The Akwa Ibom State Commissioner of Police,
Imohimi Edgal, has ordered the immediate arrest of a Police Inspector, Mr.
Bassey Peter Ikpe, for allegedly killing a widow.
This is coming seven days after the alleged brutal
murder of Mrs. Deborah Nkereuwem Nkpenie, a hypertensive widow by the police inspector.
Reason for the killing of the woman is yet to be
established, but it was gathered that it might not be unconnected with the
landed property of the widow's husband.
The killing was alleged to have occurred within the
vicinity of the state police headquarters in Ikot Akpan Abia.
The state Police Command had earlier kept silent
over the murder.
The brother and sister of the late husband of the
widow were said to have dragged the deceased widow to the Police Command over
the property of the widow’s husband.
In a statement signed by the state Police Public
Relations Officer (PPRO), Mr. Odiko Macdon, and made available to journalists
in Uyo yesterday, the police said its decision to finally look into the alleged
murder was informed by some media reports.
"The attention of the Akwa Ibom State Police
Command has been drawn to a publication in some dailies and online media that a
police officer attached to the Akwa Ibom State Police Command, Inspector Bassey
Ikpe, reportedly beat one Mrs. Deborah Nkereuwem Nkpenie to death on January 16,
2020.
"To authenticate this serious allegation, the
state Commissioner of Police, Imohimi Edgal, has ordered the immediate arrest
of the said iInspector.
"The commissioner has instructed the deputy commissioner
of the State Criminal Investigation Department (SCID) to carry out a thorough
investigation into the matter, while reiterating the Command’s commitment to
policing with great respect for human rights,” the statement noted.
An eyewitness said the incident took place in the
morning of January 16, 2020, following the invitation of the deceased by the
policeman who was an IPO in the ongoing case.
Such invitation, according to a human rights lawyer,
Clifford Thomas, who had taken interest in the case and had interacted with the
DPC, was against the wise counsel
of the Deputy Commissioner of Police in
charge of the state Criminal Investigation and Intelligence Department,
considering the hypertensive state of the deceased at the time.
A tricyclist, Ukpono Sunday Umoren, who brought the
woman to the police station, recounted the deceased's last moments with the
policeman at the premises of the police headquarters.
According to him, "The policeman approached my
tricycle, which the woman was on, and shouted at her that she was lying about
her illness. He made efforts to drag her out in anger, and knocked her head
several times by the side rail of the tricycle. The woman was screaming that
she is not well.
"She began to suffocate, and found it
difficult to breath. The policeman insisted that she was lying. He even told
her that if she wanted to die, she should die.
"As she was screaming while the police man was
trying to pull her out of the vehicle, her voice grew faint. We were still begging
the policeman to refrain from his hostile act towards the woman.
"He even refused us from taking her to the hospital.
It was after she breathed her last, that he eventually ordered that she should
be taken to the hospital."
Checks revealed that the state Deputy Commissioner of
Police, Mrs. S. U. Horsefall, a lawyer, had earlier advised against
unprofessional conduct by the Inspector Ikpe, including not bringing the
parties before the DC for interview before arraignment in court.
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