing complaints against SARS and the campaigns of the #EndSARS warriors that lasted for many months did not receive any serious attention until early this week, probably against the run of play.

    Worse, who can forget that the police themselves feigned ignorance of the issues advocated by critics of SARS, even as they attempted to blackmail the public for demanding an end to the high-handedness and arbitrariness of the police and the anti-robbery squad? Hopefully both Prof Osinbajo’s directive and the desultory response of the IGP will constitute the first tentative steps in getting an elected government to respond appropriately and sensibly to the yearnings and aspirations of those who voted them into office.

  • Security expert hails IGP for SARS overhaul

    A security expert, Dr. Ona Ekhomu, has hailed Inspector-General of Police (IGP) Ibrahim Idris for the administrative and operational measures announced to overhaul the Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS).

    He said the action by the IGP showed that the government was responsive to the concerns and complaints of citizens.

    Ekhomu, the president of Association of Industrial Security and Safety Operators of Nigeria (AISSON), in a statement yesterday, said the new administrative measure, which centralised the SARS organisation in the office of the IGP, was a mistaken strategy, which would deepen lack of accountability of the unit.

    He said the problem with SARS was not the organisational structure, but their excessively violent behaviour, which involved brutality, torture, high-hardened extra-judicial murders and so on.

    The expert said it was a “big mistake” to relocate SARS from FCID to Operations Directorate.

    He said SARS, as a tactical/detective unit, naturally and operationally resided in the Investigations Directorate.

    Ekhomu added: “Reform must be aimed at improving process activities, service delivery, and quality of service, but reform should never be for its own sake.”

    He said the investigative strategy of the Police had been to cast SARS as the “bad cop”, which was designed to strike fear in the hearts of hardened criminals.