Murder Incorporated Print E-mail
Written by Okey Ndibe   
Tuesday, 27 November 2007

Murder Incorporated

By Okey Ndibe

The Nigerian police have long had a reputation for needless highhandedness and unjustified bloodlust. So embedded is this fearsome reputation in the popular imagination that Nigerians have taken to describing mobile police officers as “kill-and-go.” The picture is of officers quick to draw their guns, take aim at (usually) innocent citizens, and let out a deadly report. Nigerians know that the fear of the police is the beginning—and often the end—of wisdom.

Inspector General Mike Okiro recently reminded us why the police are feared. Two weeks ago (November 14), Mr. Okiro disclosed that, in a mere three-month span between June and the end of September, the police shot and killed 785 suspected armed robbers. In the same period, the police arrested 1,628 suspected armed robbers.

Okiro’s disclosure was nothing short of a scandal. It implied that the police under his command had become a mindless and unrestrained killing machine. Okiro is less an inspector general than the commander of a human slaughtering enterprise. He presides over a business whose corporate name might as well be: Murder Incorporated.

Okiro’s startling statistic was released with gusto. There’s no question that the IG expected to be garlanded and feted for doing a superb job. Instead, Nigerians ought to recoil in horror and outrage at the man’s gruesome conception of his job. A police force that specializes in extra-judicial killing of Nigerians deserves jeers, not cheers.  

What’s worse, Okiro made the chest-thumping revelation while briefing the House of Representatives’ Police Affairs Committee on the “achievements” of his first three months in office. Why didn’t the legislators tell him there and then that he and his subordinates were out of line?  

Okiro’s notion of crime fighting has produced no verifiable deterrent effect. His announcement has brought Nigeria nothing but international embarrassment. A Sierra Leonean friend rang me from Tampa, Florida to express shock. He was in Jamaica attending a conference when Okiro’s gleeful statistic was disseminated through agency reports.  

Instantly, he told me, it became the talk of the conference. People gathered in groups to discuss this bizarre factoid of Nigerian law enforcement. Most were incredulous. Did they hear right? What manner of country? What would be the fall-out? Would the IG survive this public confession that the men and women under his command had become trigger-happy dealers of death?

Human Rights Watch, which less than two months ago released a scathing report on the April polls, weighed in by calling for an official probe. In a statement titled “Nigeria: Investigate Widespread Killings by Police,” HRW called on Abuja to “launch an independent public inquiry.”  

Gory as Okiro’s portrait was, Human Rights Watch actually suggested that the reality could be more sordid. It speculated that “the true number of people killed by the police since 2000 may exceed 10,000.” Peter Takirambudde, the agency’s Africa director, said “It’s stunning that the police killed half as many ‘armed robbery suspects’ as they managed to arrest during Okiro’s first 90 days.” Then he added: “And it’s scandalous that leading police officials seem to regard the routine killing of Nigerian citizens—criminal suspects or not—as a point of pride.”

Okiro’s confession served to bring out to the open a dastardly practice that has been a poorly kept secret. Nigerians know that the police operate according to an unwritten rule, namely, that armed robbery suspects are taken to the back of police stations and executed. The victims of such unsanctioned executions are, in the official lingo, “wasted.”  

The Human Rights Watch has a dossier on such blatant miscarriages of justice. The international body noted: “Police officers routinely label individuals they kill as ‘armed robbers’ who fired on police; according to police statistics, all of the thousands of individuals shot and killed by police officers were ‘armed robbers.’… In June 2005, the murder of six young people at a police checkpoint in Abuja generated a nationwide scandal that led to an investigation and criminal charges against the officers involved, but that case was an exception to prevailing norms. Reported cases of investigations into police killings have been extremely rare and accountability even less common.

“In August 2006, police arrested and publicly ‘paraded’ 12 armed robbery suspects in the Abia State town of Umuahia; the 12 were later found among a pile of 16 corpses deposited near a local mortuary. Police officials claimed that all 16 were armed robbers who had somehow been involved in an exchange of gunfire with the police. No investigation was carried out.”  

My guess is that this reprehensible practice thrives because of the popular (and founded) perception that armed robbery has risen to an implacable scourge: incessant, pervasive and nightmarish. Many armed robbers operate with a viciousness that inspires terror in the hearts and heads of their victims. I’ve been a victim of armed robbery in a Lagos cab; it is not an experience to wish on one’s worst enemy. Some robbers are not content to strip their victims of hard-earned possessions and valuables; they also gut their victims of dignity and leave them dispirited. Some of them relish to rape, maim and kill. They scar their victims in body and spirit.  

In fact, the Human Rights Watch underscored the depth of the problem. It acknowledged that “Many parts of Nigeria experience extremely high levels of violent crime, owing partly to rising poverty, high unemployment and the proliferation of small arms throughout the country.” Then it revealed that “Dozens of Nigerian police officers die in the line of duty every year.”

Given robbers’ cruel modus operandi, it is no surprise that the society has come to think of them as less than human. Armed robbers, so the argument goes, merit summary treatment. And that includes, especially, summary capital treatment.    

Hard as it is, it is an argument—and an attitude—that a society that aspires to enlightenment and realization of humane values must reject. To start with, we must never forget that the casualties of police execution are not armed robbers. They are “armed robbery suspects.”  

The difference is critical. No state should ever dabble in the business of willfully killing innocent citizens. Yet, even when the paraphernalia of justice is sound and the process for determining guilt or innocence rigorous, it is not uncommon for an innocent or two to fall victim to human error or malice. When the issue of divining guilt or innocence is left to the whims and caprice of inept, corrupt and ill-equipped police officers, then the margin of error is liable to be multiplied by several factors.  

Even if all police officers were morally exemplary and meticulous in the discharge of their duties, it still should not be up to them to decide whom to execute, when and how. Citizens should always be wary of a law enforcement agency that seeks the powers to mete out death or grant absolution. A corrupt police—and the Nigerian police is widely regarded as a synecdoche of corruption—should not be entrusted with determining when a suspect is guilty—and deserving of execution.  

Impatience with the grinding pace and circuitous mode of the judicial system is one reason many otherwise informed citizens are swayed by the seductive illogic of instantaneous “justice” via police execution. But it behooves us to realize that it is all of us, not just the 600 odd “suspects” slaughtered by Okiro’s men, whose humanity is discounted. In conceding to the police the fiat to kill in our name once the victim is tagged an “armed robbery suspect,” we expose many innocents as well as ourselves to the same hazards. All we need do to fall victim is be in the wrong place at a time the police are out to “prove” that they are up to combating the scourge of armed robbery.  

Attorney General Michael Aondoakaa bestirs with the mantra of “rule of law” when it comes to legal jeopardy for former and serving public officials accused of betraying the public trust. But when more than ten prisoners died at Ibadan Prison, he did not see fit to visit the facility to inspect its inhumane conditions and to champion the rights of its hapless occupants.  

Nor has Mr. Aondoakaa got round to rebuking Okiro and the police for extra-judicial slaughter of impoverished Nigerians. That’s deplorable. A state that turns a blind eye to the killing of thousands of its citizens risks encouraging citizens to adopt self-help rather than the vaunted rule of law. Human Rights Watch has collated Nigerian police records on its unilateral executions. Said HRW: “by the police’s own statistics, police personnel have shot and killed more than 8,000 people since January 2000 in circumstances that remain largely unexplained. In 2005, police officials told Human Rights Watch that from January 2000 to March 2004 police personnel killed 7,198 ‘armed robbers’ in ‘combat.’ Remarkably, during the first three months of 2004, the police claimed to have killed 422 armed robbers in shootouts, while recovering only 300 firearms.”  

This is chilling statistics by any measure, and an indictment of the police. It is time the police tried a different, and professionally sounder and accountable, approach to crime prevention and fighting. Instead of persisting with a suspect policy of mowing down “suspects,” it is time the police embarked on internal house cleaning. It should then devise a rigorous method for gathering intelligence on true crime suspects and update its manual for solving crimes.




RobotRobot is offline 
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 # 1

Two weeks ago (November 14), Mr. Okiro disclosed that, in a mere three-month span between June and t...Read the full article.

Posted by Robot| 27.11.2007 00:16

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ObiObi is offline 
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 # 2

An ill-equipped police force with poor remuneration for its rank and file would definitely not be a disciplined one. Moreover, a policy that grants promotion to an officer who kills an "armed robber" is an invitation to the ills Okey mentioned. Just pray that you are not at the wrong place at the wrong time.

The Nigerian police needs proper orientation which must be coupled with improved financial incentives.

Posted by Obi| 27.11.2007 03:16

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i-go-betteri-go-better is offline 
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 # 3

As usual, a terrific presentation. My worry is, the Police may now stop revealing these GORY statistics! They of course "owe no one" such accountability; not in "a" Nigeria.

Posted by i-go-better| 27.11.2007 03:49

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ObiObi is offline 
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An ill-equipped police force with poor remuneration for its rank and file would definitely not be a disciplined one. Moreover, a policy that grants promotion to an officer who kills an "armed robber" is an invitation to the ills Okey mentioned. Just pray that you are not at the wrong place at the wrong time.

The Nigerian police needs proper orientation which must be coupled with improved financial incentives.

Posted by Obi| 27.11.2007 04:41

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 # 5

Okey, what about the public parade of armed robbery suspects, or suspected hired-assassins? It usually brings chill into my heart any time I see one on the TV. But wait a minute, do most Nigerians know better? Me think youur article vividly suggests otherwise. Even at the house and senate.

Posted by Austin| 27.11.2007 04:43

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CelticologistCelticologist is offline 
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“In August 2006, police arrested and publicly ‘paraded’ 12 armed robbery suspects in the Abia State town of Umuahia; the 12 were later found among a pile of 16 corpses deposited near a local mortuary. Police officials claimed that all 16 were armed robbers who had somehow been involved in an exchange of gunfire with the police. No investigation was carried out.”



Wao!. No investigation carried out!. Life just goes on...as in the 700 before that.



It is time the police tried a different, and professionally sounder and accountable, approach to crime prevention and fighting. Instead of persisting with a suspect policy of mowing down “suspects,” it is time the police embarked on internal house cleaning. It should then devise a rigorous method for gathering intelligence on true crime suspects and update its manual for solving crimes.



First world standard he means. Somethng makes it such that in Nigeria, only failed members of the society end up joinig the police force. This also applies to some extent certain levels of the military. There is a larger decay that has resulted in policemen acting as a reflection of everyone else who walks the street. The cycle likely to remain unbroken as long as government misrule remains the one single disaster in the life of sub-sahara Africans.

Posted by Celticologist| 27.11.2007 05:09

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admin_oldadmin_old is offline 
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 # 7

New thread

Posted by admin_old| 27.11.2007 09:08

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RAYNOSARAYNOSA is offline 
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Mr Okey Ndibe,
What a nice piece to be HONEST what do you expect from the AGF whose only reason for his appointment is to defend his corrupt political benefactors.
As for the police i don't really blame them as we can't have an effective police force from a corrupt system.

Posted by RAYNOSA| 01.12.2007 09:52

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felixfelix is offline 
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 # 9

Police Killed 8,564 In Seven Years – Report



Mon, 10 Dec 2007 00:00:00
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By Sebastine Ebhuomhan, Law Reporter, Lagos

Police killed at least 8,564 citizens in the line of duty between 2000 and October 2007.

The aggregate figure officially released by police chiefs does not, however, explain the chilling and gory details of brutality and criminality behind the killings, investigated, compiled and published in a new report: Criminal Force? An Interim Report on the Nigeria Police Force, presented to the media on Sunday.


The report was presented by Open Society Justice Initiative’s Programme Manager for Africa, Anselm Odikanlu, on behalf of the Network on Police Reform in Nigeria (NOPRIN) at the Robert’s CafÈ on Akin Olugbade Street, Victoria Island, Lagos.

NOPRIN, a coalition of 41 human rights groups advocating the reform of law enforcement to guarantee public safety and security, was established in 2000. It stated that the 18-page report forms its year-long monitoring of over 400 police stations spread across 13 states and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT).

Urging President Umaru Yar’Adua to take urgent steps towards fulfilling his promise of strengthening the police, NOPRIN Chairperson, Lydia Umar, said: "Police abuses in Nigeria have become a public health problem. Any infection that kills and disables people in the numbers at the rate that our police kill and disable will be declared a public health emergency."

NOPRIN claimed killing, torture, extortion, and rape by police personnel have become routine in Nigeria because the police shield their personnel from legal consequences such as prosecution as a result of unlawful conducts.

The report concluded that "the NPF is now a danger to public safety and security and the conduct of its personnel could be the cause of a major health and mortality emergency on a national scale".

According to the report, thousands of detainees are killed annually in encounters with the police, while hundreds of others die outside police custody from injuries sustained during police torture.

It added that custodial conditions in police cells cause and spread infectious diseases resulting in more death, while allegations of rape against police personnel raise the risk of trauma injuries to the victims as well as the spread of sexually transmitted diseases (STDs).
Link: http://www.independentngonline.com/?c=117&a=6991





..,and we know the usual difference between official figures and the actual figures.., looks like we have a civil war going on in Nigeria.

Posted by felix| 10.12.2007 06:14

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