SARS investigative panel orders policeman to appear with suspect detained since 2017
SARS investigative panel orders policeman to appear with suspect detained since 2017
SARS investigative panel orders policeman to appear with suspect detained since 2017
SARS investigative panel orders policeman to appear with suspect detained since 2017
The Presidential Investigation Panel on the Special Anti-Robbery Squad Reforms, sitting in Abuja, on Monday ordered SP Philip Oshiri to appear before it with a suspect.

The News Agency of Nigeria reports that Oshiri, an officer in charge of Intelligence Response Team, Lagos SARS, was the Investigating Police Officer in a case involving one Biodun Olaroye.

Executive Secretary, National Human Rights Commission, Mr. Tony Ojukwu, who doubles as the chairman of the panel, gave the order during a public hearing on some petitions against SARS.

Ojukwu gave the order after a petitioner, Mr. Olatunde Olaroye, had told the panel that following the arrest of Biodun, his brother, by the SARS, the family had not been able to establish contact with him.

The chairman said all efforts to get Oshiri to appear before the panel proved abortive, hence the order.

Ojukwu said that apart from the IPO’s appearance before the panel, Biodun should also be produced with his case file on January 25.

Olatunde had written to the panel requesting them to look into the alleged unlawful arrest, detention and disappearance of his younger brother, Biodun, who was in the custody of the Police.

He alleged in the petition that his brother, then 37, was arrested at Ikorodu, Lagos, between May 11 and May 13, 2017.

He said the family later traced him to the Police Headquarters in Ikeja, while Oshiri, who was in charge of the case, did not allow them to see him.

The petitioner alleged that the Police boasted that they had the legal right to detain and investigate his brother for three months, two weeks before he could engage legal services to defend Biodun.

Olatunde added that they (Olaroye family) mounted pressure on the Police to tell them who the IPO for Biodun was, but that they were warned and threatened to steer clear of the Police station.

He said that his brother was held for about four months, after which he was paraded, alongside others before the Inspector General of Police as criminals in custody.

The petitioner claimed that afterwards, his brother was moved from Lagos SARS to Abuja and they have since refused to disclose his whereabouts.

Olatunde said that 18 months after their brother’s arrest, no member of the family knows his whereabouts.

NAN reports that the Federal Government had, in August 2018, set up the panel to look into public complaints of human rights abuses by the squad and to recommend the way forward.(NAN)


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