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More Police Checkpoints, More Crime In The South-east by jona2: 9:44pm On Nov 29, 2009 |
More police checkpoints, more crime in the South-east By Emmanuel Ogala [b]November 29, 2009 12:00AMT The first thing a first time visitor to the Southern part of Nigeria will notice, besides the ubiquitous bad roads, is that there are security checks at almost every other kilometre of the road. The road blocks are mostly manned by squads of police officers and a mix of police and military officers. The checkpoints also vary from point to point. Police officers in the South East use unsophisticated barriers like tree branches, logs and old tyres and tar barrels to barricade the road at such close intervals that they turn the road into a snaky, single lane. Face value At such checkpoints, the officers on duty first mentally size up the passengers. “If you look innocent, you are left to go. But if they don’t like your face, they will ask you to come down and ask you questions like ‘where are you coming from or where are you going to?’ and then demand for your license and registration documents,” Emeka Ngwu, a taxi driver in Enugu, said. “Sometimes they ask every passenger to step down and they go in to search the vehicle. Some other times, they ask the driver and passengers to spread their arms apart while they search their body too.” Mr. Ngwu added. The checks are ostensibly to fish out suspected criminals, especially kidnappers, so the efforts to secure the region. Yet, despite the heavy presence of security officers on all the main roads in the area, the south-east still remains, according to the police, the most insecure place to live in Nigeria. “Those are the areas where we have the highest incidence of kidnapping right now,” Emmanuel Ojukwu, the national public relations officer of the Nigeria Police Force, said an interview with NEXT. “Now, we have isolated cases of kidnapping in some part of this country. But we have a preponderance in the South (East): Anambra, Imo, Abia (and) Edo state.” Extortion or Security? Drivers and other road users on these routes however said the officers that man these checkpoints do more than security checks. They say the officers are more inclined to intimidate, harass and extort money from them. Linus Obum, who has been a commercial bus driver in Aba, a commercial city in Abia State, for more than 10 years, said it has almost become part of his daily routine to always put money aside for police officers at checkpoints. “I drive Aba to PH (Port Harcourt) and sometimes to Owerri and I share at least N1000 to police officers at checkpoints on each trip,” he said. “If you no give them, they go waste our time sotee (till) your passengers go drop enter another bus.” Mr. Obum claimed his dilemma is shared by every other bus or taxi driver in the region. At such checkpoints, the commercial drivers stop for either the bus conductor or the driver to run to a nearby patrol van with money in his hands and pay an officer sitting in the van, a ransom that allows them to progress to the next checkpoint where the ritual is repeated. Are they effective? Figures of security breaches across the nation question the efficacy of these checkpoints security-wise. Hillary Ugwuanyi, 42, a resident of Enugu, said the police pose more threat to the residents than even the criminals they claim to guard against. “They can open fire on a civilian for just N20 at a checkpoint but disappear at the slightest appearance of criminals,” he said. “Most times, I wonder if they are paid to protect us or intimidate and extort us civilians.” Mr. Ojukwu, the police spokesman, however said the officers were doing their job well, especially in combating kidnappers. He also said the police have other crime combating strategies beyond road blocks. “We have a number of cases whereby where we notice the demeanour on somebody, we subject the person to search and we have been able to rescue some victims, even along the roads,” he said. “When they pick somebody (the kidnappers), they may not necessarily pass the main road. They can use foot paths or some routes which police are not manning. But that notwithstanding, we have rescued so many victims and we have arrested so many kidnappers and we shall keep arresting then.” Back http://234next.com/csp/cms/sites/Next/News/Metro/Crime[/b]/5487897-146/story.csp |
Re: More Police Checkpoints, More Crime In The South-east by jona2: 9:50pm On Nov 29, 2009 |
some comments. http://234next.com/csp/cms/sites/Next/News/Metro/Crime/5487897-146/story.csp [b]The chickens have come to roost in the east! Years of selfish pigeheadedness and "self inflicted angst" to quote Mr Chidi Amuta of Thisday has lead them to this to sorry state of affairs. In the East,there is no clear leader,no uniting force except the desire to be wealthy and lord it over their neighbour. It is harsh but true or how else do you explain the anarchy in anambra or the theft of abia? If Onovo an igboman had not been made IG we would be hearing stories tht it is because the IG is not Igbo. The story now is,it is ""abuja"" that is causing our problems. Didnt abuja try to cause problems in lagos,edo and plateau states but the will of the people prevailed because they all came together to fight the common enemy. Unfortunately there is no common front for the igboman,no clear leader or goal only selfish narrow interest of who gets what and how much. The criminals in the south east represent the basest form of that thinking;everyman for himself and nobody for everybody else. The militants were called to heel because they had a common purpose (or so they claimed) and chose to work as a unit so they were lead or united behind leaders.The leader(s) said stop and stop they did. However in the south east we have just pure criminals with no claim to altruism whatsoever apart from renting themselves out to be used as political thugs for the highest bidder. Unless there is a major change in the mindset and attitude of the south east to their position in the nigerian state there will be no peace in the east! Posted by saydura on Nov 29 2009 I am glad to read from all above comments that the Igbos are the main problems in Southern Nigeria, bribery and corruption, armed robbery, hard drugs etc. I have followed from the begining of this year the number of people arrested at our airports for drugs exportation, the biggest percentage are of Igbo origin. Until the Igbos erase the idea of must make it big, various problems will continue to emerged. The police contribute to some of our problems no doubt but as individuals we need to re-focus our thinking. Posted by Clems Igboman on Nov 29 2009 'The Southeast can't even ask for its rights again from the federal [/b] |
Re: More Police Checkpoints, More Crime In The South-east by jona2: 9:52pm On Nov 29, 2009 |
Posted by Ikechukwu on Nov 29 2009 Another example of how tribalism is killing Nigerians. The Igbos were shouting marginalization because they wanted an Igbo IG. You got one guys, along with police intimidation and extortion in addition to heightened kidnapping and armed robbery. Having said that, I think this is another reason why Gov Obi's tenure in Anambra state has expired. Using the state police argument is obsolete. We need a governor that will do whatever it takes to get things done. Lagos does not have a state police but the last time I checked it is a lot more peaceful than Onitsha |
Re: More Police Checkpoints, More Crime In The South-east by jona2: 5:11pm On Nov 30, 2009 |
*jona: |
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