Sunday, September 30, 2012

NDLEA board reads riot act to officers


The newly reconstituted Governing Board of the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) has warned officers against improper conduct. 
This followed the approval of promotion for two officers for outstanding performance as well as punishment for eighteen (18) others. 
While some were elevated in rank, others were however punished for various disciplinary offenses in line with the NDLEA Act.
The Board which commenced sitting immediately after it was inaugurated by the Attorney General and Minister of Justice, Mohammed Bello Adoke in Abuja a fortnight ago promised to reward hard work and punish acts of wrongdoing in line with best practices.
Two officers were elevated for dedication and bravery. 
Eight others with disciplinary cases had their appointments terminated. 
The reasons for their termination include corrupt practices, dereliction of duty, falsehood and prevarication as well as gross misconduct.
Similarly, two other officers were demoted by one rank for unlawful exercise of authority and improper conduct. 
Other forms of punishment meted out to the officers include loss of seniority and administrative warning.
The NDLEA Chairman/Chief Executive, Ahmadu Giade who is the Board Chairman urged officers to be dedicated and steadfast in service of the country. “Reward for excellence and outstanding performance as well as punishment for improper conduct is a continuous exercise. I hereby urge officers to remain dedicated to duty” Giade charged.

NAPTIP rescues 10 trafficked Nigerian girls working as sex slaves in Cote d’Ivoire


Jedy-Agba

The National Agency for the Prohibition of Traffic in Persons and Other Related Matters, NAPTIP, has carried out a covert operation evacuating 10 Nigerian girls working as sex slaves in Abidjan, Cote d’ivoire.
The girls who were brought into Abuja in two batches are from Edo State, Delta, Rivers and Benue States respectively, with Edo State topping the chart with six girls.
The Executive Secretary of NAPTIP, Mrs. Beatrice Jedy-Agba disclosed that the operation which was intelligence driven was in collaboration with the regional bureau office of Interpol in Abidjan and an Abidjan based Non Governmental Organization, family Essan for Protection and Promotion of Human Rights, FEPDH.
Mrs. Jedy-Agba who spoke while receiving the girls in NAPTIP Headquarters , sued for more intelligence sharing; co-operation and collaboration between West African Law Enforcement Agencies on trafficking in persons as a panacea to breaking the stranglehold of the criminal networks on the scourge.
According to her, NAPTIP felt obliged to bring the girls back home for rehabilitation as Nigerians and also to support further investigation in the crime.
She lamented that there are many Nigerian girls in bondage in the booming sex trade in Cote d’ivoire and Burkina Faso and the agency will go as long as funds permit to return them home to safety and rehabilitation.Mrs. Jedy-Agba said the task of combating this crime and consequent rehabilitation of victims cannot be left to NAPTIP alone as the whole of society is needed much more in tackling this huge responsibility.
The 10 girls are presently undergoing medical screening and counseling with NAPTIP operatives after which rehabilitation will commence in earnest.

DPO promoted to ACP 30 days to retirement


No fewer than 20 Chief Superintendents of Police (CSP) were promoted to the rank of Assistant Commissioners of Police, in the Nigeria Police Force.
IGP, Mohammed Abubakar
Among those promoted is the Divisional Police Officer, (DPO), in charge of Gowon Estate Police Station, Mr. Agba Nchor, who has just 30 days left to serve as a police officer in the Nigeria Police Force before his retirement.
Nchor’s promotion came with an immediate directive for him to move to his new post at Yobe State as an area commander.
Nchor is the police officer who turned down N2.4 million bribe money, offered to him by drug traffickers and criminals at the Gowon Estate.
For years, drug peddlers and criminals turned part of the Estate, dubbed Kuwait, into a hide out for all sorts of criminal elements. It took the determination of Nchor to disinfect the area of such miscreants. Since his achievement of this feat, Nchor had received two awards for his bravery.
It is gathered that Nchor might not head to Yobe since his days in NPF are numbered.
The DPO, in charge of Alausa Police Station, Mr. Kehinde Longe is the second police officer in Lagos State, who is favoured in the promotion scheme.
Longe will be moving to area H’ Ogundu, to assume position as the new commander.

Saturday, September 29, 2012

Sunday bloody robbery attacks in Lagos State: how policemen help robbers to escape


Fresh facts have emerged about the gang of robbers, who a few week ago, brazenly rocked the foundation of Lagos State security, driving through the streets of Lagos State and shooting recklessly like they were in a Wild West American movie.
They killed three policemen and injured several civilians. Among those they injured was a child.
The latest information says that two police corporals assisted the robbers to escape being caught on that fateful day.
Just as police in Lagos State have arrested two men suspected to be part of the gang, the men had also denied being members of the gang.
The suspects were identified as Rasheed Suleimon and Kazeem Enifolabi. But Suleimon had quickly denied being a member of the gang.
He said he knows the leaders, but had never partaken in any robbery with them. He insisted that he was just an ‘ordinary handsets snatcher.”
Just as anti-robbery detectives were still debriefing Eniofolabi and Suleimon, emerging information said two police corporals had been arrested in connection with the robbery.
A source squealed that the robbers were able to escape because these two policemen, one attached to Elere Police Station and the other Special Anti-robbery Squad (SARS), Ikeja, monitored police Walkie-Talkie and divulged all the moves and strategies put in place by the police command to catch the bandits.
The source said: “Nobody would have known that these two corporals were involved, if not for providence. The robbers that attacked that fateful Sunday killed three of our men. They went away with their rifles. The gang later went to Oshogbo to rob and one of them was arrested. One of the rifles of the policemen killed at Oba-Akran, Ikeja, was recovered from him. He was the person who fingered these two policemen. One of the policemen is attached to Elere Police Station, the other to SARS.
“They aided the robbers to escape, by monitoring what the Compol was saying on the Walkie-Talkie. They would listen and use their handsets to relay messages to the robbers, so that they would take another route.”

Sunday bloody robbery attacks in Lagos: why police could not catch the robbers


On Sunday, a gang of armed robbers brazenly rocked the foundation of Lagos security, driving through the streets of Lagos State and shooting recklessly like they were in a Wild West American movie.
Their sophisticated looking guns smoked endlessly.  By the time the smoke from their guns cleared, three policemen were dead and about seven civilians injured. In fact, it was alleged that at least seven civilians were killed, including a child, but nobody official confirmation was received with respect to that figure.
The bandits stormed Lagos in a Toyota Prado and an Armada jeep, streaking like lightening through several parts of the metropolis, including a Bureau de Change at Agege. At the Bureau De change, they were shot two of the staff and escaped with bags containing local and foreign currencies.
The robbers were believed to have been an eight-man-gang of robbers, comprising six men and two women. Police gave them chase thorough chase via patrol vans and helicopter, but all the police got for their pains, was death of three dead colleagues, who were mowed down at Oba Akra, Ikeja.
Why did the police failed to catch these bandits, in spite of all the amenities at their disposal and even the use of helicopter?
Robbers breached police Walkie-Talkie frequency: The bandits were able to escape because they gained access to police Walkie-Talkies and alertly monitored the instructions being issued by the police hierarchy. They were able to avoid all the points and channels, where they knew police would be waiting. How were they able to breach the police frequency?
A police source said: “Policemen on patrol duty should learn to be alert.  The policemen were killed at Oba Akran, Ikeja by the robbers and they took over these slain policemen radio. They were able to monitor every movement of the police. Catching them became very difficult. Every move police made, they were able to evade. In fact, they had on camouflage uniforms. When they heard on the radio that they were wearing camouflage uniforms, they pulled off the uniforms. How they disappeared, is still a mystery. But truly, with the radio, they were no stopping them. They knew our every move, our every plan.”
Police chasing robbers were confused due to no road block order: The Nigerian Compass also learnt that the policemen, who were supposed to pursue the bandits, were sort of confused.  The normal and apparent move would have been to mount road blocks in order to stop the gunmen and women careening to freedom, but they did not do this. They did not know whether to block the roads or not, since they feared and remembered that there was a standing order that there should be no road blocks. Another police source explained: “The policemen who were chasing the robbers, seemed not to know what to do. They were confused. They were confused because of the IG’s order that there should be no road blocks. There were no clear directives. But ordinarily, every policeman knows once you’re chasing a robber, the first thing to do is to block all exits. But they didn’t do this. This was part of the reason the robbers escaped.”
Police were too careful not to shoot civilians:  Almost every Inspector General of Police, past and present, had repeatedly told policemen that it was far better to allow a truck load of robbers to escape, than to kill one innocent civilian in the course of exchanging gun fire with the bad guys. This was definitely one of the reasons the bandits showed the police their back views and sped off to freedom. The robbers shot recklessly, killing and maiming civilians, who were unfortunate to be caught under their radar. But the policemen who were chasing them were too careful. They could not afford to shoot reckless, even though such shooting could have killed, maimed or injured one or two of the robbers, slowing them down. A police officer, who spoke with the Nigerian Compass, said: “When robbers are firing, they can fire anybody on sight, especially if police are pursuing them. That was what happened on that day. They just kept firing and shooting anybody but police could not respond in like manners.  Anybody can be the targets of the robbers, but police wanted the only targets to be the robbers. The police had to be careful in choosing their targets. He couldn’t just fire anyhow. Many people said the police were afraid and cowards on that day, but the truth were that they couldn’t afford to kill an innocent soul.”
Policemen were simply not on ground: stunning information that came to the fore was the unavailability of policemen on ground on that fateful day. A policeman told the Nigerian Compass that on the particular day in question, when a radio raised the anti-robbery squads to pursue, a certain team had only four men on ground!  It is no longer news that in many police commands and divisions, Sundays are seen as no working days for the police. There is usually a skeletal activity. In fact, the superior officers are hardly ever in their offices on such days. If they bother to come, they leave early. A handful of rank and files are often ordered to be on duty. This was part of what transpired last week Sunday.
Many policemen did not come to office; many went to churches, events or travelled. Short of its usual robust man power, the robbers practically came for a cocktail party and simply swaggered to their hideout with their loots.
“Most police people used to go to churches on Sundays, which was why the robbers picked that day! They know that a lot of policemen are hardly ever on duty. Policemen used to choose Sundays to travel. Some choose that day to stay at spend time with their families.”
Confusion over the authourity of Armoured Personnel Carriers (APC): It was learnt that when the robbers struck, policemen who were supposed to mount and navigate the APC waited endlessly for the commander of the Rapid Response Squad, Hakeem Odumosun to give the order, so that they could head towards any of the routes the robbers were streaking through, but the policemen waited in vain. When it dawned on the police hierarchy that the order was never going to come, the deputy commissioner of police, in charge of operations, gave the order, but by then, it was too late. The robbers were already singing and kissing farewell to Lagos. A police officer demanded angrily: “The question I keep asking myself is where Odumosun was? If he was around, why didn’t he order the APCs to move? Why! Why!”
To begin to write and argue that the Lagos State government had given a lot to Lagos command in terms of equipment to combat crime and criminalities, including robberies, is stating the obvious and belabouring the issue.
But a policeman says it all: “In all the states in Nigeria, Lagos State police command had received a lot of assistance from the state government. There is no reason not to be able to combat robberies. Personally, I think an order should be given that no policeman should stay at home on Saturdays or Sundays. These are days that clever robbers used to rob! Policemen who are on patrol duties should be retrained. Many of them don’t know that the first thing to do, while on patrol duty is to be at alert. Instead, you’ll find them sleeping on duty. They’ll wind up the windows of the patrol vans or even switch on the car air conditioner. They won’t shootings or noise. They end up being killed needlessly.”