A jarring video in circulation shows the immediate aftermath of the mindless murders of the police officers.
An episode that is shaking the foundations of the relationship between the Nigeria Police Force and the Nigerian Army, the killing of three policemen as well as a civilian in Taraba State on Wednesday is still sending shock waves across the minds of many Nigerians.
An episode that is shaking the foundations of the relationship between the Nigeria Police Force and the Nigerian Army, the killing of three policemen as well as a civilian in Taraba State on Wednesday is still sending shock waves across the minds of many Nigerians.
A jarring video in circulation shows the immediate aftermath of the
mindless murders of the police officers, attached to the Inspector
General of Police Intelligence Response Team (IRT) with one of them, in
the throes of death, not spared despite begging, with incalculable
desperation.
The video begins with one of the slain officers in a red attire and
alone beside their bus apparently turned over through an accident that
must have occurred from the hot chase that ensued after the team was
ambushed by the soldiers. Seconds later, it moves to the other side as
three bloodied people lay dead while one, in a striped white and green
Polo shirt, is on the floor and writhing in agony. A man in yellow tee
shirt hands the ignition key of the white Toyota bus with number plate:
Lagos MUS 564 EU, to a man not visible in the video. “Here is the key of the vehicle,” he said in Hausa language.
The body of the vehicle, like the murdered policemen, was riddled
with bullets as the mob continues cursing the fallen officers. “We will
deal with you, you unlucky ones. They showed us ID cards that they were
from the IG (Inspector General of Police). Till all of you die, another
said, also in Hausa. As this goes on, a booming voice from the crowd of
mostly soldiers, many of them not in uniforms, commended the mob and
said: “Well done guys, you did well.” Lending further credence to
reports that the killings were premeditated, another unidentified voice
said: “Let’s set them ablaze with the vehicle,” a suggestion another,
perhaps a personnel of a higher rank, responded to almost immediately
with an order: “No!
Do not burn them.” As the officer battling to stay alive turns as
he continues to wriggle in pain, another person in a white fez cap, as
if alarmed, shouted: “He is not dead! He is not dead” as he moves and
rains a number of slaps on him as the dying man fell back in a sleeping
position. Calling on others’ attention, another asked: “Where is their
service pistol?” as another swiftly responded: “They have been collected
and taken away.” In the meantime, a bulky frame in a yellow top with
white fez cap is seen recording a video of the slain policemen as they
made to cross check whether the while few minutes earlier had died
finally.
Upon certifying him dead, a member of the crowd, as if in victory,
shouted: “He is dead! He is dead!” Thereafter the glare falls on two of
the killed policemen, one in a red shirt covered in his pool of blood
and the other with a white striped shirt lying face down as the people
surrounding them start plucking and dropping leaves and shrubs on them, a
typical practice for accident victims. Even more harrowing is a scene
in which it becomes clear that one of the fallen policemen, the last to
give up, had defecated on his body shortly before succumbing to death
finally.
Lifted by two men by the hands and legs, his corpse is dumped along
with the others as a soldier with a riffle walks past the bodies,
shouting: “He is defecating. Do not touch the faeces.” As the voices
rise even further, a voice is heard in the background saying: “They
showed us ID cards that they were from the IG (Inspector General of
Police).
They met us at the check point. If they had escaped here, they
would definitely not have escaped the road block at Wukari.” Meanwhile,
fresh information has emerged on what really went down between the
police policemen and soldiers along Ibi-Jalingo Road, leading to the
death of three policemen and a civilian. Security agents said the order
to attack the policemen, who were on lawful duty to apprehend a
suspected kidnap kingpin, Alhaji Hamisu Wadume, was given by an army
captain, who is a friend of Wadume.
The unnamed army captain, it was learnt, is not just a friend, but
allegedly also on Wadume’s pay roll. According to sources, the
operatives, while heading to Ibi village to make the arrest, encountered
military men at three check-points. They introduced themselves, chatted
with the soldiers and exchanged pleasantries. But when returning with
the suspect, the same soldiers seen earlier at one of the check points
pulled the triggers that ended the lives of three of the policemen. “The
road to Ibi village is very narrow and only that road leads to the
village. You have to pass through it to enter or leave the small
village. That was why when the policemen encountered the soldiers at the
three checkpoints, they introduced themselves and stated what they came
for. They chatted, joked and exchanged pleasantries.
The arrest was made within 20 minutes and while they were
returning, soldiers at the first and second check points asked them if
they were already through. The soldiers and operatives know one another,
but the phone call from a top military personnel changed everything,” a
source disclosed.
One of our reporters gathered that the policemen were attacked at
the second military check-point in the village. It was further learnt
that the policemen were taken unawares as the soldiers allegedly opened
fire on the bus conveying the operatives, with the shocked driver losing
control of his wheel, leading the bus to somersault under the barrage
of gun fire. Policemen, who were fast enough to crawl out of the damaged
vehicle fled into the bush and the soldiers, upon getting to the scene
and realising they were still alive, shot three operatives and a
civilian among them at close range.
Two of the recovered corpses had bullet holes in their stomach, the
other two, had bullet holes in their chests. Ibi is a small community
and within a twinkle of an eye, the scene of the accident and attack
swarmed with people and as the soldiers labelled the policemen
kidnappers, the people went wild with jubilation. The arrival of the
people to the scene actually saved the lives of two policemen, who had
earlier crawled to hide. It was gathered that they would have been shot
dead too, but for the crowd and they were taken to a part of the army
base where deliberations were held regarding whether to kill them or
not. One of the soldiers told his colleagues that killing them would be
too risky because most of the villagers already captured them alive on
their smart phones. Upon telling them the videos would give them away,
the soldiers reluctantly took them to a hospital. A security source
said: “The three IRT operatives were brutally murdered while on
investigation duty in Taraba State by personnel of the Nigerian Army.
It is believed that these soldiers and their boss are working for
the kidnapper, Wadume, who was later released. The operatives, who were
on a follow-up in an ongoing kidnapping investigation, led by an
Assistant Superintendent of Police (ASP), Felix Adolije, went to Taraba
State with a letter detailing their inves- tigation and mission.
They were ambushed by the soldiers. Preliminary investigation
showed that the kidnap kingpin, who is presently on the run, has many
security personnel in Ibi, Taraba State on his pay roll.
Operatives got to the police headquarters Jalingo, and perfected
their papers as professionals. Then they proceeded to Ibi Town, Taraba
State, in their operational Toyota Hummer Bus.” The agent further said:
“When the operatives got to Ibi town, they booked their arrival at the
police station and proceeded with assistance from a policeman attached
to them in the state headquarters, Jalingo, to trace and arrest Alhaji
Hamisu Wadume, who is wanted because he is linked to several kidnappings
in Taraba State, including a recent kidnapping in which N100million was
collected as ransom. After arresting Wadume, the operatives were
heading to police headquarters at Jalingo, when gang members of Wadume,
who are close to an army captain serving in Ibi town, called the army
and told him that his friend had been kidnapped. “Without any
verification or inquiries, the army captain ordered his men along the
highway to ambush the policemen.
Thus, as the team was moving along Ibi-Jalingo Road, they came
under the hail of bullets from soldiers. The soldiers came from behind
with another vehicle, as a result the policemen’s bus summersaulted.
Thereafter, two policemen and one civilian agent were shot to death by
the soldiers at close range. The policemen were shot despite presenting
their police identification cards. These policemen also wore police
jackets. All the policemen were alive when their vehicles somersaulted.
Two operatives, Inspector Mark Idiale and Inspector Abah Mathias, were
seriously injured with bullets. They are now receiving treatment at the
General Hospital Wukari in Taraba State. Policemen from Ibi Area Command
responded to calls and took the injured and dead officers to the
hospital. Wadume, who was rescued and released by the soldiers, is
presently on the run.
”It is believed that Wadume and other members of his gang escaped
with him to a location outside Ibi Town. One AK47 rifle and two pistols
belonging to the late police officers were carted away by the gang
members of Wadume who came to the scene with the soldiers while two of
the police AK47 rifles are with the soldiers as admitted by one of their
personnel at the scene. Following the killings of the policemen, the
military high command issued a press release attempting to exonerate its
men and this forced the Nigeria Police Force to issue a stiff counter
statement, raising posers and demanding answers to several puzzles in
the case, one of which was the demand for the military to present
Wadume. Force Spokesman, a Deputy Commissioner of Police (DCP), Frank
Mba, mentioned the names of the murdered policemen as Inspector Mark
Edaile from Edo State, Sergeant Usman Danzumi from Taraba State and
Sergeant Dahiru Musa from Taraba State.
Mba said: “The gallant, outstanding IRT team attacked by soldiers
in Taraba State consists of some of the most disciplined, proficient and
hardworking police investigators in the service of the nation. Until
their untimely death in the hands of soldiers of 93 Battalion Takum,
Taraba State, these officers have participated in several high profile
and high risk arrests, rescue missions and investigative operations.”
Killed police operatives among the best in the land The FPRO listed some
of the operations to include the arrest of Nigeria’s most notorious
kidnap kingpin, Evans.
The arrest of 22 Boko Haram terrorists responsible for the 2014
kidnapping of the Chibok schoolgirls in Borno State; the arrest of Umar
Abdulmalik, the overall Boko Haram Commander of North-Central and
several of his group members; the arrest of the kidnappers of two
American and two Canadian citizens in Kaduna State.
“And most recently, the rescue of Magajin Garin Daura in Kano State
and arrest of 13 terrorists responsible for the kidnapping of the
Magajin Garin Daura in his hometown, Daura, Katsina State on May 1,
2019, among many other outstanding feats,” Mba stressed. This is the
first time in many years of the silent war between police and soldiers
that the police appear ready to throw their weight behind its men and
demand the truth and justice. Recent history of burning stations,
killing of policemen by soldiers On October 4, 2005, soldiers and
policemen had a confrontation at Area C Police Command, Ojuelegba, which
led to the death of many policemen.
The attack was later described as a massacre as soldiers set the
station on fire, freed detainees and allowed the police armoury to be
looted. Policemen at the station, who survived, either had to hide in
toilets or fled through windows and back ways. Till date, no soldier has
been arrested over the burning of the station or death of the
policemen. When the military responded, it stated that the act was
carried out by unknown soldiers, with the police hierarchy claiming it
was still investigating the matter when it finally reacted to the case.
Also, some years ago, three policemen, including the Divisional
Police Officer (DPO) of Badagry, were shot dead by soldiers from nearby
barracks and as was the norm, it was attributed to unknown soldiers.
Nigerians in shock, activist reacts The murdered of the three operatives
and their civilian friend, followed by viral videos of the scene of the
attack, has generated a buzz in the social media and among members of
the Civil Society Organisations. A human rights activist, Okechukwu
Nwanguma, who is the Executive Director of Rule of Law and
Accountability Advocacy Centre (RLAAC), while speaking on the matter
said: “There are many reasons to doubt the Nigerian Army’s claims of
‘mistaken identity’ as excuse for the murder of the IRT operatives.
That plea does not explain why they shot at the officers at close
range and continued to maltreat the ones battling for life after being
shot even after they identified themselves as police officers. It does
not also explain the immediate release of the arrested kidnap suspect.
There is something fishy. They probably have something to cover
which only an independent and impartial inquiry, perhaps, a judicial
panel of inquiry will unravel. There have been allegations of diversion
of security funds, military and security agencies’ collusion/
involvement in crime and sabotage of efforts to combat kidnapping and
insurgency. Nigerians should insist on this matter not being covered up
like previous cases. There’s the need to unravel the motive, and other
circumstances surrounding this tragedy and identify appropriate measures
to end interagency rivalry and also identify, isolate and neutralise
saboteurs of the fight against insecurity in Nigeria.”
Youths flee Taraba community for fear of police reprisals Hundreds
of youths from Ibi Local Government Area of Taraba State have fled their
homes in fear of possible invasion of the town by security operatives
in search of Alhaji Hamisu Bala Wadume allegedly rescued by soldiers
from the Inspector General of Police Response Team earlier in the week,
with three operatives left dead by soldiers who claimed they were
kidnappers. A combined team of soldiers and police detectives have
intensified search in the community with the aim of arresting youths who
allegedly took part in the killing of the three policemen and a
civilian on Monday.
According to sources, the streets of Ibi have been deserted as most
of the youth of the town have gone into hiding while some have
temporarily relocated to nearby villages for safety. It was gathered
that some of the youth and the soldiers facilitated the escape of the
arrested suspected kidnapper Hamisu, arrested by the IRT policemen on a
covert mission in Ibi and being taken to Jalingo. A source who pleaded
anonymity told one of our correspondents: “As soon as the news of the
escape of Hamisu got to town and knowing that special forces will be
coming the town to track him down, many of the young men ran out of town
for safety to avoid arrest.
The suspicion is that the young men took part in the killing of the
policemen and and also aided the escape of Hamisu.” Our source
disclosed that Hamisu has been a very generous person and has helped a
lot of people in the area and so most of the youth will not want to
betray him even if they know his whereabouts. Consequently, most of them
have fled the town to safer places to hide pending the end of the
tension before they will return homes.
Another source said: “The wanted kidnap suspect has been generous
to the soldiers in Ibi. It was Hamisu who allegedly paid a ransom of
N1.5 million when one of the soldiers was kidnapped few months ago.”
Sources told our correspondent that between Tuesday and Friday, over 10
truck-load of soldiers have visited the community on fact-finding
mission while over 20 senior police officers, some from Force
Headquarters, Abuja, have continued to visit Ibi. Our correspondent
recalls that Hamisu, who was arrested for complicity in several
high-profile kidnappings in Taraba state, by the IRT policemen, was
freed by men of the Nigerian Army.
Efforts by our one of our correspondents to confirm the true
position of things including likely arrests in Ibi from the police
failed as the PRO, ASP David Misal, did not respond to several calls put
across to him.
Source: New Telegraph
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