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#EndSARS Protest: Petitioner Demands N20m From Police

One of the petitioners who appeared before the Rivers State Judicial Panel of Commission of Inquiry Investigating the alleged acts of violence, brutality, torture and violation of the fundamental rights of citizens allegedly committed by police officers in the state, Mr Lucky Ezu, has demanded for the sum of N20million from the police as compensation for injuries and dehumanising treatment he suffered in the hands of police officers at Ahoada in 2018.
Ezu made this demand when he appeared alongside other four petitioners to testify before the commission sitting at the Obi Wali International Conference Centre in Port Harcourt, last Wednesday.
He told the panel how he was manhandled and beaten up by a team of police officers who came to buy petrol at his filling station in Ahoada in 2018, adding that since the incident occurred, he had developed hearing problem on his right ear, and cannot hear well with it again.
According to him, after the ugly incident, he had consulted five medical doctors to find remedy to the hearing challenge without success.
Ezu, who is in his 50s and an indigene of Ahoada East Local Government Area of the state, further told the panel that trouble started when the police officers claimed that they bought N12,000 fuel but alleged that the fuel attendant dispensed below the amount, adding that on his attempt to resolve the matter, the police men gave him a beaten of his life.
The petitioner, who was the fourth witness to testify before the panel, expressed happiness with the state government for setting up the commission, saying that the amount he demanded would help him seek more serious medical solution to his hearing problem.
On his part, a civil servant, Mr Nodi Sylvanus, also took his turn to narrate how an alleged live bullet from trigger-happy SARS operatives pierced the roof of their station, and killed his only three-day-old baby girl in 2018.
However, counsel to the police, Mrs N.M. Nweke Esq opposed the submission of the petitioners, saying that their actions were an after-thought as they had no verifiable evidence to prove their allegations against the police.
Ruling on the various submissions, the Chairman of the panel, Justice Chukwunoye Uriri (rtd), adjourned Ezu’s matter till Monday, November 30, to allow him present his witnesses for cross-examination.
By: Akujobi Amadi
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