A serving police sergeant in Lagos, Mr. Akan Jackson, and another
resident have accused some soldiers of subjecting them to extreme
torture, and inflicting severe injuries on them.
Expdonaloaded blog gathered that on Saturday, October 3, along the Alaba
International Market Road in Ojo, Lagos, three soldiers believed to be
from Ibereko Barracks, Badagry, savagely brutalised Jackson and his
friend6. The policeman said he and his friend were subsequently abducted
and taken to the riverside where the soldiers threatened to kill them
and dump their bodies.
According to the policeman, it all began when a
soldier he later identified as Okon who carried no identification
whatsoever, accosted him, and started flogging him with a horsewhip. He
said the incident happened as he tried to turn his vehicle at a point
close to Alaba Market, to avoid a traffic snare. He said as Okon was
flogging him, two other soldiers, including one Abu and another, joined
in the beating.
Jackson said he tried to identify himself as a policeman, but noted that
Okon flew into a rage. He said the soldiers dragged him and his friend
out and began pummelling them. He said that it was when Okon removed his
overalls that he identified him as a soldier. He said owing to his show
of rascality, he had thought that the soldier was an area boy because
of the way he conducted himself. And to make matters worse, they beat
them up as if they were entertaining the crowd. He said the soldiers had
already removed the ranks on their victims’ uniforms before they
descended on them. He said the three soldiers later took them to their
barracks where one Lieutenant Colonel Gora, after seeing how they were
bleeding, directed that the policeman and his friend be treated
immediately. His words: “At about 4pm on Saturday, October 3, I was
driving with my friend along the Alaba International Market road. When I
realised that there was traffic build up, I decided to turn and go
through the expressway. As I attempted to turn, I saw a man in blue
overalls. He accosted me and asked why I wanted to turn. I told him I
wanted to get on the expressway. Instantly, he drew his koboko and
started flogging me. I asked him why he was doing that, explaining that I
was a policeman and that I did not do any wrong, but he was adamant.
Not done, he forcefully dragged me out of the vehicle and continued
flogging me, insisting that the police were not officers in Nigeria.
When I held the koboko, his colleagues instantly came and joined him.
“I told them to ask their colleague what happened rather than beating
me, but they didn’t listen. One of them, Abu, gave me a savage head-butt
in my eye and instantly I sustained a serious injury. They now forced
my friend into their patrol van, and bundled me in too. I asked them
where they were taking us to but they warned me to ask no more
questions. But I persisted so that I could call my people to our plight.
Then one of them said they were going to hang us. When we got close to
my station, I saw my colleagues mobilising to rescue me. I wanted to
signal to them because the information had already got to the station,
but the soldiers pressed me down so that nobody would see me.
They took us to an unknown place near the river where I summoned courage
and asked them why they brought us that far. They said they missed
their way, but we should thank God they had no jack knife, that they
would have killed us and dumped our bodies in the river. Shortly after,
they drove us away. When they got to their checking point, they started
flogging us again. One of them picked up a pebble and broke my friend’s
head. They bundled us out and kept us at a spot. When it grew dark, they
forced us into the vehicle, saying that they were taking us to their
barracks. “On arrival at their barracks, they drove directly to their
clinic. When one Colonel Gora saw us, he mandated that anybody on duty
should start treating us immediately because the wounds they inflicted
on us were much. Instantly, they started stitching us. After the
treatment, they asked us to enter their patrol vehicle again, stating
that they were taking us to the police station. One of them began to ask
me if I wanted them to settle the matter or they should go and lock us
up in the station. I asked him why he would lock us up, and challenged
him to take us to the station and see whether any policeman would lock
us up in the condition that we were. “At that moment, their boss,
Colonel Gora began to blame them, warning that what they did was
absolutely wrong. He wondered why they beat us the way they did.
Thereafter, they took us to the Badagry Police Station to establish if I
was actually a policeman. “Luckily, the man on duty knew my Station
Officer (SO). They asked him if he knew me, and the SO told them that I
was serving under him, and that I was supposed to be on night duty. Then
they told my SO that something happened, that they were at Badagry
Police Station. They later called my DPO who promised to send a patrol
vehicle there to meet us. But they refused, saying that they would drop
us by themselves. “When the policeman on duty put us behind the
counter, the soldiers went outside and began to discus among them. Then
they called me and told me that Colonel Gora said what happened had
already happened, and that we should forget about it. “What pained me
most was that he did not care to listen to me. All he was asking was,
why did I fight the soldiers. I asked him how I could fight soldiers in
uniform. “At the point they wanted to leave, the officer at the Badagry
Police Station told them that the matter did not happen in Badagry, and
that they should take us to Ojo or Ajangbadi, but they refused. Then,
the colonel left us and drove away. After that, his boys followed him,
abandoning us. “We begged for money to return to Alaba where I
abandoned my vehicle. As we were trudging along, we were like mad men.
When we arrived at the spot where I left my vehicle, I noticed that my
two phones and the money I had inside the vehicle were missing. My
friend also lost his own phones and money. I later made an entry at
Ajangbadi Police Station. “I want the Chief of Army Staff to bring these
errant soldiers to book. It was when they discovered that I am truly a
policeman that they became confused.” Giving his own account, Jackson’s
friend, Mr. Balogun Idris, said he was stripped naked like a common
criminal by the soldiers. He said he lost much blood when one of the
soldiers broke his head.
“I was surprised at the attitude of the soldiers. Incidents like that
happen daily in this area. No day passes without a soldier brutalising a
civilian on this Badagry road. They treated us like common criminals,
and people stood there to watch. They didn’t even want to know what
would happen to us after. They were not even there to know what we lost.
They believed they were soldiers and they could do anything and get
away with it.” When our correspondent contacted Colonel Anka, Deputy
Director, Army Public Relations, 81 Division Nigerian Army, Lagos, he
told the reporter that there was no one called Colonel Gora in Badagry.
He said the army had only one colonel in Badagry, adding that his name
was not Gora.
“We don’t have anybody as Colonel Gora at Badagry Barracks. That person
is fake! Kindly send me a text a message so that I can reply properly,”
he said.
Colonel Anka did not respond to the message sent to his mobile line.
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