Oh my! This is too much, Find the chilling details of what Justin Nwankwo. A doctoral student of Philosophy from the Nnamdi Azikwe University had to endure while he was in the police custody for three Months.
Narrating his ordeal to Crime Guard,
the then Manager of Upper Class Hotel in the commercial city of Onitsha,
Anambra State, before it was demolished by the Peter Obi administration said:
“August 1, 2013 is a day I will never forget in my life, as it marked the
beginning of an ugly experience I passed through for three months. It was the
day I was arrested alongside 13 others who worked in the hotel I managed while
pursuing my educational career.
“That morning, police
officers stormed the hotel shouting: ‘Where is your director?’ I took them to
his office and they brought out a search warrant. In the course of
interrogation, I discovered that they already had a particular room in
mind. One of the officers kept shouting: ‘Where is room 102?’ The staff
in charge of cleaning the guest rooms had already resumed. Unfortunately, the
particular room which the police officers were asking for was locked by the
guest who lodged the previous night. When we discovered that the guest did not
drop the key at the reception while leaving, the police had to break the door.
“I was there when they
forced the door open and discovered two dark poly bags containing two dried
human skulls. But the true story is that the night before that day, we had a
guest who lodged in one of the rooms in the hotel. He lodged with a name and
was given a receipt. It was immediately the guest checked out that the police
stormed the hotel early the next morning with a search warrant, searched the
hotel and discovered two dried human skulls, two AK-47 rifles and one military
cap.”
Crime scene and
demolition of hotel
“Ironically, the police
did not take photo shots of the crime scene, the hotel, and the bags containing
the items, which is what obtains in other climes. Rather, what they did was to
march all of us out of the hotel, then whisked us to the Area Command in
Onitsha. They took about 13 of us away in a bullion van to the Area Command and
then, to the Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS) Akwuzu. When we got there,
they said they have to start with the manager. Surprisingly, the hotel was
demolished by the state government the same day we were arrested. On the second
day, the hotel was in rubble.”
My ordeal
“My ordeal started at
Akwuzu Special Anti-Robbery Squad where I met an entirely different world. As a
little boy who grew up in Onitsha, I heard that anyone who went to Akwuzu SARS
never returned, but I had never been there. When we got there, it was a
terrible experience for me. I was the first to be tortured. We were taken to a
rickety hall, tied like Christmas goats used for barbecue and hung on a stake.
I went through this torture everyday for three months. The torture was in
stages. Like other suspects, I was tortured till I passed out. They poured
water on me to revive me each time I passed out.”
The torture room
“The torture room was a
large hall with several operatives applying different types of techniques in
torturing suspects. When I first entered the torture chamber and saw what was
happening, I began to expect mine immediately. Most times, sounds of gunshots
filled the halls, as suspects were shot by officers. There was a day I was
being tortured and bullets were sprayed on a suspect. I was scared of what will
be my fate if any of the bullets hit me? There were times I was tied to a stake
with arms raised up. Blood was dripping out of my nose. When I passed out, I
was taken off the stake for about an hour or two to recover before the torture
continued. From that stage, I was taken to where my hands were tied with a rope
and pulled in different directions.
“Severally, I felt I may
not survive the torture because of the weighty allegations against me. I was
tortured for three months.
“The final torture I
received was from my investigating police officer, IPO, who used his hands to
pull out the hair on my skin because I am hairy. I noticed that each time
we were being tortured, the officers murmured among themselves, asking what
would happen if the suspects died. This shows they knew that the treatment they
were meting out was inhuman.”
Physical and mental
torture
“Initially when I got
there, I was asked to write a statement. Midway, they forced me to stop.
After the physical torture, they took me through the mental torture. This
involved putting you inside a small dark crowded cell with about 26 other suspects,
all naked. We were not fed. We were kept under dehumanising condition. Some
suspects had gunshot wounds which were decaying, septic, with maggots coming
out.
“When tortured beyond
unbearable limit, suspects will begin to confess to crimes they didn’t commit,
saying what the officers wanted them to say just to be freed from torture. The
painful aspect is the fact that they lie to your relatives when they come, that
you are not in their custody. Meanwhile you are wasting away in their cell.
“It was when the Network
on Police Reform in Nigeria (NOPRIN) mounted pressure through media
publications that my IPO brought a statement written by him and forced me to
sign. Without being derogatory, my IPO is less educated than me. So, I had to
confront him when I was granted bail three months later, insisting that the
written statement was not mine. Instead of showing remorse, he quipped that I
should be happy I was not wasted.”
“Travel to Aso Rock”
“Goings-on at the SARS,
Awkuzu, are very inhuman. They are degrading human life there. Each time human
rights activists and civil society organizations visit, they give us clothes to
wear and depopulate the cells by taking suspects to other cells. After they
leave, they bring the suspects back into the cells. It was during one of such
occasions that some suspects died. They execute people summarily in Cell 5. The
cell is built in such a way that when you come inside the building, it is the
first cell you see but you won’t know that anything like that goes on there.
Whenever they open the cell, expectations are that many suspects will certainly
die and they simply refer to it as, ‘travelling to Aso Rock’. We saw it, we
experienced it and we felt it. Every night, we feel like it was the last day on
earth.”
Disappearance of
suspects at night
“Usually in SARS, two
words are commonly used. They are: to ‘waste and to travel’. Initially, when I
began to hear the phrase, I didn’t understand what it meant till suspects began
to disappear from our cells at night and never returned. Some of the suspects I
met in the cell left and I rose to become the boss. But I was a very benevolent
boss as I fed suspects in the cell with the money my parents gave me while in
cell. I was lucky to have survived the physical, mental and psychological
torture but when I was released, I had to face the societal stigma as people
who were close to me before my arrest and detention, stayed away from me
and treated me like I was an ex-convict.”
Back to academics
“I was supposed to have
completed my programme but for my ordeal, I was forcefully taken away from the
academic world. I returned this year. Hopefully, before the end of July,
I would defend my project. Ironically, the police filed a suit against us at
the magistrate’s court when there was too much pressure from civil right
organisations spear-headed by NOPRIN. The police was forced to take us to
court. On the day we were arraigned in court at about 2:30am, officers came
into the cell, asked us to have our bath. I asked where they were taking us.
They said they were taking us to court. That was the first time in three months
that I took my bath. At the court, we were arraigned on a seven-count charge
ranging from murder to robbery.”
Demolition in error
“While in prison, we
made enquiries about Nnabule Okafor, the man they said we killed in the charges
preferred against us. The truth of the matter is that Anambra State government
demolished the hotel in error and when they discovered that it was an error and
the whole incident, a set-up, they had to file a charge against us so that they
could justify the demolition of the building.
Now that we have been
bailed, both the police and the Department of Public Prosecution (DPP) have
refused to take the case to high court. We have 14 suits in court on violation
of fundamental human rights. All the cases we have in the court are the ones we
instituted for the government to compensate us but nothing has been done. We
have served them notice yet they refused to respond.”
Compensation for the
oppressed
“It is all part of the
torture that both the police and Anambra State Governor have erred and still
will not accept the fact that there is need to compensate those whom you have
victimized.
“The experience of
torture in the Nigerian police if you have not heard, or seen or felt it, you
keep hearing go to court, go to court but we have been in the court.
“We also want to be in
the court of public opinion because when this thing happened, the Governor of
Anambra State did not go to court.
He became the accuser
and the judge at the same time. He demolished the hotel alongside the
properties of those who lived and worked in that place. I am not scared
to discuss this experience because I still want justice to be done,” he stated.
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