Tag: Investigation

  • Oromoni’s death: Some Dowen College parents hindered investigation – Police

    Oromoni’s death: Some Dowen College parents hindered investigation – Police

    CSP Bamidele Olusegun on Tuesday told an Ikeja Coroner’s Court that parents of some Dowen College students hindered investigation into the death of 12-year-old student of the school, Sylvester Oromoni.

    Olusegun, who works at the Homicide Section of the Lagos State Criminal Investigation and Intelligence Department, Panti, Yaba, told the court that the parents hindered the investigation by refusing to release their wards for interrogation.

    Olusegun, the Lead Investigating Officer of the case, made the claim at the continuation of his cross-examination before the court.

    While responding to a question from the Coroner, Mr Mikhail Kadiri, Olusegun said that three roommates of the deceased were not released by their parents due to fear of trauma.

    Olusegun also said that investigation into the death was not comprehensive due to unavailability of the three roommates of the deceased.

    “Having not been able to interview the remaining three students, I can say the investigation was not comprehensive.

    “There were four bunks of eight students in the deceased’s room and we (police) were given all the names of the roommates of the deceased.

    “We, however, succeeded in interrogating four out of the seven roommates.

    “This is because some of the parents said their children were going through trauma,” he said.

    Responding to a question by Mr Anthony Kpokpo, counsel to Dowen College, as to how many students confirmed that the deceased was beaten, Olusegun said, ‘None.’

    “All the students at the police station said the alleged beating never happened,” he said.

    The witness added that investigation into the death did not reveal anything against house masters at Dowen College.

    It was alleged by the Oromoni family that the 12-year-old student died on Nov. 30, 2021, from injuries sustained in an attack by five senior students of Dowen College for refusing to join a cult.

    It was also alleged that he was forced to drink a substance by his attackers.

    Advice by the Lagos State Directorate of Public Prosecutions released on Jan. 4, however, disputed the allegation.

    It stated that an autopsy revealed the cause of the student’s death as acute bacterial pneumonia due to severe sepsis.

    The coroner adjourned proceedings until Feb. 28.

  • EFCC opens investigation into tape alleging Buhari’s minister influences corruption cases

    EFCC opens investigation into tape alleging Buhari’s minister influences corruption cases

    The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) has commenced an investigation into a trending audio tape alleging that the Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Abubakar Malami, influences corruption cases.

    In the tape, an operative of the anti-graft agency, Mohammed Idris, accused the justice minister of compromising graft cases.

    “Malami now controls the EFCC. The commission is in his hands. Once Malami speaks, the account will be unfrozen. They are unfreezing suspects’ accounts, including the big cases,” EFCC operative was heard saying in one of the multiple audio recordings obtained by Daily Nigerian.

    But the EFCC in a statement on its verified Facebook page on Thursday said it would activate its internal mechanism to deal with the issues arising therefrom.

    “Without prejudice to the outcome of the investigation, snippets of the audio recording clearly showed an abysmally compromised officer dropping names to ingratiate his benefactor, a relative of a crime suspect,” the statement read.

    “By the alleged action, the said officer is no more than a corrupt fifth columnist with scant regard for the values of the commission.

    “The action is contemptuous of the established Standard Operating Procedure of the EFCC. Such professional indiscretion has no place in the new EFCC.

    “The commission encourages citizens who encounter any such unprofessional conduct by personnel of the EFCC to report to the commission in support of our quest to build a better agency.”

    “Reporting such conducts has been made easy by the Eagle Eye App, a financial crime reporting application which was launched earlier in the year,” Uwujaren further stated.

    According to the EFCC, its operations were guided by established professional precepts “which do not support the kind of discretion that could allow for manipulation by external actors.”

  • ICC prosecutor seeks investigation into abduction of Nigerian schoolchildren

    ICC prosecutor seeks investigation into abduction of Nigerian schoolchildren

    The prosecutor of the International Criminal Court (ICC) is set to seek authorisation from the Pre-Trial Chamber of the court to open an investigation into cases of abduction of schoolchildren in several parts of Northern Nigeria, closure of schools, and the persistent failure of Nigerian authorities at both the federal and state levels to end the abduction.

     

    The ICC prosecutor’s decision followed a petition sent to the court by the Socio-Economic Rights and Accountability Project (SERAP).

     

    This development was disclosed today in a statement by SERAP deputy director, Kolawole Oluwadare.

     

    SERAP had in the petition dated 4 September 2021 urged the ICC prosecutor, Mr Karim A. A. Khan, QC, to “push for those suspected to be responsible and complicit in the commission of these serious crimes, to be invited and tried by the ICC.”

     

    In the petition, SERAP argued that, “The severe and lifelong harms that result from depriving children the right to education satisfy the gravity of harm threshold under the Rome Statute.”

     

    Responding, the ICC prosecutor in a letter with reference number OTP-CR-363/21, and dated 22 October 2021 confirmed to SERAP that “the criteria for opening an investigation into a string of abductions and closure of schools in some parts of Nigeria have been met.”

     

    The letter signed on the prosecutor’s behalf by Mark P. Dillon, Head of the Information and Evidence Unit, read in part: “On behalf of the Prosecutor, I thank you for your communication received on 13/09/2021, as well as any subsequent related information.”

     

    “The preliminary examination of the petition is considered complete. Under Article 53 of the Rome Statute, the next step in the judicial process is for the Prosecutor’s Office to prepare and submit a request to the Pre-Trial Chamber for authorisation to open an investigation on Nigeria.”

     

    “Once submitted, the request will be made publicly available on the Court’s website: www.icccpi.int.”

     

    “Your communication will be forwarded to the relevant team to be analysed, together with other related communications and other available information, in the context of any future investigations. We thank you for your interest in the ICC.”

     

    SERAP deputy director, Kolawole Oluwadare said: “By this decision, the ICC prosecutor has taken a significant step toward ensuring that those suspected to be responsible for grave crimes against Nigerian schoolchildren are exposed, and held to account.”

     

    “The victims of these crimes deserve justice. Impartial justice and reparation will deal a decisive blow to impunity of perpetrators, and improve access of Nigerian children to education. SERAP will work closely with the ICC to achieve these important objectives.”

     

    SERAP’s petition to the ICC prosecutor, read in part: “Senior government officials know well or ought to know that their failure to prevent these crimes will violate the children’s human rights and dignity.”

     

    “The absence of any tangible and relevant investigation or prosecution in Nigeria suggests that the authorities are unwilling or unable to carry out genuine investigation or prosecution of those suspected to be responsible for and complicit in the abduction of students.

     

    The consequences of persistent abductions of students, closure of schools, and the failure to provide safe and enabling learning environments despite federal and state authorities yearly budgeting some N241.2 billion of public funds as “security votes”, are similar to those of the offences in article 7(1).”

     

    “More than 10,000 schools have been reportedly closed in at least seven northern states over the fear of attack and abduction of pupils and members of staff. The states are Sokoto, Zamfara, Kaduna, Kano, Katsina, Niger and Yobe.”

     

    “Among the string of abductions in Zamfara was the abduction of over 200 schoolgirls in the town of Jangebe in February. The latest abduction comes after widespread reports of abduction of students and closure of schools in many states of Nigeria, including in north-central Niger State where some 91 schoolchildren were abducted.”

     

    “An estimated 1.3 million Nigerian children have been affected by frequent raids on schools by suspected terrorists. Some 13 million Nigerian children are out of school nationwide. According to the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), more than 1,000 students have been abducted from schools in northern Nigeria since December 2020.”

     

    “Families and parents have reportedly resulted to paying the terrorists thousands of dollars as ransom to secure the release of their children. An estimated $18.34 million was reportedly paid in ransoms between June 2011 and the end of March 2020.”

     

    “Nigerian authorities have also failed and/or neglected to satisfactorily address the abduction of 276 schoolgirls from Chibok in 2014, which prompted the #BringBackOurGirls campaign. According to reports, more than 100 of those girls are still missing.”

     

    Nigeria is a state party to the Rome Statute and deposited its instrument of ratification on 27 September 2001, thus giving the court jurisdiction over crimes of genocide, crimes against humanity, and war crimes committed on its territory or by its nationals.

     

    The ICC prosecutor decided to seek an investigation after undertaking a preliminary examination of the cases of abduction of children in the country.

     

    A three-member panel of ICC pre-trial judges will consider whether to grant the prosecutor’s request, once it is submitted, to let the ICC step in as a court of last resort.

     

    Judges will rely on the materials submitted by the prosecution to determine whether there is a “reasonable basis” to proceed. Victims and their families may also make their views known to the pre-trial chamber.

     

    If the investigation identifies suspected perpetrators of the crimes alleged in SERAP’s petition, prosecutors can ask judges to issue international arrest warrants, which can remain under seal to help authorities apprehend those charged.

     

    As an international court of last resort, the ICC is mandated to bring to justice people suspected to be responsible for war crimes, crimes against humanity, and genocide when national courts are unable or unwilling to do so.

     

  • Hushpuppi: Police deny concluding investigation into suspended DCP Abba Kyari’s case

    Hushpuppi: Police deny concluding investigation into suspended DCP Abba Kyari’s case

    The Nigeria Police Force (NPF) says investigations into the alleged indictment of Deputy Commissioner of Police, DCP Abba Kyari, by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) is still ongoing.

    The Force Public Relations Officer Frank Mba, in a statement on Tuesday, debunked claims that the panel in charge of the probe had submitted its report to the Inspector General of Police, Usman Alkali Baba.

    He said, “The Nigeria Police Force wishes to inform the general public that the probe into the alleged indictment of DCP Abba Kyari by the FBI, being conducted by the NPF Special Investigation Panel (SIP), is still ongoing.

    “Members of the public are enjoined to note that the panel has not submitted its report to the Inspector General of Police, as being wrongly reported in some news outlets and online platforms”.

    The police spokesman, however, promised that the outcome of the investigation by the panel would be communicated to the public.

    Kyari, the former Head of the Police Intelligence Response Team (IRT), is being investigated following his indictment by the FBI over his alleged relationship with the fraudster Ramon Abbas, popularly known as Hushpuppi.

    He was later suspended by police authorities following the issuing of an arrest warrant by a U.S magistrate judge, Otis Wright.

    On August 2, the IGP appointed a Deputy Commissioner of Police, Tunji Disu, to replace Kyari as the new Head of the Police IRT pending the conclusion of the ongoing investigation.

  • Premiere Academy calls for investigation of Queens Clinic where her student died

    Premiere Academy calls for investigation of Queens Clinic where her student died

    The Management of the Premiere Academy, an upscale, elite secondary school in Lugbe Abuja, has called for investigation of the medical procedures applied by the Queens Clinic Abuja on her student Keren Akpagher who died under controversial circumstances while on admission in the clinic last June.
    Mrs. Stella Fawehinmi, lead Director of the school, made the call at the school yesterday when she addressed the press. She said it became necessary for the members of the school’s management, who had been thrown into mourning following the death of the student, to address several dangerous and pernicious allegations flying around in respect of the student’s death.
    According to Mrs. Fawehinmi, the best way to address what she identified as “misinformation flying around regarding our daughter’s death,” was to shine some light on what happened to Miss Akpagher from the point she was admitted into the clinic and when she slipped into coma leading to her death. She revealed that Akpagher was a diabetic patient, a condition the school had managed for two and half years without incident.
    She condemned the attempt to contrive allegations of rape on Miss Akpagher and called it a “thoughtless cruelty to the memory of their student’s exemplary life,” by individuals whom she believed were desperate to impugn the integrity of the school. She said that what the school’s matron witnessed when she visited their student in the clinic in addition to serious unanswered questions have convinced her that that clinic has some questions to answer.
    The school matron Mrs. Grace Salami who also addressed the press revealed that she became apprehensive when she got to Queens clinic and saw the student’s condition. According to her, the student’s mother, Mrs. Vivien Akpagher, had alerted her that Miss Akpagher who spent the weekend with her family was in crisis and being taken to a hospital. Mrs. Salami recalled that Mrs. Akpagher told her their daughter was in a state of delirium but was alarmed when she got to the hospital and was confronted with frightening indicators.
    According to her, Miss Akpagher’s blood sugar that was 112 three days earlier when she left the school had shot to 423. Amid that grave state of her blood sugar, she learned that the hospital had proceeded to sedate her, a step that she insisted had no professional medical precedence, and has been known to lead to fatality. “The girl was in coma already and was losing pulse, ”disclosed Mrs. Salami. The matron narrated that on further enquiry she was told that the doctor had closed. In a frantic effort to save what seemed to her a precarious situation she requested that they move the girl to a better manned and equipped hospital but Mrs. Akpagher dismissed the suggestion.

  • COAS: Soldiers take over crash site in Kaduna, AIB to commence investigation

    COAS: Soldiers take over crash site in Kaduna, AIB to commence investigation

    Soldiers have cordoned off the site where the Nigerian Airforce plane crashed on Friday evening at the Kaduna International Airport.

    TheNewsGuru.com, TNG reports that the plane which was carrying the Chief of Army Staff, Lieutenant General Ibrahim Attahiru, and other Senior Army Officers crashed near the airport’s active runway, killing all the eleven people on board.

    Speaking on the incident in an interview on Channels Television, the Manager of Kaduna airport, Amina Salami said the military authorities have taken over the crash site.

    She added that they have prevented civil aviation officials from gaining access to the crash site pending the arrival of officials from the Accident Investigation Bureau (AIB).

    She explained that the military plane was initially scheduled to land at the Nigerian Airforce Base in Mando area, but was later diverted to the Kaduna airport due to poor weather conditions.

    According to her, only the Accident Investigation Bureau will determine the actual cause of the crash.

  • Police Commission to investigate report on EndSARS brutality

    Police Commission to investigate report on EndSARS brutality

    The Police Service Commission (PSC) has pledged to investigate report of alleged police misconduct submitted to it by the Action Group on Free Civic Space in Nigeria.

    The Head of Press and Public Relations of the commission, Mr Ikechukwu Ani, disclosed this in a statement on Monday in Abuja.

    He said the group, led by Mrs Zikora Ibe, submitted the report titled: “ENDSARS: Police Brutality, Protests and Shrinking Civic Space in Nigeria” to the commission on Monday.

    Justice Clara Ogunbiyi, Commissioner, Representing the Judiciary in PSC, said the report was far reaching, adding that the commission would need to further investigate the allegations contained in it.

    Ogunbiyi, who received the group on behalf of the commission, said the report contained serious allegations and information that would need to verified.

    She commended the group for a job well done, adding that the commission would continue to do its best to improve the workings of the Nigeria police.

    The commissioners said the idea was to ensure that the force operated within defined rules and regulations and with respect to democratic tenets.

    In her remark, Ibe said the report was to ensure that erring police officers of the dreaded SARS were held accountable.

    She urged the National Human Rights Commission and the Enugu State Judicial Panel of Inquiry to ensure that officers and politicians named and identified by victims in the report were brought to justice.

    Ibe also called for investigation into the alleged black market trade of bodies murdered by SARS operatives to University Teaching Hospitals as cadavers for the teaching and practice of medicine in tertiary institutions.

    “We demand that the capacity of oversight by the Complaints Response Unit (CRU), the PSC, Ministry of Police Affairs and the National Human Rights Commission, to enforce discipline in the police be strengthened,” she said.

  • Buhari demands thorough investigation into attack on Gov. Ortom

    Buhari demands thorough investigation into attack on Gov. Ortom

    President Muhammadu Buhari has condemned the attack on Gov. Samuel Ortom of Benue, saying the brutal attacks on individuals and communities in the state, with the latest one targeting the governor, was unacceptable.

    The president made the condemnation in a statement by his Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity, Malam Garba Shehu, in Abuja on Sunday.

    Buhari welcomed the dispatch of a high level team of crack investigators to the state from the Police headquarters in Abuja, urging the officers to uncover who, or whatsoever, was behind the attacks and bring them to justice.

    He also expressed his sympathies, and that of the government of the federation to Ortom and Benue indigenes.

    Buhari, however, maintained that the unfortunate incident must not be politicized, reiterating that ”an attack on one Nigerian is an attack on all Nigerians.”

    The president directed the Police to undertake a thorough investigation into the incident involving the governor and into all such incidents affecting individuals and communities in the state.

    “Let there be open and transparent investigation and whoever is linked to it should be caught and be made to face the law,” he further directed.

  • Gov Abiodun orders investigation into herdsmen, farmers clash in Ogun

    Gov Abiodun orders investigation into herdsmen, farmers clash in Ogun

    Governor Dapo Abiodun of Ogun has ordered investigations into the recent clash between herdsmen and farmers in Eggua, Yewa-North Council Area of the state.

    TheNewsGuru.com, TNG reports that the clash led to the loss of one life and destruction of property.

    Mr Kunle Somorin, the Chief Press Secretary to the governor, in a statement in Abeokuta on Saturday stated that Abiodun had also set up a special task force to maintain peace in all areas prone to herders/farmers conflict in the state.

    According to the statement, the governor had also directed that those behind the violence should be brought to justice.

    “Our first priority in Ogun is the safety of lives and property of everyone and we will not compromise on that.

    “We will not condone any act of criminality in the state, no matter who is involved.

    “The Police and other security agencies have been directed to go after the perpetrators of this act and bring them to book.

    “We will not allow anybody to disrupt the peace in Ogun and anyone who tries to test our resolve to maintain peace in our state will have himself or herself to blame,’’ the governor was quoted as saying.

    Abiodun commiserated with the family of the deceased and also expressed sympathy to those who lost their farmlands as well as cows during the unfortunate incident.

    The governor had convened an expansive stakeholders’ meeting involving farmers, herdsmen and other stakeholders to bring about a lasting peace.

    “Our state is known for being a haven of peace, security and harmonious relationship amongst people of different ethnic groups whether citizens or settlers, who consider the state their home.

    “This is a long and cherished tradition that we are proud of and which this administration is committed to sustaining.

    “We, therefore, condemn in strong terms the recent unfortunate violence orchestrated by certain elements to set an agenda that is inimical to public security and safety,’’ the governor said.

  • Okowa orders investigation into death of mother, child in Warri

    Okowa orders investigation into death of mother, child in Warri

    Delta State Governor, Ifeanyi Okowa has ordered an immediate investigation into the death of a woman and her daughter in Warri on Wednesday.

    The governor gave the order in a statement by his Chief Press Secretary, Mr. Olisa Ifeajika, in Asaba.

    He decried the incident and charged police authorities in the state to commence an urgent and accelerated investigation into the circumstances surrounding the losses.

    According to Okowa, the sad news of the death of a woman and her daughter in a rather bizarre circumstance in Warri on Wednesday is quite unfortunate and disheartening.

    He condoled with the deceased family on the loss of their loved ones and assured them that everyone involved in the processes that led to the incident would be brought to book.

    Okowa called on the people, especially the people of Warri, to remain calm and law-abiding, and allow the government and law enforcement agencies to take necessary steps to address the situation.

    The governor also charged the police to ensure that law and order prevailed in the area.