
A shocking new report by Amnesty International has accused a special Nigerian police unit set up combat crimes of torturing detainees in its custody as a means of extracting confessions and lucrative bribes.
The human rights campaign group said in the damning report published on
Wednesday, September 21, that former detainees said they had been
subjected to horrific torture methods, including hanging, starvation,
beatings, shootings and mock executions, at the hands of corrupt
officers within the Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS).
Amnesty has received reports from lawyers, human rights defenders and
journalists and collected testimonies stating that some police officers
in SARS regularly demand bribes, steal and extort money from criminal
suspects and their families.
Amnesty International’s Nigeria researcher Damian Ugwu said:
"A police unit created to protect the people has instead become a danger
to society, torturing its victims with complete impunity while
fomenting a toxic climate of fear and corruption.
"Our research has uncovered a pattern of ruthless human rights
violations where victims are arrested and tortured until they either
make a ‘confession’ or pay officers a bribe to be released. SARS
officers are getting rich through their brutality. In Nigeria, it seems
that torture is a lucrative business."
Amnesty’s report also reveals SARS detainees are held in a variety of
locations, including a grim detention centre in Abuja known as the
‘Abattoir’, where Amnesty found 130 detainees living in overcrowded
cells.
Squad investigates civil matters and tortures detainees in non-criminal
disputes. In addition to its stated remit of tackling violent crime,
Amnesty also found that SARS investigates civil matters and in some
cases tortures detainees involved in contractual, business and even
non-criminal disputes.
In one case in Onitsha, Anambra state, a 25-year-old fuel attendant was
arrested by SARS after his employer had accused him of being responsible
for a burglary at their business premises. He told Amnesty:
"The policemen asked me to sign a plain sheet. When I signed it, they
told me I have signed my death warrant. They left me hanging on a
suspended iron rod. My body ceased to function. I lost consciousness.
When I was about to die they took me down and poured water on me to
revive me."
Like many people detained by SARS, he was not allowed access to a
lawyer, a doctor or his family during his two-week detention. Yet in
various cases where victims of police torture or other ill-treatment
attempted to seek justice, the authorities took no action.
When the police force was asked by Amnesty why no officers had been
suspended or prosecuted for torture, the police denied that any torture
had taken place.
However, one senior officer disclosed that around 40 officers alleged to
have carried out various acts of torture and ill-treatment of detainees
were transferred to other stations in April 2016. He did not say
whether the claims against them were being investigated. Damian Ugwu
added:
"This lack of accountability creates an environment where SARS officers
believe they have carte blanche to carry out acts of torture. This is
hardly surprising when many of these officers have bribed their way to
SARS in the first place. The police chiefs in charge are themselves
entwined in the corruption."
Chidi Oluchi, 32, told Amnesty he was arrested in Enugu before being
robbed of his belongings and then tortured in custody by SARS officers.
"They told me to slap myself and, when I refused, they started beating
me with the side of their machetes and heavy sticks. My mouth was
bleeding and my vision became blurred," said Chidi, who was released
after he paid SARS officers N25,500 ($100) to be freed.
Apart from demanding bribes, SARS officers have been accused of stealing
or confiscating property from relatives of detained suspects. Some
family members told Amnesty that SARS officers stole their cars or
withdrew all the money from their bank accounts.
The majority of the victims of torture in SARS custody are poor and
unable to hire legal representatives. In some cases, when detainees
cannot afford to pay bribes, they are simply tortured more. Damian Ugwu
added:
"Our research has exposed the callous workings of a police squad
operating outside of the law and inflicting daily brutality on Nigerians
who are often legally powerless to defend themselves against criminal
accusations, let alone from the torture meted out by SARS. Depressingly,
there are scant judicial or any other mechanisms in place to prevent
SARS officers from subjecting vulnerable targets to human rights
violations for their own financial gain."
Despite repeated calls from Amnesty in recent years, the Nigerian
justice system has failed to prevent or punish torture. In December
2014, the Nigerian police launched a human rights manual which prohibits
torture and other ill-treatment of detainees, but SARS has failed to
implement it.
When a new Inspector General of Police was appointed in early 2015 it
was announced that there would be reform and reorganisation of SARS, but
officers attached to the unit told Amnesty they were not aware of the
reforms.
A revised version of a bill to criminalise torture, which was first
introduced in 2012 but was returned unsigned by the President, was
passed by the House of Representatives in June 2016 and will be
resubmitted to the Senate for further debates in 2016.
"With the Nigerian government’s previous attempts at stamping out
torture proving completely ineffective, it is time for the authorities
to ensure that officers responsible for such human rights violations are
finally held accountable. Police torture is a stain on Nigerian society
that must be addressed with clear orders to law enforcement officers
not to inflict torture or other ill-treatment on detainees under any
circumstances."
In February this year, the UK Government announced it was running
training in anti-kidnap strategies for the Nigerian police force. The UK
also stressed that it would seek assurances from the Nigerian
authorities that transfers of equipment, know-how and training for the
police do not contribute to human rights violations.
Given these fresh concerns on the police’s human rights record, Amnesty
will urge the UK Government to demonstrate how it is ensuring that UK
police and military training doesn’t contribute or facilitate any of
these types of abuses.
Amnesty International report Nigeria is obligated under international
and regional human rights law to ensure the prohibition of torture and
other ill-treatment.. All victims have a right to reparations, and
steps must be taken to ensure that nobody profits from abusing
detainees.
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