A 200-level university student,
John Ekefre, has been admitted into the Lagos State University Teaching
Hospital after policemen from the Iponri division tortured him and damaged his
intestine.
He was said to have been operated
on to rectify the internal injury and to remove “the blood clots” that blocked
his chest as a result of the torture.His elder sister, Mercy Ekefre,
told a Punch correspondent, who visited LASUTH on Tuesday that the family had
spent over N200,000 on John’s treatment.
“The doctor said his intestine was
ruptured and that he had a blood clot. He had a surgery and we are still
awaiting the medical report,” she added.It was learnt that John, an
appendicitis patient who works in a cinema house in Surulere, and four other
friends were going for a church programme tagged, The Experience, organised by
the House on the Rock at the Tafawa Balewa Square, Lagos Island, after they had
closed from work around 11pm on Friday, December 4.
Punch correspondent learnt that
John and Anthony Kenkwo, a graduate of a university in Imo State, had waited
for three other colleagues, Michael Peter, Godwin Ekeji and Joy Imoh on the
fateful day so that they could go for the programme in a group.It was said that on getting to the
Costain area, the vehicle that the young men boarded ran into gridlock and they
decided to alight from the commercial bus.Punch Metro gathered that they
were walking by the roadside when they were arrested by the policemen, who
accused them of robbery.John, 22, said he and his friends
showed the cops their identity cards, but were rebuffed. He said the policemen
beat him to a coma when he demanded to know what their offence was.
He said, “I work at a cinema in
Surulere. We were on afternoon duty that fateful Friday. We closed around 11pm
and left for TBS to attend a church programme – The Experience 10.
“When we got to Costain, we
alighted from the bus we boarded because there was gridlock. About five
policemen on patrol stopped us and we told them we were going to the church.
They searched our bags, but nothing incriminating was found there. They forced
us into their bus. We showed them our identity cards, but they ignored us.“On our way to the station, I
asked them what our offence was and they said we were highway robbers. When we
got to the station, they dragged me down, beat me up and one of them hit me in
the stomach with the butt of his gun.
“They said I was too inquisitive.
The following day, they collected N6,000 from my brother before I was
released.”Kenkwo said a policeman pummelled
him when he complained that their arrest was not justified. He said he
eventually parted with N5,500 before he was release.He said, “It was a bitter
experience. Every Friday and Saturday, we run late night shows. After the close
of work, Ekefre and I waited for three other friends from Apapa so that we
would go to the programme in a group. The traffic was hectic that night and we
decided to disembark from the bus because the guys with us looked stern.
“I also asked the officer who took
my statement what I did. But he responded with punches. It was while I was in
the cell that I started bleeding from the nose.“They charged me N10,000 for bail.
It was after my brother bargained with them that they collected N5,500. They
collected N5,000 from Godwin (Ekeji’s) family, but Joy, the only female among
us, was released free.”Peter told our correspondent that
the policemen collected N8,000 before he was released.Godwin could not be reached but
Ekefre confirmed that his (Godwin’s) relatives paid N5,000 for his bail.
A lawyer and President, Citizens
Rights Defenders, Chief Gabriel Ojumah, said he had, in a petition dated
December 14, urged the Inspector-General of Police, Solomon Arase, Federal
Ministry of Justice and the National Human Rights Commission “to investigate
the matter and bring the erring policemen to book.”Calls made to the line of the
Lagos State police spokesperson, DSP Joe Offor, rang out. He had also yet to
reply to a text message sent to his number as of time of filing this report.
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