A senior police officer spearheaded
the killings of the above six persons popularly tagged "Apo 6"
"It
really overwhelms our capacity to store bodies," says Dr Anthony Mbah,
chief medical director at the University of Nigeria Teaching Hospital.
His
mortuary is overflowing - with corpses brought in by the police.
"We
have between 70 and 80 bodies right now... and about three weeks ago, there was
a mass burial of some other corpses," he says.
"We
are now getting ready to get these ones buried."
Inside
the mortuary in the south-eastern city of Enugu, two rooms are set aside for
the remains of the young men.
In
the first room, they are stacked, naked, one on top of the other. In places the
piles are four or five deep.
Faces
peer out amongst a forest of legs. Heads loll into groins. Limbs are flung
around torsos. Some almost seem to embrace. The smell - and the flies - make it
impossible to get close.
It
is a scene beyond belief.
FATHERS'
PAIN
The
mortuary is in a state of chaos. No-one working here can put a precise number
on the corpses. Many of the bodies have no names. Mortuary records simply say
"suspected armed robber" or "unknown thief".
The
register says police left 75 bodies between the beginning of June and 26
November this year.
But
the records are imperfect - staff correct mistakes as they go along, one page
appears to be missing.
It
is uncertain how many of these bodies really are those of armed robbers.
The
father of one victim of a police shooting has no doubt about the innocence of
his son.
"A
child is a gift from the Gods. They have taken him from me," Chief Dennis
Onovo murmurs.
The
morning that Mr Onovo's 22-year-old son, Matthew, died he had been walking to a
computer class. Police were searching for an armed man in the area - and shot
him dead.
"I
always hoped my son will one day be governor of this state, or even head of
state - but all my effort is in vain," says Mr Onovo. For two days, the
community stood still as people came out in peaceful demonstration.
The
police told Matthew's parents he was suspected of armed robbery. "This boy
was not an armed robber. He was never a thief, much less an armed robber,"
says Mr Onovo.
"As
they killed him, they killed me, my life is over."
A
few miles away, another father echoes his words.
Chief
Mark Ngena trembles, remembering.
"He
was playing with his fellow children," he says of his 13-year-old son
Emmanuel.
"Suddenly
policemen, three of them, came in. They shot and killed this boy. Murdered him
in cold blood."
It
was later claimed that Emmanuel too was an armed robber.
His
family have never recovered his body.
Lawyers
and relatives point to a pattern - of unlawful killings by police, followed by
claims the deceased was an armed robber.
It
is an easy way to cover dirty tracks, they say.
Police
'are victims too'
Enugu
State Police Commissioner Mohamed Zarewa looks at the photograph of piled up
bodies in the mortuary and covers them with his hand.
"I
am not aware of that number you are talking. I am not aware, I am not
aware," he says.
He
mutters it five or six times.
Officers
in his force do not carry out unlawful or arbitrary killings, he insists.
He
says the young men were all killed in gun battles, fighting the police.
"Not
just to go and kill somebody, we don't do that, it's unconstitutional. We are
in a democracy," he says.
"You
are asking about the young men, why are you not asking about the policemen who
died? We people, we lose our lives."
It
is true that police work in Nigeria is a difficult job - often deadly.
An
encounter between a police officer and a real armed robber is a matter of life
or death.
Police
officers' wages are low. Corruption in the force is endemic. Poorly trained and
ill-equipped policemen are sent to face armed gangs.
But
it is also true that many people are killed in police custody.
PUNISHMENT
WITHOUT TRIAL
In
the Brought in Dead book, seven names are of particular interest.
Kennis
Victor Okonkwo, Adolphus Odumegwu, Sunday Okoye, Hussein Yusuf, Ugochukwu
Ogbonnaya, Amichi Nnamdi, and Ifeani Eze Leonard.
They
were arrested, accused of a kidnapping in early September.
On
11 September they were paraded by the inspector-general of Police. Photos of
them alive appeared in local newspapers.
But
they never reached court. By 15 September six of them were dead. The body of
the last was delivered to the mortuary the following day.
By
each name is written SARS, Special Anti-Robbery Squad - a feared police unit.
When asked for an explanation, Police Commissioner Zarewa said he was too busy.
'Equivalent
to hell'
"They
told me they have transferred my brother to Abuja," says Charles, a shy
22-year-old.
His
older brother was in trouble with the police, accused of robbery.
Charles
took a food flask for his brother, and travelled for two days to reach the
police station. On arrival he was arrested, accused of armed robbery, and held
for three months.
"Inside
there was equivalent to hell," he says.
He
says he was taken out of his cell, hung by the knees and beaten. But he feels
lucky as it happened only a couple of times.
A
man held with him suffered a similar punishment, but his joints were smashed.
He screamed as he crawled back into the cell. Briefly, Charles was held
opposite his own brother and the two had the chance to talk.
After
that, Charles never saw him again.
"It
is the slang they use," he says quietly.
"They
are not going to tell you openly your brother is killed. They just tell you
they have transferred his case to Abuja."
How Nigeria Police Flocks Mortuary With Innocents Victims Corpses —BBC
Reviewed by Unknown
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Tuesday, December 05, 2017
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