The police
have acknowledged the authenticity of an internet video that shows suspected
kidnappers writhing at the back of a police van and struggling to breathe
after
being shot in their private parts by officers.
The police
said the suspects were the first to fire at officers attached to the
Intelligence Response Team when they attempted to free an abducted victim in
Abia State last week.
“In the
course of the shootout, some of the kidnappers sustained injuries and were
overpowered,” Abia police spokesperson, Geoffrey Ogbonna, told PREMIUM TIMES in
response to an enquiry about the video which was obtained by Sahara Reporters.
Mr. Ogbonna,
a deputy superintendent of police, put the number of the suspects at ‘over
seven’ and vaguely identified the victim as a 76-year-old man with a history of
hypertension.
The victim
was rescued but later died at the hospital, having allegedly been tortured by
the kidnappers in their den, Mr. Ogbonna said.
The officers
recovered AK-47 guns, ammunition and three vehicles from the suspects.
The video is
believed to have been shot on December 11 or 12. Sahara Reporters published it
Thursday night to an outraged audience.
Some
officers surrounded a truck marked as belonging to the police in Abia State and
in which the suspected had been crammed.
“You wan
turn millionaire overnight, bah?” an officer asked rhetorically in Nigerian
Pidgin. “You want to get rich quick.”
“This one
wants to die,” another voice said in an apparent interjection. “Na death e dey
wait for like this; e dey struggle the thing.”
The Nigerian
police have for years faced persistent allegations of human rights abuses, and
the new video could strengthen the poor public perception of the force.
The Human
Rights Watch found in 2007 that Nigeria police officers killed more than 10,000
citizens within seven years, a figure it said was conservative.
Mr. Ogbonna
evaded PREMIUM TIMES’ questions about why the officers shot the suspects in the
testicles after overpowering them as reported by Sahara Reporters.
He also
could not defend the snide remarks the officers uttered to the wounded
suspects.
He also did
not say how many of the suspects died —if at all— and whether those seriously
wounded where receiving medical care.
The footage
surfaces amidst growing anger against the police which stemmed from widespread
allegations rights abuses, extra-judicial killings and robbery attacks against
citizens by officers.
Although
most of the claims are directed against the Special Anti-Robbery Squad, which
is a separate unit from the Intelligence Response Team that carried out the
latest operation, rights activists see the gruesome shooting as common amongst
all police officers.
“This is a
clear case of torture and extra-judicial execution,” said Okechukwu Nwanguma of
the Network on Police Reform in Nigeria, NOPRIN.
Mr. Nwanguma
decried the unimaginable level of atrocities being allegedly perpetrated by
police officers every day in Nigeria, considering that most of the gruesome
abuses and execution hardly make it to the public domain.
“The duty of
the police is to arrest, investigate and produce accused persons to court for
fair trial,” Mr. Nwanguma said. “Executing crime suspects extra-judicially is
both unlawful and criminal.”
He called on
the police leadership and the Nigerian government to pursue a lasting solution
to the horrific activities of officers before it is too late.
“The case
underscores the need for the police hierarchy to demonstrate that they are
serious about their promise to reform the institution,” said Mr. Nwanguma,
whose organisation has tracked numerous cases of abuses by the police for many
years.
“Part of
this reform would be to bring officers responsible for this and similar
egregious violations to a public trial in order to send out a clear message
that the police as an institution does not tolerate human rights atrocities,”
he added.
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