Police declare war against looters in Oyigbo
Ahmadu Saifu, The Guardian newspaper's driver in Port
Harcourt, Rivers State, leaves his house in Oyigbo by 6:00
a.m. daily to trek for about one hour before boarding a
cab to the office in Ikwere road in the bid to escape the
24-hour curfew imposed by the state government in the
troubled Oyigbo Local Government Area.
The restriction on movement was imposed in the area
after violent attacks that rocked the local council last
week.
However, things took a bad turn yesterday for Ahmadu
when he stepped out of his residence. He hadn't walked
for a distance when he sighted military personnel coming
from the opposite direction.
He thought with his identity card as a media/essential
worker, the soldiers would let him go, perhaps after the
usual raising of hands and frog-jumping.
But he was wrong, as the angry soldiers were seemingly
on a mission to retaliate the alleged killing of their
colleagues by suspected members of the proscribed
Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB).
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They never gave
Ahmadu a moment to identify himself. They appeared to
be on a mission to arrest and torture anyone on sight.
It will be recalled that residents of Oyigbo had been fleeing
the area since Sunday following reports that the military
was planning to launch a reprisal attack in the area.
Ahmadu said: "Immediately they arrested over 500 of us
at TAP junction, near Pamo University, they made us
switch off our phones and ordered us to lie down in mud
water, warning that anyone who raised his head or hand
would be killed because Oyigbo people killed
soldiers."When I sensed the situation was tensed, I put
my phone on silence and sent a text message to my
daughter that the army has arrested me and I don't know
where they were taken us to.
Ahmadu narrated that the soldiers later took them to a
nearby bush filled with broken bottles and asked them to
lie down on them, lamenting that the bottles tore his
clothes and body. He also disclosed that the soldiers
arrested and tortured some police officers who they
suspected had collected bribe from victims' relatives to
seek their release.
Speaking further, The Guardian driver said: "After some
time, I tried to stand up to show my ID to them, but they
refused.
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Later, I went and met one of the junior officers
and showed him my identity card, he took me to the
Captain in charge and ordered me to leave. That was how
I returned by 1:30 p.m."
Ahmadu, who disclosed that he sustained hand and head
injuries as a result of severe hitting from the soldiers,
described his experience as sad, horrible, and
unfortunate.
He said: "It is a bad situation we have found ourselves in
this country. I was on a lawful duty. I had a valid ID card,
but I was tortured for no reason."
The spokesman of the 6th Division of the Nigerian Army,
Charles Ekeocha, who The Guardian reporter contacted
earlier on the matter, confirmed that he contacted the army
commander in the area to facilitate Ahmadu's release.
MEANWHILE, the Rivers State Commissioner of Police,
Joseph Mukan, has declared total war against the
miscreants who attacked and looted police stations in
Oyigbo Local Government Area of the state. The police
boss made the declaration during a meeting with
Divisional Police Officers (DPOs) and Heads of
Departments of the Tactical Units in the command.
He gave the officers marching order within the next 48
hours to deploy both intelligence and patrols across the
command to ensure that the items looted are recovered
and perpetrators arrested with immediate effect.
The CP further warned members of the proscribed IPOB to
relocate from the state as machinery has been put in place
to fish them out and deal with them as a terrorist group.
Mukan reiterated that Rivers State is not an IPOB state
and would deal decisively with any group that carries out
activities under that guise or any guise whatsoever..
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