Tag: UNIBEN

  • UNIBEN student’s family challenge police for evidence

    As the family of the late Ibrahim Momodu awaits the Edo State Directorate of Public Prosecution report, it challenged the police to tell Nigerians where the three shots to the heart shown by the autopsy report were fired.

    The late Momodu, a student of the University of Benin (UNIBEN) was allegedly killed on May 28 by the Divisional Police Officer (DPO) of Ogida Police Station, Mrs. Carol Afegbai.

    The family’s counsel, Jefferson Uwoghiren, said a team, which includes the police, visited the crime scene on Siluko Road, Benin, and no trace of blood was found there.

    Uwoghiren said the family has evidence to prove that the late Momodu was shot when he posed no threat to the police.

    He said: “We hold that brutality and deadly use of excessive force against an unarmed and non-dangerous person is wrong. The summarily execution of suspects frustrates the interests of society in the judicial determination of guilt and punishment.

    “The autopsy report said ‘three bullet marks were seen on mid portion, close to each other with a distance of about 0.5cm apart. The marks were seen on the back and front with the entry point at the back and the exit at the front. The heart was lacerated (torn) into shreds and devoid of blood’.

    “Arising thereof, we restate our demand for the arrest and prosecution of all the police officers who participated in the killing because justice delayed is justice denied.”

     

  • Four UNIBEN students killed in cult clash

    Four students of the University of Benin have been reportedly killed in a renewed cult war between two rival cult groups.

    It could not be ascertained what led to the recent killings.

    Sources said two were killed at Osasogie Street close to the university main campus at Ugbowo along the Benin-Lagos Express Road.

    The source said several shots were fired in other areas around the university including the staff quarters.

    Apparently in a reprisal attack, another two students were shot inside the university campus where students have queued for biometric registration at the University Sports Complex.

    One of the victims, who is a 200-level Mathematics student and simply identified as Snazzy, was shot in the neck.

    The attackers were said to have dropped the gun and escaped in the ensuing stampede.

    The identity of the other student could not be ascertained as at press time.

    Snazzy was rushed to the University of Benin where doctors battled to save his life to no avail.

    The Public Relations Officer of the university, Harris Osarenren, did not pick calls made to his cell phone for comments.

     

  • Pictures of slain UNIBEN student released

    •Govt stops panel of enquiry

    Pictures of Ibrahim Momodu’s last moments with the police were yesterday made public.

    The late Momodu was a final year student of the University of Benin (UNIBEN), who was killed by policemen on May 27.

    In the picture reportedly taken by policemen at the scene of the killing, there was no bloodstain on the ground, an indication that the late Momodu was alive when he was demobilised.

    He was reportedly shot by the Divisional Police Officer of Ogbai Police Station, Mrs Carol Afegbai and was buried at the 3rd cemetery.

    His body was exhumed for post-mortem examination and it was discovered that Momodu was shot thrice from the back.

    This was against Mrs. Afegbai’s initial claim that Ibrahim was shot in the legs and died on the way to the hospital.

    The family’s lawyer, Jefferson Uwoghiren, said some policemen and residents have volunteered to talk about what happened that night, including police activities in the area.

    He said it was wrong for the police to send the case to the Department of Public Prosecution for legal advice without waiting for autopsy report or conducting proper investigation.

    A video that went viral on the internet also showed Mrs. Afegbai watching a suspect bleed to death on the street.

    The suspect was saying he was innocent but a gun and two bullets allegedly recovered from him were placed on the ground.

    Afegbai later put them into her handbag.

    Governor Adams Oshiomhole has halted the setting up of a judicial panel of enquiry.

    Oshiomhole, in a statement by his Chief Press Secretary, Peter Okhiria, said his decision was based on police submission of the case file to the DPP.

    He said it would amount to duplication of efforts since the Director of Public Prosecutions is a government official in the Ministry of Justice.

    “Government is therefore of the view that it is sufficient at this point to wait for the outcome of the investigation and advice of the Director of Public Prosecutions before any other step is taken,” the statement said.

     

  • Killing of UNIBEN student: Police sing discordant tunes

    Killing of UNIBEN student: Police sing discordant tunes

    There appeared to be no end to the confusion trailing the killing of a final year student of the University of Benin, Ibrahim Momodu by a Chief Superintendent of Police (CSP), Carol Afegbai following several versions given by the police.

    Afegbai and her team on patrol on the night that they accosted Ibrahim are presently the only witnesses to what actually transpired before the killing.

    The alleged accomplice of Ibrahim who was carrying Ibrahim on a motorcycle is yet to be seen.

    What sparked off the confusion was the initial report by the police to a local television station that Ibrahim was a commercial bus driver terrorising residents in Textile Mill Road and its environs.

    Mother of Ibrahim, Osas Momodu said police gave her two different versions of the incident.

    She said the police had told her that her son was caught in a robbery scene and was killed in a shootout while another version had it that the son snatched a bag and ran into a team of policemen on patrol that shot him.

    She said: “The police referred to my son as a commercial bus driver while my son cannot even drive a car. The motorcycle which my son boarded was impounded while the whereabouts of the motorcyclist remain unknown.”

    “I met a policeman when they said the PRO was not around. He called my son a thief. He said my son was killed at a robbery scene. He said my son snatched a bag while on a motorcycle and they ran into a team of policemen and they opened fire. He said the okada rider escaped with bullet wounds while my son was killed. I said okay, that vengeance was God’s. I demanded for the corpse, but they said he has been buried.”

    The police, in its first official statement, said Ibrahim was killed in self-defence.

    According to the statement, “Operatives at Ogida Division, led by the DPO, while on a routine patrol within the area intercepted a cyclist and another with an unregistered motorcycle at Obayuwana junction in Siluko Road.”

    “The suspect immediately brought out a Russian made cut-to-size double barrel gun but policemen, noticing his action, responded swiftly and shot at the suspect later known to be Ibrahim Momodu who died on his way to the hospital.”

    Police spokesman, DSP Moses Eguavoen, in a statement listed items found in the bag of the suspect to include eight live catridges, two handsets and one unregistered red Qlink motor cycle.

    The killer DPO, in an interaction with protesters said she shot Ibrahim in the leg and that he died on the way to hospital.

    She displayed items recovered from Ibrahim on her facebook page and posted the following comments: “Does these portray the image of a student? Are guns and riding of unregistered motor cycles at 22:30HRS, attempting to shot a policeman a new syllabus for university students? Let’s face reality and tell our self the truth, no sane human being takes pleasure in taking the life of an innocent citizen thanks”.

    State Police Commissioner, Adebanjo Folusho, at a press briefing yesterday, said the police would not accept any killing, except through judicial pronouncement and circumstances contained in the Force-order 237.

    Adebanjo said the responsibility of the police at the moment was to establish fact with an objective mind as contained it its rules of engagement.

    He added that it was too early to dismiss claims of either the police or the bereaved family.

    The police boss said the file has been sent to the DPP for legal advice.

  • Row over UNIBEN student’s death

    Row over UNIBEN student’s death

    The death of a final year student of the University of Benin (UNIBEN), Ibrahim Momodu, has sparked a row. The police said he was a robber, but his family disagrees, saying the deceased was a victim of extra-judicial killing. GILBERT ALASA (400-Level Foreign Languages) and LEONARD KOLAWOLE (300-Level Electrical and Electronics Engineering) report.

    The downpour that day in Benin City, the Edo State capital, could not stop the enraged students. They could not even be deterred by the acrid smell of the canisters of tear gas fired by the police. The demonstrators moved round the ancient city, chanting solidarity songs in a synchronised voice: “We want justice for Ibrahim Momodu”.

    The University of Benin (UNIBEN) students took to the streets on Monday to protest the alleged killing of Ibrahim by Mrs Carol Afegbua, a Chief Suprintendent of Police (CSP) and the Divisional Police Officer (DPO) of Ogida Police Station, Benin.

    The deceased was a final year student of Science Laboratory Technology. The circumstances surrounding his death appear hazy. Many are asking how he died.

    Ibrahim was allegedly killed by the police led by CSP Afegbua on Monday, May 27 on his way back from where he was undergoing his Industrial Attachment. His remains were allegedly hurriedly buried in a shallow grave at Third Cemetery, Benin by policemen, who approached Egor Local Government Area for permission to do so.

    Maureen Eweka, his girlfriend, said the deceased spoke with her on the phone at 8pm that fateful day. “He told me that he was riding on a bike and that he would be with me shortly. A few minutes later, sounds of gunshot rent the air. I called him immediately to know where he was but I could not get through to him again. His phone rang endlessly.”

    When the victim’s family visited the Ogida Police Station last Sunday, the police, allegedly described the late Ibrahim as one of the robbers that specialised in using motorcycles to rob Ogida residents.

    Another twist was added to the incident when the Edo State Broadcasting Service (EBS), on its Crime Watch programme, portrayed the late Ibrahim as a taxi driver and robber, who was killed on a robbery scene.

    A member of the family, who spoke to our correspondents, said the police were exploring all avenues to cover up their crime. He said the victim could not ride a motorcycle nor could he drive a car.

    Maimuna, the younger sister of the deceased, told our correspondents: “I was in Abraka, Delta State on May 29 when my mother called that my brother had been missing for two days. I know my brother never slept outside. So, I knew something was amiss. I called his number and a policeman picked up the phone. I requested to speak with my brother. But he said my brother was involved in a gun duel with the police around our house. Later, we learnt that he had been killed and buried by the policemen.”

    Rebecca Idehen, the deceased’s aunt, told our correspondents that CSP Afegbua confirmed to her that the late Ibrahim was arrested on a bike around 8pm with a gun at the Textile Mill Junction and killed during a struggle with the policemen that were trying to effect his arrest.

    Idehen said: “Mrs Carol told me that she shot the boy in the leg so as not to pose security threat to her men. We later discovered that Ibrahim bled to death before getting to the station, which is why they went to bury him immediately.”

    CSP Afegbua defended her action when she wrote on her Facebook page: “Does this portray the image of a student…guns and riding of an unregistered motorcycle at 22:30hrs attempting to shoot a policeman, a new syllabus for university students? Let’s face reality and tell ourselves the truth, no sane human being takes pleasure in taking the life of an innocent citizen.”

    Also, a statement by the Police Public Relations Officer (PPRO), Moses Eguavoen, a Deputy Superintendent (DSP), said: “On May 27, 2013 about 8:20pm, operatives at Ogida Division led by the DPO while on routine patrol within the area intercepted a cyclist and another with an unregistered motorcycle at Obayuwana Junction on Siluko Road, Benin City.

    “The suspect immediately brought out a Russian made cut-to-size double barrel gun, but policemen, noticing his action, responded swiftly and shot the suspect later known to be Ibrahim Momodu who died on his way to the hospital.’’

    He added that eight live cartridges, one unregistered red Qlink motorcycle, two mobile phones and a bag containing the firearm were recovered from the suspects.

    CAMPUSLIFE learnt that the remains of the student were buried on May 28 at Third Cemetery after a “permission document” was obtained from the Egor Local Government Area. But when our correspondent visited the Egor Local Government Secretariat on Tuesday, none of the council officials was willing to comment.

    But Kadiri Momodu, a cousin of the deceased, told our correspondents that the late Ibrahim could not drive his mother’s car not to talk of driving a cab. “So, we wonder how he became a taxi driver overnight. We are asking the Edo State government, the Commissioner of Police, the Commissioner for Justice and well-meaning Nigerians to help us. This is another extra-judicial killing by the police,” he said.

    Idehen said: “Ibrahim was neither a taxi driver nor a motorcycle rider. He was on industrial attachment at a pharmaceutical firm on Murtala Mohammed Way in Benin. My brother is not an armed robber. He had never stolen anything before. I know he didn’t die well. I can see him weeping wherever he is now. Nigerians must help us to demand justice for this innocent boy.’’

    Students disrupted activities in Benin during the protest that started at the Akenzua Cultural Centre. The demonstration was led by the president of the UNIBEN Students’ Union Government (SUG), Osifo Osasere.

    Osifo said the protest became necessary given the role the police played in the “extra-judicial” killing of the student. He told the students: “As fellow students, we are aggrieved by the barbaric act of the DPO. We cannot fold our arms and allow some narrow-minded persons to destroy the future of our generation. We will continue to rise against all oppressors of students.”

    The protesters moved to the Edo State Government House to register their grievances. Addressing the students, the Deputy Chief of Staff to Governor Adams Oshiomhole, Stephen Idehenre, urged them to be peaceful and conduct themselves responsibly. He said: “The government is not happy with this situation and we will ensure a proper and thorough investigation. We are not happy about it. I want to assure you that the governor is aware of this incident and he has since swung into action.”

    The Commissioner of Police, Folusho Adebanjo, said he would not address the aggrieved students because of their rowdiness. He requested that the students appoint delegates to meet with him. Swiftly, the protesters rejected his offer and continued to chant anti-police songs, such as: “CSP Carol is a ritualist’’; “Killer police must be brought to book”, among others.

    In a telephone interview with our correspondents, the UNIBEN Public Relations Officer (PRO), Mr H.O. Osarenren, described the incident as unfortunate, adding that the university would await the police investigations before taking a stand.

    Osama Adodo, 500-Level Science Laboratory Technology and the deceased’s class representative, described the late Ibrahim as easygoing. He said: “Ibrahim was a hardworking student. He related with everyone and he was widely admired for his neatness.”

    The Commissioner for Justice, Henry Idahangbo, urged the bereaved family to remain calm, saying the government would investigate the matter.

  • Police: UNIBEN student killed in self defence

    •Govt to set up judicial panel
    •Body to be exhumed

    The police in Edo State have said a 500-level student of the University of Benin (UNIBEN), Ibrahim Momodu, was killed in self-defence.

    Ibrahim, a student of the Department of Laboratory Science, was allegedly shot on May 27 by a team of policemen led by the Divisional Police Officer (DPO) of Ogida Division, Mrs. Carol Afegbua. His body was buried in suspicious circumstances.

    His relatives were not aware of his death until two days later.

    The late Momodu’s mother, Mrs. Osas Momodu, has petitioned the Inspector-General of Police, Mohammed Abubakar.

    Students and members of civil society organisations marched on the streets of Benin City on Monday, protesting the “extra-judicial killing”.

    Police spokesman Moses Eguavoen said the late Momodu was shot while attempting to bring out a Russian cut-to-size double barrel gun.

    His statement reads: “Operatives at Ogida Division led by the Divisional Police Officer (DPO) on a routine patrol within the area intercepted a cyclist and another with an unregistered motorcycle at Obayuwana junction on Siluko Road.

    “The suspect brought out a Russian cut-to-size double barrel gun but policemen noticing his action responded swiftly and shot at the suspect, later known to be Ibrahim Momodu, who died on his way to the hospital.”

    Eguavoen listed items allegedly found in the bag of the suspect as eight live catridges, two phones and one unregistered red Qlink motor cycle.

    He said efforts were on to arrest the other fleeing suspects.

    Governor Adams Oshiomhole has promised to set up a judicial commission of inquiry on the incident.

    Oshiomhole said the government would do everything possible to unravel the circumstances leading to the killing of Ibrahim.

    He spoke when members of civil society groups, students, family members and the legal team took a protest letter to his office yesterday.

    The governor said the body would be exhumed to determine the possible cause of death.

    He condoled with the family, assuring that the government would not allow any unlawful killings in the state.

    The family’s lawyer, Jefferson Uwoghiren, in the letter, said the body was hurriedly buried by the police “to obscure evidence of the illegal killing.”

  • DPO kills, buries UNIBEN student

    DPO kills, buries UNIBEN student

    Vehicular movement was yesterday paralyzed in parts of Benin City, the Edo State Capital, as Students mainly from the University of Benin, staged a protest over the alleged shooting to death of a 500 level, 22 year Old student, Momodu Ibrahim, of the Faculty Laboratory Science.

    The students dressed in black attire marched through the streets of Benin calling for the immediate arrest and prosecution of the Divisional Police Officer, Carol Afegbua in charged of Ogida Police station over her alleged complicity in the murder of Momodu.

    Late Momodu who was the only male child of his parents was said to have been shot a stone throw from his family house located at No 1, Igbobawaye Street off Siluko road by Textile mill junction.

    Addressing newsmen at the Nigeria Union of Journalists,( NUJ), secretariat, the immediate sister of the deceased, Ebohon Rebecca Egbe while calling for Justice gave an account of how the life of his brother was cut shot by the bullet of the Divisional Police Officer in-charge of Ogida.

    “ I was in my office in Port- Harcourt when I received a call from Benin from a cousin of mine who is a Police officer that I should take heart that we lost Ibrahim my younger brother. I called my mother and she said they have been looking for him in last two days, normally it is after 48 hours that you report such thing to the Police.

    So, She went to the Police on Wednesday, 29th May 2013, only to be told that he has been killed by Carol Afegbua, the DPO of Ogida Police station and was buried the next day without the family knowing. His cell-phone which was with the Police rang all through as we are trying to locate his whereabouts until the Police finally picked the call and asked my mother to come to the police station. When the DPO was confronted and asked why his men shot my brother she explained they didn’t know his identity because his men asked him to stop and he refused. she also alleged that he was carrying a gun and wanted to shoot at his men on patrol before his men shoot at him in self defense”

    The family according to the sister of the slain student was informed that the body of late Momodu had been buried at a public Cemetery in Egor local Government Area of the State.

    Several calls by our correspondent to the Commissioner of Police, Folusho Adebanjo, and the Police Public Relation officer, ASP Charles Eguavoen, were unanswered at the time of filing this report

  • 2face thrills UNIBEN students

    Crowd of students of the University of Benin (UNIBEN) were entertained when 2face, a Hip-hop artiste, stormed the campus as part of the his Campus Connect to universities across the country.

    2face, whose real name is Innocent Idibia, stormed the Sport Complex of the university with a lineup of artistes including Sound Sultan, Crystal, Sasha P, Seyi Shey, Solod Star and EFA.

    The show, which started around 2:45pm, featured dance competition and performances by local artistes, who are students in the university.

    The venue of the show was filled to the brim as 2face doled out songs to the revellers. Students that attended the show described it as inspiring, confessing that the show would be an unforgettable experience for them.

     

  • UNIBEN Pro-Chancellor warns against corruption

    UNIBEN Pro-Chancellor warns against corruption

    The Pro-Chancellor and Chairman of Council, University of Benin, Senator Effiong Bob has warned members of the council and the university authority to shun corruption

    Those who have come to the university ostensibly for material profit, will not succeed, Bob said.

    In his inaugural speech with the authority of Uniben which was made availably to reporters in Abuja, Bob vowed to reposition the institution and ensure that academic excellence is sustained.

    To make his vision a reality, he said everyone must put aside individual differences and embrace the common goal which is that of changing what should be changed and initiating fresh moves that will ensure that this university stands out among its contemporaries.

    His words: “Let me caution that any of us who has come here based on what material profit this appointment and or this university will offer him or her, is certainly in the wrong place. I want us to reflect on the Bangkok Declaration of World University President’s Summit of 2006; which demands that: ‘Universities must strive to be beyond politics and business interests, and serve their societies and communities by providing a voice and space in which to cultivate rational, mutual and moderate dialogues that will shape intellectual, cultural and economic development on a shared basis within and across boundaries and nations.”

    “That is our mission. We are here to render service to this academic community and this country. In rendering this service, we may sometimes be misunderstood or criticised, we may even be condemned and accused by those with very little knowledge of what our statutory functions are. That should not bother us. As long as we work as a team; with a common goal, and a clear conscience, at the end, we will be justified. We must above all be determined to take the academic rating of this university higher than where it is now. Let it be that at the end of our stay as Council, the university, the community and the government that appointed us will greatly miss us.

    He said his appointment marked the beginning of a long fruitful friendship that will outlive this assignment. He, therefore, called on his fellow council members to team up with his vision and exhibit openness so that they can ‘take the glory when we succeed and take the blame if we fail.’

     

  • UNIBEN, UI to begin courses in corruption studies

    University of Ibadan and the University of Benin have indicated interest in running modules and courses on Corruption Studies, according to the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC).

    The chairman of the commission, Mr. Ekpo Nta, who disclosed this in Calabar, said once the curriculum is developed and approved, resources and lecturers drawn from Nigeria and international organisations would be readily available to teach the course.

    He noted that it had become necessary to introduce such courses on ethics and corruption because Nigerians have a poor knowledge of the consequence of corruption, hence the need to teach it in schools.

    “It is a known fact that corruption is our headache. We cannot fold our hands and let this vice eat deeper into our social fabric. We can fight it.

    “Corruption can be eradicated. Once corruption becomes a course of study in our tertiary institutions, our children, our future leaders, would know how to identify and tackle the malaise,” he said.

    Mr. Nta spoke in an interview shortly after the closing ceremony of a 10-week training programme on Corruption Risk Assessment.

    Asked to name the four governors that his commission was investigating, he said the commission does not thrive in sensationalism through premature disclosure of names since the investigations were based on allegations.

    On the challenges in fighting corruption in Nigeria, Mr. Nta mentioned the inability by most Nigerians to speak out as the main challenge.

    “Nigerians should not whip up ethnic, political and religious sentiments once a person close to them is arrested for corruption.

    “They should agree that corruption is evil and therefore rise up against the vice irrespective of ethnic, religious or political affiliations.”