After the #EndSARS Protests against police brutality
in 2020, Nigerians believed such human rights violations perpetrated by some
police personnel had been curtailed. However, shocking stories of human rights
abuses and police impunities started emanating from the Anti-kidnapping Unit,
otherwise known as Tiger Base Police in Owerri Imo State Police Command. The
incidents sound unbelievable. JULIANA FRANCIS, who went to different states in
the southeast region, chasing after petrified victims of Tiger Base Police,
tell their horrific stories….
A cloud of fear hangs over the people of Imo State in
the southeast region of Nigeria. This fear has enveloped their minds and most
pronounced among people, suspects, who had been ‘guests’ at the Anti-Kidnapping
Unit of the Imo State Police Command, popularly known as Tiger Base Police.
The suspects who survived Tiger Base Police, while narrating in chilling
details, their experiences, all said that it was akin to walking through the
valley of the shadow of death,
A staggering number of former detainees refused to listen, let alone share
their experiences due to fear of being rearrested or targeted.
The core mandate of the Anti-kidnapping Unit in Imo State Police Command is to
investigate crimes that have to do with kidnapping, but the personnel currently
are not playing by the rules guiding the Unit. Investigation shows that Police
who are supposed to be protectors have become persecutors.
Many Detainees Collapse, Die In Detention – Chinonso
Beautiful Chinonso is one of the courageous people, who haltingly shared her
story. It was because of her beauty that the intrepid human rights lawyer, Ms.
Majorie Ezihe, who got her out of Tiger Base Police after three months in
detention, fretted that the girl might have been sexually violated. Ezihe is
planning to send her for therapy.
Chinonso is a quiet girl, who hurriedly shared her ordeal with Tiger Base
Police without going into many details. Chinonso, like other former detainees,
said that sharing their experiences was like dragging them back into the
traumatic nightmare they were struggling to forget.
The 25-year-old lady was arrested after she lost her phone in 2024. The phone
was stolen from where it was being charged. She was already planning to buy a
new one when policemen from Tiger Base swooped on her.
She recounted: “I remembered telling my brother that I would have to block the
SIM, but I abandoned the idea. I was in the compound when the police came to
arrest me. They asked me why I didn’t report to the Police that my phone was
stolen.
“They said my stolen phone and SIM had to do with a murder case. I was detained
for three months. My brother repeatedly tried to bail me out, but the Police
told him that they wouldn’t release me until I confessed. I didn’t know what
they wanted me to confess to.
“I was locked up for three months in a room without ventilation. The heat was
too much and as a result, most of us in detention had rashes all over our
bodies.”
Chinonso said that for the three months she was locked up, she was not allowed
to write a statement. A suspect writing a statement is supposed to be a
standard initial procedure after arrest.
Her mother, a distraught widow, wrote a petition to a human rights
organisation, which stepped into the case.
After that, the case positively turned around for Chinonso. She would later
write her statement, charged to court, and then granted bail.
However, things that she witnessed at Tiger Base Police still haunted her.
She recollected: “There were cells for men and women, but these cells are so
small. We sat on a bare floor and the heat was unbearable.
“There were women I met in the cell and even though I spent three months there,
I still left them there. I was lucky, I was not beaten. But a certain woman was
beaten mercilessly. She was arrested because the police couldn’t find her son.
“She and other women were beaten with planks, and at some point, some of them
started accepting the allegations heaped on them. My Investigating Police
Officer (IPO) is Chidi Igwe.
“While I was in detention, there was a time some sex workers were arrested at
hotels. Sometimes these prostitutes will be up to 40 in a cell. These ladies
would start fainting because the cell is cramped.
“Many people died in those detention facilities; some people had become so weak
that they couldn’t even walk. Every day Police will carry out a male corpse.
These Policemen do not pity anyone, and I do not know where they take the
corpses.”
Several actions and inactions of the Police personnel at Tiger Base contravene
the extant law of the Federal Republic of Nigeria and international laws.
According to investigations by this reporter, many victims/suspects, who went
through Tiger Base Police were subjected to torture, extra-judicial killings,
being held incommunicado, heavily extorted, victims of illegal arrest, and
detention.
Many suspects were also said to have died of starvation and others were
arrested in lieu, among other violations.
The only personae in this ongoing theatre of horror at Tiger Police are the
personnel, who continued to laugh all the way to the bank.
People who pass through Tiger Base are threatened with rearrest if they dare to
share their experiences with the media, and some are even made to write letters
of undertaking to that effect. Others are made to speak in videos incriminating
themselves.
My Nephew, Ekene Francis Elemuwa, Was Arrested Alive,
Brought Out Dead – Reverend Onyekwere
Reverend Onyekwere Elemuwa is among the hundreds of Nigerians, if not
thousands, seeking answers to know what happened to their loved ones when they
were taken into custody by Tiger Base Police.
Onyekwere’s 34-year-old nephew, Ekenedilichukwu Francis Elemuwa, was hale and
healthy when he was arrested, but he would later be brought out in a body bag.
Ekene’s family members are yet to know what has become of his corpse. Police,
said his relative, refused to release it.
Indeed, Ekene, who was into Estate Management, had plans to marry his awaiting
fiancée and had concluded plans to travel out of Nigeria before his untimely
death.
He was said to have been arrested alongside his friend, called Ikemba.
Onyekwere said: “On 28th of August 2023, at about 8:pm, Ekene went out with his
friend, Ikemba. He wanted to collect his phone, which he gave to someone to
charge for him. In the process, policemen in their vehicle blocked and took
both men away. Both young men shouted, asking to know their offence, but the
police did not respond.
“They were taken to Tiger Base. The following day, Ekene told them to contact
his people, but these police people refused. They also did not contact Ikemba’s
people.”
Onyekwere is not happy that the Police have not given them answers to many
questions, one of which is what or who killed Ekene and what was the charge
levelled against him by the Police.
He said: “This is a boy who had never experienced police arrest or detention
before. He was a good boy. He was arrested either on the 8th or 9th of August,
he was there till August 30th and 2nd of September. He died on the 4th. Ekene’s
brother was further told by other detainees that when Ekene suddenly slumped,
other detainees started shouting that someone had slumped, it was then that the
police came.
“The Police said they were taking him to hospital when he died, but his
cellmates insisted that it was his corpse that the police carried out of the
cell. The question now is how did we know about this issue? The police seized
his phone and did not allow him to contact his family. They did not arraign him
in court and the worst part is that he did not have a case file. We still do
not know his offence, or why he was arrested and detained.”
Onyekwere said that they would not have known of Ekene’s arrest, detention, and
death, if not for a former suspect, who contacted Ekene’s elder brother after
he regained his freedom.
Meanwhile, Ekene’s family members had been frantically searching for him,
calling his phone line, which was permanently switched off.
Nobody knew Ekene was arrested and then died in police custody. When the family
members finally got information that Ekene was in Tiger Base Custody, they
dashed there, but the police bold-facedly denied knowing anyone with that name
and description.
“It was when someone mentioned Ikemba, Ekene’s friend, who is still alive and
in detention there, that the police accepted that Ekene was brought there. They
referred his brothers to one Inspector Moses, who for no reason started
threatening them, and told them not to disturb him.
“This Inspector Moses is Ekene’s IPO. He was asked about the case file and the
offence that the boy committed, but Inspector Moses did not give any answer. He
did not give us a clue as to where Ekene’s corpse is.”
Onyekwere said that they had to get a lawyer involved, who petitioned the
Inspector General of Police, Kayode Egbetokun. The IGP then instructed the Imo
State Commissioner of Police, to find out what happened to Ekene.
Onyekwere recounted: “It was at that point that Inspector Moses told my
brothers to meet one SP Oladimeji, who is in charge of the Tiger Base Police.
“The Oladimeji explained that truly Ekene was arrested, along with another boy.
He said that Ekene became sick in detention, and they took him to the hospital,
it was so serious and then he died in the hospital.
“The question I asked was, did he die inside the police cell, or did he die
inside the police vehicle, or did he die in the hospital why doctors were
treating him? The Police did not give me answers to these three questions.”
Police Held Rifle, Machete To My Head, Ordered Me To
Write False Statement – Citizen Offor
Another shocking incident is what happened to Mr Offor with his electrician.
The Investigating Police Officer (IPO) in charge of Offor’s case, identified as
Promise, would later say that Offor and the electrician were arrested because
they drove close to the Imo State Governor’s convoy.
The Police claimed that the Special Adviser to the Governor, suspecting that
they might be kidnappers, ordered the Police to arrest them. They were arrested
and marched to the Anti-Kidnapping Unit at Tiger Base.
Offor was released following the intervention of a
human rights activist, but he had already been through hell and back. Family
members were angry that after 72 hours of detaining Offor, he was not
investigated and was not released.
Before he was granted bail, the IPO demanded N500,000 for bail, but after
haggling, N40,000 was paid.
Offor recounting his ordeal in Tiger Base Police, said that his education made
him know that his fundamental rights were infringed upon.
He explained that on the 14th of November 2022, he invited an electrician to
come over and help him fix his residential electrical issues. The electrician
demanded payment in cash because he needed it for food and transportation.
Offor had no cash.
Offor said: “I had no other option than to drive out at about 10:35 pm to the
nearest ATM to withdraw cash to pay him.”
Most of the ATM galleries were not dispensing, thus Offor continued his search,
and it was in the process he noticed some vehicles in convoy.
Offor said: “No sooner than we got to the UBA, parked at the front of the Bank
and came out of our vehicle to approach the ATM, we noticed that all the fleet
of the said vehicular convoy stopped ahead of us. We noticed a considerable
number of Mobile Policemen, armed with AK47 Rifles approached, rounded us up
and started barking at us, asking who we were.”
Offor recalled that he and the electrician were immediately ordered to open all
doors of the vehicle and booth. He introduced himself and explained his quest
for an ATM gallery.
Just when Offor thought the policemen were done with them, they arrested them.
When he asked the nature of their offence, Mum’s the word. He said that at a
point, he thought they had fallen into the clutches of kidnappers disguised as
police officers.
They soon drove to Tiger Police, opposite the Imo State Government House. He
said that when they drove in, they were petrified as some armed policemen
pointed guns at them and wanted to shoot.
But the two officers that accompanied Offor and the electrician screamed:
“Don’t shoot! Don’t shoot!”
The armed policemen then broke into chants: “Shoot them! Kill them! Dagger
them!”
Offor said: “My heartbeat was terrible as the whole incident had been too much
for me. Inside, we saw a crowd of people, some with grievous wounds and
injuries, bandages and so on, some lying down, some standing and some
squatting.
“Many of the injuries on their various bodies were either bullet wounds,
machete cuts or dagger piercings. There was a stench from both the passages
that led into a more deadly Solitary Confinements of small compartments where
human beings were kept for various categories of timelines, ranging in days,
weeks, some several months with such quantum of numbers, ranging between 30 to
40 suspects per patch as such does not even qualify to be regarded as rooms.
“Many of the suspects however were suffering from not only various degrees of
grievous and harmful wounds, but also from many kinds of poor hygiene diseased
related ailments such as Chicken poxes and skin diseases. Many of those who had
different major injuries were not taken proper care of.
“Their bodies were half rotting even though they were still breathing. Many of
them complained to me that they had never been given access to their families
as their phones were seized on the day of their arrest.
“Many were seriously malnourished. Some were dying daily, and corpses were
being carted away to unknown places. The electrician and I were kept in
solitary confinement for two nights, without access to our family members,
friends, or relatives, just like what some of the detainees narrated to me.
“The cells were filled up and yet people were still being brought in at
intervals and piled in like sardines, without a recourse to the number of
suspects or health implications. Detainees had no food and water and were
simply dying slowly but surely.”
The following day after their arrest, Offor and his electrician were called out
for their statements to be recorded. His initial IPO was one Austine, who later
transferred his case to IPO Promise. Offor described Promise as “cruel, and
abusive, given to threatening suspects, assaulting, and inflicting injuries.”
He said that his trouble with Officer Promise began after he refused to
cooperate with him to doctor his confessional statement.
Offor said that his statement was at the concluding part when Austin handed him
to IPO Promise, who started interrogating him about his car.
IPO Promise then went and searched Offor’s car, irrespective of the fact the
car had been searched earlier.
“IPO Promise alleged me all forms of crimes, ranging from drug addict,
kidnapper, to assassin. When he could not find anything incriminating in my
car, he began to point at my Registration Number, alleging that I covered it,
which I refused. He went ahead to damage my transparent plate number cover
which had been there for several months without harassment by any Law
enforcement agents on the road,” said Offor.
He said of Officer Promise: “At various intervals right from the time I was
handed over to him, he assaulted me by beating and slapping me. I begged him to
allow me to conclude my statement. After that, I handed it to him and he
compelled me to read to his hearing all that I had written.
“He rejected my statement, brought a new Statement paper, and ordered me to
write an entirely new Statement, which he must dictate to me. I was not only
shocked by this development but also faced a series of life, and physical
threats from Officer Promise for objecting.
“His threats and anger continued to heighten and his colleague, who was
standing behind me, corked his gun, threatening to shoot me. At one point,
another officer came with a machete, threatening to cut my back if I did not
comply and write whatever Officer Promise asked me to write.
“Officer Promise then dictated; thus, “That I and my gang of Kidnappers and
Assassins had been trailing the convoy of the Honourable Special Assistant to
the Governor on Security and Special Duties, Honourable Chinasa Nwaneri with
the bede kidnapping and assassinating him…”
“When I heard the heinous charge and the names he mentioned, I was shocked! I
maintained that I had already made a completed honest statement and that there
was no need for either an excess or multiplicity of statements.
“He slapped me, and hit my forehead, ranting that I had condemned his Statement
Sheet. He later said that he wanted to help me, but that I was rather
stubborn.”
Offor said that Officer Promise then brought out their phones from his pocket
and demanded passwords. Officer Promise accessed Offor’s phone and dived deep
into his privacies.
It was while Offor’s phone was being browsed, and he was sitting somewhere,
waiting for Officer Promise to be done, that he noticed a middle-aged woman
with two children. The woman later introduced herself as Mrs Ebere. They
chatted.
Ebere told him that she was at Tiger Base Police because her 20-year-old
younger brother, had been in detention for over two months.
Ebere explained to Offor that she and her relatives had been frantically
searching for the boy for a while before they got information that he was at
Tiger Base Police.
According to her, the boy was profiled and tagged as a cultist for merely
wearing a black cap. He was grabbed along the road. The Police dumped him in a
cell and did not bother to alert his family members about his whereabouts.
Ebere would later turn out to be a Good Samaritan for Offor. She collected
Offor’s brother’s phone number and alerted him of Offor’s current location.
Meanwhile, Offor’s family was sickened by his sudden disappearance, especially
because his phone was unreachable.
Offor stated: “We spent a total of three days in their ‘Custody of Death’
without food or water. My sister brought food on the second and last day; I
couldn’t eat it, so I gave it to the electrician and other detainees. I had no
appetite. I could not stand the stench of the environment. After my release, I
was shocked to find out policemen were using my vehicle for their chase and
arrest operations.”
Female Detainee Loses Pregnancy After Police Stomped
On Baby Bump, Says Blessing
A former detainee at Force Headquarters, FCT, Abuja, who wishes to be simply
identified as Mrs Blessing, said that she was arrested under a Trump-up charge
of her and her husband being members of the Indigenous People Of Biafra (IPOB).
IPOB, a separatist group in the southeast region of Nigeria aims to restore the
Republic of Biara, also known as Igbo Nation. A Federal Court in Abuja in 2017,
declared IPOB a terrorist organisation leading to law enforcement agencies
carrying out arbitrary arrests, illegal detentions, trump-up charges and now
generally cashing out with the proscription.
Blessing was one of those arrested over alleged membership with IPOB. She was
moved to Abuja, where she met other women in detention, who were also charged
with being IPOB members or lovers of IPOB members.
The women soon started swapping stories of their arrest and sojourn in
detention facilities.
Blessing recounted: “I didn’t pass through Tiger Base Police, but I was
detained in Abuja with other women who passed through there. All these women
were arrested under the guise that they were Biafra women or because of their
husbands’ alleged Biafra activities.
“When they started sharing their experiences of Tiger Base Police, I was
horrified. Tiger Base is a Horror Base! One of our cellmates is called Melody.
She was arrested and tagged as the girlfriend of an IPOB member. She was
arrested with her father, who was in his 60’s.
“Melody’s father was shot to death inside Tiger Base, while Melody lost her
four-month pregnancy after the police stomped on her stomach during torture.
She started bleeding and her pregnancy was aborted. Another case is about one
Pastor Chinedu, who was arrested at Port Harcourt, Rivers State. He was
arrested in lieu: the Police were looking for his nephew and when they could
not get him, they grabbed Pastor Chinedu.
“Pastor Chinedu started conducting morning devotion and prayer sessions with
the detainees. He became well known. One night, the Police came to call him,
and immediately other detainees started weeping because they knew they would
never see him again and that was what happened. We heard his children have
dropped out of school.”
Note: Some detainees who spoke with the reporter
requested their real names should not be used to avoid being rearrested or
targeted by Tiger Base Police personnel.
This Report was supported by the Rule Of Law And
Accountability Advocacy Centre as part of its interventions on South East
insecurity and its impact on Human Rights, Civic Space And Development.
To Be Continued
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