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Wednesday, 15 August 2018

One Out Of Many Issues With Nigerian Police (SARS)


On the day the Nigerian presidency complained about the excesses of a unit in the Nigerian police known as SARSand gave directive for the overhauling of SARS, the same unit was forced a PREMIUM TIMES journalist to disclose his source.


The Nigerian police, through the Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS) on Tuesday, arrested and detained Samuel Ogundipe, who covers the security sector. Together with Mr Ogundipe, this newspaper’s editor-in-chief, Musikilu Mojeed, and its education correspondent, Azeezat Adedigba, were briefly detained and manhandled by the police at the SARS headquarters in Abuja.


Ms Adedigba was released after about three hours of detention. Mr Mojeed and Mr Ogundipe were taken from the SARS headquarters in Abuja to the IGP Monitoring Unit at Force Headquarters where Mr Ogundipe was made to write a statement.


At the Force headquarters, a DCP at the IGP Monitoring Unit, Sani Ahmadu, was heard directing lawyers to “rush to court” to obtain a warrant to detain Mr Ogundipe. They repeatedly asked the journalist to disclose his source for a story published by this newspaper.

The story was also published by other media, revealing a letter written by the Inspector General of Police, Ibrahim Idris, to Acting President Yemi Osinbajo on last week’s siege to the National Assembly by security officials.


The DCP furiously threatened Mr Mojeed as he alerted him that it was wrong compelling a journalist to disclose a source of information.


The DCP replied that "the police was acting within the law and that Samuel would remain detained until he discloses those who gave him the document," the journalist said.

Officials at the police headquarters told PREMIUM TIMES that the directive to detain the journalist came directly from the Inspector General of Police who is said to be angry at this paper’s critical reporting of his activities.

THE ARREST OF THE JOURNALIST

The plan to arrest Mr Ogundipe started on Saturday, August 11, when a Police Superintendent, Emmanuel Onyeneho, called a PREMIUM TIMES journalist, Azeezat Adedigba, on phone,  requesting her to show up at their station.

PREMIUM TIMES management had then insisted that the request be formally sent to it so the reporter could honour it on Monday.


Then a formal invitation letter from an Assistant Commissioner of Police, Sanusi Muhammed, said the police was investigating a crime of which her name and number was involved.
“This office is investigating a case of criminal conspiracy, cybercrime, attempted kidnapping and fraudulent act that your name and phone number featured. You are kindly requested to interview the undersigned officer on 14th August 2018 by 1000hrs for fact findings,” the letter reads.


It turned out it was all a lie when the reporter arrived at the SARS office as directed.


By 10 a.m. Monday morning, the reporter, in the company of Mr Mojeed and another staff was at the SARS headquarters, Guzape, but was told the investigating officer, Emmanuel Onyeneho, was not available.

An armed operative (ostensibly on directives), who attended to the trio subsequently confiscated Ms Adedigba’s phone and detained her, after physically manhandling PREMIUM TIMES editor-in-chief, who attempted to intervene.


When she was led in, the editor and the other staff had to wait for over four hours before Mr Onyeneho eventually sauntered in.

Subsequently, the official, who declined giving details on the reason for the invitation requested that Ms Adedigba dial a number, he provided, with her phone. The dialled number turned out to be that of Mr Ogundipe. The official requested that Mr Mojeed ask the reporter, to come down, a request he immediately obliged.

Promptly, Mr Ogundipe came in, Ms Adedigba was allowed to go while Mr Mojeed and Ogundipe were detained. At this point, the two were notified that the police were investigating the source of the interim report sent by the IGP on Mr Daura as published by PREMIUM TIMES.


They were subsequently taken to the IGP Monitoring Unit at Force Headquarters where Mr Ogundipe was made to write a statement.

THE STORY
The Inspector-General of Police, Ibrahim Idris, recently accused Mr Daura of gross violation of Nigerian constitution in Tuesday’s barricade of the National Assembly by State Security Service operatives.


In a preliminary report on the controversial incident prepared for Acting President Yemi Osinbajo on Wednesday, Mr Idris said Mr Daura was working for some politicians for selfish interest but did not name the accomplices.


He said Mr Daura did not consult with other security agencies before ordering the siege and questioned the validity of a security report that allegedly anticipated a violence at the parliament.
Mr Daura was sacked by the acting President Osinbajo on Tuesday afternoon. He was immediately handed over to the police for further interrogation, after unauthorised deployment of SSS officers that sparked nationwide outrage and condemnation.


Mr Idris said the police have been interrogating Mr Daura in Garki, Abuja since he was arrested.
The report, seen by PREMIUM TIMES, was signed by Mr Idris on August 8, but it was not immediately clear whether the acting President has received it.


Thus, disturbed by the report, the police operatives are bent on making Mr Ogundipe disclose the source of the documents despite the report was also published by other newspapers who had access to the documents.

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