Lagos police station where every motorist is always Guity!
It was a public holiday they all looked
forward to. And as the weeks faded into days, they prepared themselves,
packed their bags, prepared enough edible items that could last them for
the duration of their journey.
Fortunately for the Ayanfes, the holiday
was a Thursday, which marked the beginning of a long weekend, hence,
they converted their trip from mere family treat to a vacation, which
was to run from Thursday to Sunday. They had their plans well laid out
and they had really prepared for it, both psychologically and
financially.
Eventually, the day they had all been
waiting for came. At about 10am, they left their house in Orisunbare, in
Shasha, Akowonjo Local Government Area of Lagos State, and were heading
to a resort centre in Osun State. With a slow music in the background,
the Ayanfes traded comic banters, cracked jokes and revelled in the
loving atmosphere.
They all appeared to be in a good mood,
having been deprived of such a quality family time in the past because
of work. While the man, Gbenga, took the position of the driver, his
wife, Esther, sat beside him while their two children rolled from one
side to the other on the back seat, playing and wishing they could get
to their destination in less than no time.
But that joyful moment was soon cut
short when they were stopped by some policemen from the Shasha police
station in Afonka Sreet, at an illegal checkpoint along the Shasha –
Orisunbare Road. It was an unpleasant experience that they would likely
not forget in a hurry. Not only did they spend their vacation at the
police station, they went back home with pockets of frustration and
anger.
According to Mr. Ayanfe, what started as
a friendly chat between them and the policemen soon snowballed into an
argument. He explained that one of the policemen walked up to the car
and asked for everything he could possibly ask for, which he produced.
Trouble started when he was asked to produce the receipt of his number
plate.
“I gave him everything he wanted but I
was surprised when he asked me to produce the receipt of my number
plate. I felt it was a joke, so I even teased him, saying ‘Oga
how do you want me to get the receipt of a number plate that I have been
using for years?’ Besides, there is no special receipt for number
plate. It comes with other documents from the Road Safety office. But he
got angry. In fact, he slammed the butt of his gun on my bonnet and
said I should come out. At that point, my little girl started crying,
because of the way they held their guns.
“My brother, it was like a dream. For
God’s sake, where was I to get the receipt of my number plate? It was
even the old number plate which I had been using since I bought the car
about three years earlier. I didn’t know what to say. One of his
colleagues came around and asked what was happening. I was shocked when
he told the other man that I was rude to him and that I said he didn’t
know his job. I was shocked. My brother, I was lost. I screamed, and
reminded him he was lying against me. I was even trying to explain to
the other policeman but he told him to take me to the station.”
Still confused and not knowing what to
do, Ayanfe recalled that he brought out his identity card to show that
he is a responsible citizen, but his explanations fell into their deaf
ears. Knowing the journey ahead of him, he said he came out of the
vehicle and requested to meet their boss, who was seated in a blue van
with no number plate.
He said his surprise took a new
dimension when the boss said he should go and clear himself with those
he had problem with or they should go to the station to settle it.
“At that point, I knew there was trouble
because I have always known that police station is the worst place to
go to in Nigeria. They make people miserable there because it’s their
terrain.
“In spite of all the persuasion, they
insisted that we should go to the station. So, one of them ordered my
wife to go and sit at the back while he would sit in front. Initially,
she objected, but this policeman said he would deal with her if she
didn’t oblige. I had to plead with her to go and sit at the back,
because they were brandishing their guns as if they were ready to shoot.
So, we went to their station at Afonka.”
Ayanfe explained that their ordeal in
the hands of the policemen at Afonka, Shasha, took a turn for the worst
when they got to the station and they deflated the car tyres and he was
told to write a statement on why he was driving a “stolen car.”
If not for the intervention of Ayanfe’s
friend, a lawyer, whom he had to call to rescue him, he said he could
have spent the night at the station, even though he left the place
around 6pm. “They delayed us and told us to either produce the receipt
or stay till someone would come and bail us,” he explained.
Not only did the Ayanfes miss their anticipated vacation, they went back home deflated, sad and discomfited.
Ayanfe’s story is just a brief
reflection of what residents of Shasha, Egbeda and Ikotun areas of
Alimosho Local Government said the policemen from the Afonka police
station have been subjecting motorists and okada riders in these areas
to.
Some residents pointed out that instead
of harassing innocent victims to make money, these policemen should
rather invest their energies in tackling the numerous criminal
activities in the area. Some of them even pointed out that a policeman
in the division had been tagged ‘I’ll shoot you’ because he was always
threatening to shoot anybody who disobeys his orders or tries to claim
to know his or her rights.
Some road users who spoke to our
correspondent maintained that the policemen from the Afonka division had
become “notorious and brazen” in the way they harass citizens,
especially motorists and okada riders.
A commercial driver, who spoke on the
condition of anonymity for fear of being harassed, lamented that there
was a limit to the extent to which people in the area could defend their
basic rights because of the way the policemen brandish their guns and
threaten people.
They added that they would rather go
through the suffering, delays and even part with money than lose their
lives, considering the increasing rate of accidental discharge or
extra-judicial killings by policemen.
The Ayanfes could have missed a vacation
for falling into the trap of the Shasha policemen, but beyond the
appointment that Mrs. Nwaoji Beatrice missed occasioned by her encounter
with these policemen, she got a query and three days suspension from
her boss at her place of work.
Beatrice recalled that she was to join
her boss for a meeting with some guests somewhere on Lagos Island,
hence, she said she left her house early enough and headed for the
Island. According to her, the appointment was slated for 12pm, but
because of traffic congestion and any unforeseen issues, she left the
house around 9am.
She said, “It was an all-important
meeting, so I left my house at Idimu around 9am. I knew I would not be
late even if there was traffic. But when I got to Egbeda, I met these
policemen. They were about five. They all raised up their guns and told
me to pull over. I was scared. It was a narrow road, and there was a
little space to my left, so I just had to quickly swerve, because it was
close to a corner and I didn’t see them on time.
“While I was trying to pull over
carefully so as not to end up in the gutter, one of them shouted at me
to answer them before they would deal with me. I was surprised they were
that hostile. When he came to me, he said, ‘madam wetin dey worry you na. You no wan park abi, you think say na play we dey play here? I was surprised at such a foul language.
“I challenged him to talk to me with
respect but the situation got even worse. He asked for my papers, which I
gave him. And then he asked for my driving licence, I gave him the
photocopy that I had. He rejected it and said he needed to see the
original.”
Beatrice explained that in spite of her
pleas and the explanation that she had a meeting Lagos Island, he
insisted on seeing the original licence. She added that the policeman,
assisted by some of his colleagues, told her to either go back home or
call someone to bring it for her.
“I was confused and I knew there was no
time to waste. Then, he told me we should go to the station if I was
undecided. He told me to open the door but I refused. But when he
pointed his gun at me, I had to open it. He said I should settle but I
had just N5,250 on me. I offered him N4,000 but he said he would collect
not less than N10,000. I didn’t have that kind of money to waste and I
didn’t even have it at that time, so I had to call someone at Ikotun to
go to my house, meet my house help and bring the licence for me.
“It took some time before the person
brought it, so, I left there around 11am. I called my boss but he didn’t
pick. Eventually, I was late to the meeting and my boss didn’t take it
lightly with me.”
These and many more examples give an
insight into the activities of what has become a norm in the Nigeria
Police. While armed robbers, cultists, land grabbers and ritualists
perpetrate their criminal activities and put the people under intense
fear, those who are paid to protect them seem to have added theirs to
the whole debacle.
Mr. Niran Komolafe would not mind
sharing how he spent several hours at this same Afonka police station
for claiming his rights. It was on a Friday evening while he and his
wife were on their way to a programme. Akomolafe said the policemen
stopped them somewhere in Shasha and because he didn’t feel safe, more
so that the policemen wore sweaters, covering their names and identity
numbers, he was reluctant to stop.
Due to his reluctance, he said one of
the policemen pointed his hand to his head, indicating that something
must be wrong with his head.
“The signal was that my head is not
correct, which he didn’t hide. I took an exception to being insulted.
So, I stopped, pulled over and asked what he meant by that. He asked if I
wanted to beat him. He then said he would deal with me. So, he asked
for my proof of ownership, and I challenged him to lift his sweater so I
could see his name and number. He flared up and called me names. He
wanted to open the rear door so he could enter my car, but I locked the
door. My wife even tried to talk to me but he told her to shut her
mouth, saying, “in their village, women don’t talk when men are
talking.” And these are people with guns.
“It was getting late, so I called one of
my friends in the Force who wanted to talk to him but he refused to
take the phone from me. Eventually, they took me to their station at
Afonka, where they delayed me for about two hours before one of their
senior officers asked for my proof of ownership of the car, which I
showed him, and told me to go.
“I even tried the number of the
Divisional Police Officer written on the board but the number was not
available. Sometimes, I wonder if the police hierarchy has lost a firm
grip of its men, because they would even tell you that if you like you
could call the Inspector General of Police and that nothing would
happen.”
These and many other frustrations are
what Nigerians, especially motorists go through in the hands of
policemen who are paid to protect lives and security on daily basis.
Motorists and okada riders in the area confided in Saturday Punch that
they sometimes live under the fear of harassment by these officers. And
because of the killings by policemen here and there, they said they
could not challenge them or claim to be acting on their rights.
“One of them even told me that ‘who tell
you say you get right. C’mmon, start the engine and drive to the
station,’” a motorist who operates in the Shasha and Akowonjo area told
our correspondent.
The motorist added, “I was once their
victim. They stopped me and asked for everything you can imagine.
Eventually, they said I didn’t have the reflective sticker. And I had
but it has bleached. I had to part with some money so they wouldn’t take
me to their station, because that would be the worst.”
Also, an okada rider told Saturday Punch that going to their station was the worst thing that could happen to anybody because of their brutality.
When our correspondent visited the
police station during the week, it was not a fancy site to behold. In
fact, it looked like a den, filled with fierce-looking policemen. While
some roamed about with their guns on their shoulders, some sat under the
tree, all looking very intimidating.
There were some persons hanging around
the station, standing in their twos and threes, all wearing a sad look,
while some others sat inside a makeshift waiting room in the premises.
Findings showed that unlawful arrests and detention are few of the
activities that go on in the station.
At intervals, some people would come in a
bid to bail their relatives, and while some would go back home happy,
others would go back frustrated. In fact, when our correspondent entered
the station, the way some complainants were being attended to by the
officers on duty gave some impression of their hostility.
Our correspondent gathered from a source
that one of those in the cell was being detained because his
motorcycle, which was on hire purchase, was stolen, and that he had
since been detained even when the owner said he had forgiven him.
The source said, “In fact, the boy who rides the okada
came to report the case at the station by himself that the motorcycle
was stolen, but he ended up being locked up. When the owner of the
motorcycle was called, he said he wasn’t interested in any case and that
he had let go. The owner even promised to buy another one but the
police are saying that the family of the boy should come and bail him.
The money is what the family of the boy is looking for at the moment. If
he had known the owner would forgive him, he wouldn’t have gone to the
police to report.”
Notably, this kind of experience is what
obtains in many other locations and police divisions across the
country. While policemen are paid from taxpayers’ money to protect their
lives and properties, findings showed that some of these men have
swapped this national assignment with something else, geared towards
putting citizens under pressure, intimidation and fear.
In some other climes, the appearance of a
policeman or the patrol vehicle gives comfort and a sense of cover to
residents, but in Nigeria, especially in recent times, some people have
said that sighting policemen unsettles them and puts them under fear of
imminent brutality or attack.
“It is either they drive you off the
road with their rickety vehicles and sirens, or they extort, harass and
intimidate you, or they take you to their station and come up with false
allegations, not to even talk of the scourge of accidental discharge,” a
resident of Shasha told our correspondent.
Even though the IGP, Mr. Solomon Arase,
has banned checkpoints on roads, the policemen seem to have converted
the stop and search strategy to a money-making venture and a golden
opportunity to harass people. From Gowon, Pen Cinema, to Ikeja, these
are very evident, as observed by our correspondent.
When confronted with the allegations of
activities of the men in his division, the Divisional Police Officer,
Mr. Sirajo Salisu, who was initially reluctant to comment on the issue
“because only the PPRO talks to the press,” said anyone who was being
harassed by any of the policemen from his division should call him to
complain.
He explained that he had just been
transferred to the station and that since he came he had been making
efforts to ensure there was discipline.
He pointed out that it was not
impossible for some other officers from different formations to operate
within his jurisdiction without his knowledge.
“Anyone who is being harassed should
copy my number on the board and call me. I’m always available. The
Police Public Relations Officer is in charge of matters relating to the
press. He will speak to you,” he added.
Also, the PPRO, Lagos State Command, Mr.
Joe Offor, said he would investigate the matter and get back to our
correspondent which he had yet to do as of press time.
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