I
saw this story in P.M. News and I felt so bad. Please read it and see what some
of the families of Police officers who were killed serving their country,
Nigeria are going through. What a shame!
Over
two weeks after some widows living at the barracks of the Mobile Police Unit
20, commanded by Olubode Ojajuni, a Chief
Superintendent of Police, CSP, who was a onetime Public Relations
Officer, Lagos State Police Command, the pains and anguish seem to have
continued unabated among the victims.
Some
of them are still struggling to have a roof under their heads with their
children, while some still have their properties scattered all over the
barracks.
Speaking
about her experience, Mrs. Stella Mubo, wife of the late Inspector Simon Mubo,
an indigene of Ese-Odo Local Government Area of Ondo State said: “It was on Wednesday May 20, 2014, we the
widows in Mopol 20 Barracks were invited by the commander, Mopol 20, CSP
Ojajuni. We went to his office at Oduduwa GRA with high hopes that probably
good things were coming on our way, being widows whose husbands died in active
duty, and still awaiting the benefits and entitlements due to our husbands.
“But
rather, we got a shocking news of our lives from Ojajuni that we should pack
out with immediate effect. We appealed to him to give us time because he told
us to move out on Saturday, the same week he called us, because we have not
been paid our husband’s benefits. He said he does not want to hear or know that
we have not been paid.
“He added that since we are widows in the
barracks, if there is any problem, they cannot deal with us, and that we should
pack. I begged him that he should give us time, but he said, no, that he cannot
give us time. He said that if I want to beg, I should go to Abuja and beg. I
kept begging, and he now said I should leave his office. The following day, he
brought the quit notice.
Three days later, that was on the 31 May, they came
early that morning with a truck-load of Mobile Policemen and started throwing
out our property. There was nothing we could do. As I am speaking with you now,
all our properties are still outside. We don’t have where to go. How can
somebody serve the Federal Government for twenty-something years, and died in
active service and his widow and children are thrown out just like that,
without paying them entitlements.
“We
were given only three days to pack and on the third day they came to throw us
out. I and my children have been sleeping outside since then, nowhere to go,”
she added.
According
to Mrs. Mubo, her husband died on 22 August, 2010. “Since then his entitlement
has not been paid. The only thing received was burial expenses. Since then,
nothing else. I have been running up and down, borrowing money to pursue the
payment.
I
don’t really know what is the problem, I have been going to the pension office
and they have been telling me the money is not ready, and that I should come
back. I was there last week. This week Monday, I was there, I have not been
paid. I don’t know what the problem is.
She
lamented that her husband was involved in an accident at PWD and was rushed to the hospital where he
died. “Since then, I have been managing with my children. I have two children.
“It
has been difficult for us to collect our husbands benefits years after they
died, but the police authority is not doing anything about it. They are not
assisting us to facilitate quick payment of our late husband entitlements.
“I
feel very sad. Since we were thrown out, I have not been eating. The injustice is
too much. This will not encourage me to advice any of my children to join the
Police Force. The way things are done is not encouraging. They made me to cry
and I cry every day. No help from anybody. All my property are still outside. I
want the police authority to pay us so that we can get accommodation,” she
pleaded.
According
to her, they (police) claimed that “some of us have stayed between 7 years and
8 years. This is not true about myself; it’s just three years and few months
ago that my husband died and I have not been paid, so they are just using that
as an excuse. It is a case of giving dog a bad name in order to kill it, they
should have identified those who have been paid; rather than throwing us out.
How can you give somebody three days quit notice and force the person out of
the house within three days. How can the police, which is responsible for law
and order do this. Can a landlord under the law issue three days quit notice to
a tenant and go ahead to execute it. If such matter is reported to the police,
how would they handle it?” she asked.
“They should go to the office and confirm. It
is Pension Alliance that will pay, and they have not paid me. They should go to
their office and confirm if it is true they have paid me or not,” she lamented.
“If I have been paid, why should I still be in
the barracks. Am I enjoying my life there. I am suffering there. There is no
renovation there; the houses are even old and expired.
“When
they came, I was not around; they forced the door and broke it open and threw
my things out. That was what they did to us,” she said.
Another victim, Mrs. Alice E. Bello, from
Ogbadibo Local Government Area of Benue State said that before the death of her
husband, they lived at Block 1, Flat 7 Mopol 20 Barracks.
“What led to the police throwing my properties
out of the house was that they gave me just two days quit notice. They brought
the notice on Thursday and on Friday, we went to their office to beg them to
give us more time because we have not collected our husband’s benefit. My
husband died in a motor accident in 2010.
“Since then, they have not paid us his
benefits. Even the burial money, they have not paid me. That is burial
expenses, I did not collect it. When I went there, they told me they did not
see the file. That is what happened and they have not paid us up till now.
“Then on Friday, we went to see the
Commissioner of Police to beg him for more time, we were told he was not on
seat and were directed to an Assistant Commissioner of Police, Ngozi Iloh, who
is the AC Administration. She promised that she will beg for us to stay for
extra one week or two weeks. She even called CSP Ojajuni in our presence.
“He
told her he was in a meeting with the IGP in Abuja that he had only come out to
receive her call. But on Saturday morning, I was not at home. I was on duty
because I’m managing some cleaning work somewhere. Before I returned, they had
broken my door, scattered and damaged so many other things,” she said.
She said she is a cleaner at Saint Leo
Catholic Church Medical Centre. “I have 2 children. I was not working before
the death of my husband. After his death, even when I came to the command
headquarters, they said that I should not fold my hands, that I should look for
something to do, and that it will take long before the benefits will be paid.
“Since then, I have been suffering, selling
fufu, pepper, okro inside the barracks; before I started looking for work, because
I was living from hand to mouth. In a day, if I sell, I will eat, if I do not
sell, I will not see something to eat with my children.
“My husband was promoted to a Sergeant, but he
did not hang the rank before he died. He died in an accident on Ikorodu Road.
Till now, I do not have a place to lay my head.
“I distributed my property when rain started
to destroy them. The chair and everything were affected by the heavy downpour
which happened a day after the incident.
“There
was no place to put my load. Though there is a sister that decided to help me,
I and my children slept in the corridor. That is where we are still sleeping up
till now.
“The claim that some people have been settled
and have spent up to seven to eight years in the barracks is a lie. I have not
collected a kobo. If l had collected benefits, what is the need of wasting time
in the barracks?
“The bad feelings is too much. Even yesterday
night, I was crying outside; As I am even talking now, I’m still crying,” and
she burst into tears. “Because I don’t have anybody. My husband served the
Nigeria Police Force and this thing happened to him and his family. Up till
now, they did not pay his money. They packed our load outside. Is it good like
this?.
“They will tell you to go and bring paper from
where your husband joined the police. My husband joined the Police in Sokoto.
They said I should go and bring the letter from there. “There, they demanded
for money. They said you should give them transport fare; that they want to
collect the paper from Abuja. They demand between N3,000 to N5,000,” she added.
There
were tears and gnashing of teeth among widows and the children of dead officers
living at the barracks of the Police Mobile Force, 20 Squadron (MOPOL 20),
Ikeja, as they were forcefully thrown out of the barracks without settlement of
their late husbands and fathers allowances by the Nigeria Police Force. Over 10
widows and their children were affected.
Their belongings littered everywhere at the premises of the barracks
between the Saturday when they were forcefully ejected and Sunday evening.
The
affected children and women interviewed alleged that it was just a case of
man’s inhumanity to man.
Some
of them who were said to have lost their husbands in active service between
three and five years ago argued that their stay at the barracks was because
their husband’s entitlements had not been paid.
“Where
do they expect us to get money to rent a house when we have not been paid. Even
some of our children are out of school because there is no money to continue
their education; some who have graduated from secondary school could not enter
the university. We struggle to feed them, and now the police authority has
thrown us out,” she lamented.
When
the scene was visited on Sunday evening, after the heavy downpour, some of the personal
items of the victims were seen in pool of water as they had not been able to
relocate.
Another
victim who spoke on condition of anonymity said they were given just three days
notice and the next thing they saw on Saturday morning was a truck-load of
mobile policemen who came to force them out.
A
copy of the quit notice signed by Usman M. Nasarawa, a Deputy Superintendent of
Police, DSP and O/C PMF 20 Provost, for Commanding Officer, Police Mobile
Force, 20 Squadron, Ikeja dated May 28, 2014 and made available to P.M.NEWSMETRO reads: “It has come to my notice that despite the fact that you have
been Transferred/Demobed/retired from the Squadron/Force long ago, you are
still occupying the Squadron’s official Quarters/Barracks which your continuous
occupation of this quarters is illegal and contrary to IGP’s circular Ref. No.
CH: 7970/FS/148 of 30th January, 1990 and CH: 7700?PER?FHQ?ABJ.T/1 dated 22
October,1999.
“You
are therefore given up to 30 May, 2014 i.e. three days to vacate your quarters
or you will be forcefully ejected after expiration of this notice,” the letter
added.
Majority
of the victims disputed the allegation that they were illegal occupants as
stated in the quit notice, saying that they were living happily with their
husbands before death came calling and if their husbands entitlements had been
paid, they would have left the barracks a long time ago.
On
the allegation that some of them have been paid but they refused to quit, the
aggrieved widows said that the onus is on the police to verify those who have
been settled and quit them rather than quitting everybody including a widow
whose husband died less that a year ago.
It
was gathered that only about two or three, including a man who had since
retired, have been settled but does not want to leave. Others alleged that
their forceful ejection was uncalled for as their entitlements have not been
paid.
Efforts
to reach both the Commissioner of Police Lagos State Police Command, Umar Manko
and the Command’s image maker Ngozi Braide for comments were not fruitful as
their lines did not connect when their phones were called.
However,
the Force Public Relations Officer, Frank Mba who received his call could not
comment on the incident but referred this publication to Commander Mopol 20,
Olubode Ojajuni, a Chief Superintendent of Police who said the decision was final
as the barracks is for easy mobilization of serving mobile police officers.
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