• Jonathan, security chiefs meet
• Fayemi, others call for
justice
PRESIDENT Goodluck Jonathan yesterday
met with members of the reconstituted National Security Council.
The development came amid a manhunt for
killers of four students of the University of Port Harcourt, which was shut
down on Tuesday following violent protests by their colleagues.
The new Service Chiefs who attended the meeting for the first time were Chief of Naval Staff, Vice Admiral Dele Joseph Ezeoba and Chief of the Air Staff, Air Marshal Alex Sabundu Badeh.
The new Service Chiefs who attended the meeting for the first time were Chief of Naval Staff, Vice Admiral Dele Joseph Ezeoba and Chief of the Air Staff, Air Marshal Alex Sabundu Badeh.
Members of the Council include National
Security Adviser, Col. Sambo Dasuki, Chief of Defence Staff, Admiral Ola Sa’ad
Ibrahim and Chief of Army Staff, Lt.-Gen. Onyeabo Azubuike Ihejirika. Other
members include the Inspector-General of Police, Alhaji Mohammed Dahiru
Abubakar and Director General of the State Security Service (SSS), Mr. Ita
Ekpeyong.
On his part, the Inspector General of
Police (IGP), Mohammed Abubakar yesterday disclosed that the outfit
has commenced investigation into last week’s gruesome murder of the four
students for alleged theft, vowing that the culprits would be brought to
justice.
He said already, arrests have been made
but declined to reveal the number of people that have been arrested in
connection with the murder so far.
Speaking to reporters on arrival from
Turkey where he had gone to observe the security arrangement of the country and
where he said no fewer than 4,000 Nigerians were in various prisons, Abubakar
said: “I’m aware of the situation and I’ve been briefed on this even while in
Turkey. We are on it and we have commenced investigation to the incident. The
investigation would tell what exactly happened, but I want to assure all
Nigerians that we are doing our best to bring out the culprits of that very
ugly incident and we shall not under my administration and this government
tolerate any barbaric act in this country.
“You will hear from me as soon as I get
brief from the commissioner of police in that state and the zonal IG based on
their documentations, then we will let you know. But I can assure you that
investigation is on and I don’t want to give you the number of people who have
been arrested so far.”
On his summon by the House of
Representatives, Abubakar said he was yet to see the letter of summon, but
explained that he would appear before the House on security issues in the
country.
Meanwhile, soldiers have taken
over Umuokiri community where the four undergraduates were set ablaze by
the villagers.
On Tuesday, aggrieved students of the
university went into the community and destroyed over 30 vehicles and set
ablaze 10 houses.
A truck load of mobile policemen
(MOPOL) were spotted at various locations near the scene of the incident, while
over 50 heavily armed operatives of the Joint Task Force, (JTF) Special
Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS), State Security Service, SSS and policemen were seen
moving round the community.
Some of the military men were seen
evacuating the items used on the students before they died, including motor
tyres, sticks and stones, at a place called ‘buropit’ in Umuokiri, maybe for
forensic analysis
The university authorities had on
Tuesday ordered the closure of the institution and immediate vacation of
students from the hostels for fear of further attacks and break down of law and
order.
A visit to Aluu community revealed that
most students have left the campus and the villagers fled from their ancestral
homes.
Spokesman of the University, Dr. William
Wodi while confirming the closure of the institution, said the school had been
closed indefinitely, pointing out that the decision was to forestall further
breakdown of law and order, due to the students’ unrest.
Meanwhile, five persons who were seen
near the spot where the four students were killed at Umuokiri, were yesterday
arrested by the military operatives who had been deployed to the
community.
Also, Ekiti State Governor, Dr. Kayode
Fayemi, and a non-governmental organisation, the Neo-Black Movement (NBM) of
Africa, have condemned the gruesome killing of the four students of UNIPORT and
about 50 others at Federal Polytechnic, Mubi in Adamawa State recently.
The governor in a statement by his
Chief Press Secretary, Mr. Yinka Oyebode, described the murder of the
students as “barbaric, wicked, unacceptable and reprehensible.”
NBM’s Head (Worldwide), Mr. Bemigho
Eyeoyibo, spoke in a similar vein at the pan-Africanist group’s regional
conference in the U.S.
They deplored the resort to jungle
justice, maintaining that nobody has the right to take another person’s life
under any guise.
They said the idea of people taking
laws into their hands should be discouraged, adding that the laws of the
country are enough to deal with any situation.
The duo called on security agencies in
the country to do everything possible to fish out perpetrators of the
dastardly acts and bring them to justice.
Source: Guardian
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