The 30-year-old
mechanic, Oladele Adebanjo, who was allegedly tortured and shot in the leg by
men of the Special Anti-Robbery Squad, Lagos State Police Command, has sued the
police for N200m damages.
PUNCH Metro had reported on November 14, 2012, that SARS policemen shot Adebanjo while in
detention over allegations that he stole a commercial bus.
Adebanjo
had acquired a Mazda bus model E2000 on a hire purchase agreement of N1.8m from
Olatunji Adeyemi in August 2011. The bus was, however, stolen before the full payment
could be made.
Adeyemi,
who was irked by the development, reported the incident at the Oworo Police
Division before the matter was transferred to SARS where Adebanjo was allegedly
tortured and shot with a pistol in the leg by Taofeek Olokode, the head of the
SARS team handling the matter.
In a suit
with number ID/943/12 filed before Justice Bola Okikiolu-Ighile, of an Ikeja
High Court, Adebanjo joined the Inspector General of Police, Mr. Muhammed
Abubakar, Lagos State Commissioner of Police, Mr. Umar Manko, Olokode (the
Investigating Police Officer) and Adeyemi in the suit.
The
application filed by Adebanjo’s lawyer, Gerald Abonyi stated, “We
seek a declaration that his arrest and incarceration by the 1st to 3rd
respondents( IG, Lagos CP and Olokode respectively) at the prompting and
instigation of the 4th respondent, Adeyemi, amounts to a gross breach of the
applicant’s fundamental human rights and the Africa Charter on Human and
Peoples’ Rights.
“We seek
relief in the sum of N200m against all the respondents jointly and severally
for the gross violation of Adebanjo’s fundamental human rights.”
Abonyi
also filed with the court a copy of a letter he wrote to the Lagos CP, which
stated that the missing bus had been found and urging the police command to
investigate the “circumstances surrounding its recovery.”
In an
affidavit before the court, Adebanjo claimed that the actions of Olokede were
“premeditated, deliberate and calculated to cause him permanent physical
deformity”.
He stated,
“Since my coming out of SARS custody after being in detention for seven days, I
have not been able to work due to the serious nature of the injury sustained in
the hand of Olokode.
“I am
always in and out of hospital for the treatment of the gunshot wound and other
injuries I sustained. I have been grossly, unjustly abused and stripped of all
my fundamental human rights.”
However,
Olokode, in a counter affidavit, said Adebanjo was shot in a bid to
escape from custody adding that “escaping from lawful custody after the offence
of felony was enough provocation” to shoot him.
Counsel to
the police, Mr. Cyril Ejiofor, who represented the 1st to 3rd respondents, in a
written address to the court described the facts presented
by Adebanjo as “twisted, untrue and alarming” and prayed the court
to “dismiss the application”.
Justice
Okikiolu-Ighile adjourned the case till February 7 for further hearing.
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