For
daring to invite the National Chairman of the All Progressives
Congress, APC, John Oyegun, for questioning, a police officer has been
transferred from his initial post, PREMIUM TIMES has learnt.
Fave
Semali, a Deputy Commissioner of Police, was investigating an
allegation of forgery against Mr. Oyegun and other APC leaders.
PREMIUM
TIMES reported how Christopher Anirah, who won the Sapele/Okpe/Uwvie
Federal Constituency ticket of the APC at the primary held on December
7, accused Mr. Oyegun and the party’s governorship candidate in Delta
State, Otega Emerhor, of falsifying his death so as to replace his name
with that of another person.
Mr. Anirah, who was returned winner
of the primary, had his name substituted with that of another member of
the party, Gibson Akporehe.
A letter obtained by PREMIUM TIMES,
bearing the signature and name of Mr. Oyegun dated January 20, attached
with a forged death certificate and other documents, was sent to the
Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, to effect the
substitution. Eventually, INEC effected Mr. Anirah’s substitution on
March 27, 24 hours to the National Assembly elections, following alleged
intense pressure from APC leaders including Mr. Oyegun,
After
the elections, which the APC lost, the “dead candidate” petitioned the
Zone 5 Zonal Police Command, which consists of Delta, Edo and Bayelsa
states police commands.
The invitation
As the
officer handling the case, Mr. Semali on April 29 wrote Mr. Oyegun,
inviting him for questioning as part of investigations into the case,
sources told PREMIUM TIMES.
That would, however, become the start of the police officer’s travail.
Two
days after writing the letter, Mr. Semali was, on May 1, suddenly
transferred out of the zone to Lagos State, under the Zone 2 Zonal
Command, by the Inspector General of Police, IGP, Solomon Arase.
A
senior police officer, who has followed the case, told PREMIUM TIMES
that the transfer was definitely because of Mr. Semali’s ‘temerity’ to
summon the National Chairman of APC, soon-to-be Nigeria’s ruling party.
PREMIUM
TIMES could, however, not verify if Mr. Oyegun influenced the action
meted out to the cop or if the police chief acted on his own so as not
to be on the bad books of the party leader whose party will govern
Nigeria from May 29 when its presidential candidate, Muhammadu Buhari,
is sworn in as Nigeria’s president.
However, based on the
directive of his boss, Mr. Semali washed his hands off the
investigations and resumed duty in Lagos on May 19. The case has since
been stalled and not handed to another officer to continue
investigation.
Apart from police sources who believe the transfer
was due to the investigations, the accuser, Mr. Anirah also shares the
belief.
“It was Oyegun that called the IGP after he was invited
for interrogation that he should be helped to evade investigation
because he is a national chairman of APC that will soon become the
ruling party,” the politician alleged. “The IGP who earlier approved
that my petition should be treated then bowed to pressure and
intimidation.”
When contacted on the allegations, Mr. Oyegun
declined comment. The APC chairman said he and his party were busy with
the transition process rather than responding to “allegations of
somebody I have never seen in my life”.
Also, the police
spokesperson, Emmanuel Ojukwu, told PREMIUM TIMES that although he was
not aware of the transfer, “transfer in the police is a routine exercise
at the discretion of the IGP and therefore affected officer’s transfer
should not be linked with any investigation.”
The forgery
PREMIUM
TIMES obtained some of the documents including a forged death
certificate used by the APC and Mr. Oyegun to ensure the substitution of
the names.
A letter, dated January 20 with reference number
APC/NHDQ/INEC/19/015/108 bearing Mr. Oyegun’s name and signature was
received by INEC on January 23, informing the electoral body of the
purported death of Mr. Anirah, and asking the commission to replace his
name with Mr. Akporehe’s.
The January 20 letter had as
attachments, Mr. Anirah’s “death certificate” and a January 15 letter
bearing the name and alleged signature of the Delta APC Secretary
stating Mr. Anirah’s death and that he be replaced with Mr. Akporehe.
Other
attachments included a notification of death letter to the Delta APC
chairman bearing the name and signature of Odibo Anirah, purportedly the
head of the Anirah family; and an affidavit of death bearing Chidi
Okonji as deponent.
Curiously, both the notification of death
letter purportedly by Mr. Anirah’s family head and the death affidavit
allegedly deposed by Mr. Okonji were dated January 15, same day the
state chapter of the party forwarded “Substitution of a Dead Candidate”
letter to Mr. Oyegun.
When Mr. Anirah confronted INEC on the
forged documents and asked that his name be reinstated, the electoral
body demanded a letter from Mr. Oyegun to nullify the first. The letter
was never sent by the party chairman.
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