Despite the campaign of the
Inspector General of Police on decent policing in Nigeria, a rogue police squad
in Edo State is thwarting the efforts. Martins Ifijeh chronicles how the squad
serially brutalised a Professor of Law in Ambrose Alli University with
cutlasses, hammers and teargas for daring to ask questions
When the Dean, Department of
Law, Ambrose Alli University, Ekpoma, Professor Sunday Edeko woke up in the
morning of March 13, he did not envisage he would be serially brutalised for
over six hours like a common criminal and would end up in hospital bed to treat
the wounds and pain that came with such brutality.
He had left the house that
morning like every other civil servant, when he saw a young boy he identified
as a relation of the former Speaker, Edo State House of Assembly, Thomas
Okosun, in a parked police van, which made him slow down and asked the boy what
he was doing in the van.
Little did the Professor of
Law know that his decision to ask the boy question at all, would be all that
the rogue police squad, needed to use cutlasses, hammers, teargas, their boots,
blows and slaps on him, claiming they were directly from the Commissioner of
Police, Mr. Haliru Ugwandu’s office and acting on his command.
Narrating his ordeal to
THISDAY, Edeko said on that particular day, when he slowed down to ask the boy
what was the issue that he was put in the van, before the boy could reply, an
armed man who was not on police uniform told him to get away. “Without even
giving me time to move or offer an explanation, he used a hammer to hit my
right hand. That was their first assault against me. I was surprised why a
trained police officer would descend to such level of brutality against an
unarmed and peaceful individual. I managed to park the car some metres away and
alighted from the car. At that point, about five armed men who were not in
police uniform advanced towards me.
“I clearly introduced myself
as Prof. Sunday Edeko, the Dean of Faculty of Law, AAU, Ekpoma. All my attempts
to explain that I am a law-abiding community leader fell on deaf ears. They
started the second stage of their assault on me. They descended on me with
hammers, cutlasses, tear gas, hand and foot. They brutalised me and inflicted
injuries on my back, hand and leg.”
He said as soon as he left the
scene of the unprovoked attack, he drove straight to the police station to
report the matter, where a police officer was released to accompany him to the
scene.
“When we arrived there, the
attackers had gone. We went back to the police station and I sighted the men
who brutalised me in the special anti-cult unit office. I then drew the
attention of my police companion to them. They chased the police officer away
and descended on me with a higher level of brutality. They said they were
different from the “useless police officers in Ekpoma, and were only answerable
to the Commissioner of Police, Edo State, Mr. Haliru Ugwandu.
“They fell me, kicked me
around the floor in an atmosphere in which they used tear gas on my eyes,
slapped me with cutlasses very many times that I could not count. That was the
third stage of their assault. When my wife came, they threatened to arrest and
charge her with armed robbery, kidnapping and cultism, the crimes they accused
me of,” he said.
According to him, their fourth
stage of brutality started when they gave him a pen and paper to write a
statement. He said they compelled him to write even though he was in pains.
“They tore my first two statements because they said I should not write my name
as “Professor Sunday Edeko. They equally seized the third and fourth statements
because they were not written in the exact way they wanted.”
He said when the men could not
lay hold on a crime against him, they then started accusing him of cultism,
which him personally has always been against. Adding that throughout the period
they detained and tortured him, which was between 9:30a.m. to 3p.m., he made
uncountable number of appeals to them that he was a responsible Professor and
Dean of the Faculty of Law. “The more I introduced myself, the more they got
infuriated.
“They then later accused me of
an attempt to go and buy Indian hemp from a woman they also arrested. It was
even in the police station that I met the woman for the first time as I never
knew her before then. I have never smoked Indian hemp and I hope they will
agree for all of us to do examination to know who will test positive of Indian
hemp consumption.
“I never obstructed them since
all I asked one of the boys after they were already arrested was a simple “what
happened?” I have never insulted the police. In fact, I collaborated with them
in the past to play a better role in law enforcement. Even after they
brutalised me in town, I went to the police station because of the confidence I
have in the police. Only a fool will obstruct and insult the police and still
go to the police station to seek their protection. I am not a fool. Moreover,
an unarmed civilian of my status has no capacity whatsoever to obstruct close
to a dozen police officers who were fully armed and who effected arrest
already.
“Whenever I failed to write
the exact thing they told me to write so as to incriminate myself, the more
they slapped me with hand and cutlasses and sprayed teargas on my face. They
only stopped beating me after they used their torture cutlass to cut the
shoulder of one of the suspects. I have been able to identify the boy they cut
on the shoulder through the same hospital we went for treatment. About 12 of us
were in their torture office. They detained me behind the counter for about two
hours before I was released with the intervention of the Onoje of Ekpoma and
the Divisional Police Officer. I immediately proceeded to the General Hospital
Ekpoma for medical attention.”
The highly respected professor
in the academic community said as though their brutality was not enough, they
compelled him to write an apology letter over an incident in which they
brutalised and dehumanised him, hoping they could use that to cover their
tracks when in fact it only aggravates their degree of impunity.
“They are the people who owe
me apology and compensation. I never broke the law. They broke the law with the
highest level of impunity and recklessness. I need to add that I am not the
only person they have so brutalised as others are willing to step forward for
their testimonies.
“Ekpoma is now in a state of
fear. They attack people with impunity. They have broken up birthday parties in
hotels. They raided Hisbanah Hotel near No 17 Eromon Street and arrested more
than 50 boys and girls who were in a birthday party. The owner of the hotel, a
former local government Head of Service called Mr. Cyril Abhulimen informed me.
They equally used cutlasses and hammer to torture them.”
He said in a society where
they arrest innocent people, it cannot be said that they are combating crimes
at all, adding that Ekpoma has become a town under siege. ‘This is the right
time to stop these men now. It is not just about me but about the people of
Ekpoma. I just happen to be the first to openly complain. So many people have
been brutalised. The day they arrested me there was no space in the cell to
detain some of us because it was filled up. Those arrested hardly get charged
to court. The woman they accused of selling Indian hemp was released without
charge.
‘Their leader in the anti-cult
office who joined other police officers to brutalise me is ASP Ojo. One of the
attackers is Mr. Harrison whom I later learnt to be a native of Illeh. I was
released when the Divisional Police Office (DPO) came and appealed to them. I
was not taken on bail but simply released.”
He said while the Academic
Staff Union of Universities and the Nigerian Bar Association have taken some
steps over the matter, he has petitioned Zone 5 Police Headquarters and feels
ashamed over what a section of the police has turned into in a society where
stakeholders and respected citizens like him were advocating for a better
society.
Edeko called on President
Muhammadu Buhari, the Inspector General of Police, the Police Service
Commission, and well meaning Nigerians to help him fight for justice and stop
police brutality and the bad image of the police which the new Inspector
General was trying to do.
Meanwhile, when THISDAY
contacted the Edo State Commissioner of Police, Ugwandu, which the rogue police
squad claimed were acting on his instruction, he said he was just hearing of
the incident for the first time, and that such persons who carried out the
brutality would not have been said to be policemen. He outrightly denied that
they are not police men.
Recently, the IG, Ibrahim
Idris said the force was determined to rid the country of policemen who
continue to soil the name of the police force, adding that all heads of various
police commands, including Assistant Inspector Generals of police and
commissioners have been advised not to entertain indecency in their various
commands.
A recent investigation showed
that hundreds of thousands of innocent Nigerians are being brutalised yearly,
with over 1000 innocent persons killed recklessly by police officers.
What therefore comes to mind
is, if police men can serially brutalise a Professor in the 21st century, what
hope has the common man without a voice has? How many have such rogue police
squad assaulted and tortured for simply daring to look them in the face.? If
truly the IG is serious with the much talked about image salvaging, the Edo
rogue squad should be identified and disciplined accordingly by the force.
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