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Friday, May 26, 2017

Trouble For Deputy Senate President,Ekweremadu Police Raid His Residence

The Nigeria police force raided the Abuja residence of Ike Ekweremadu, deputy senate president, on Friday.

In a statement issued hours after the raid, Uche Anichukwu, media aide of the lawmaker, said the police did not find any incriminating item on the property.
“At about 8am on Friday, May 26, 2017, men of the Nigeria police force from the inspector-general of police special squad raided the official guest house of the deputy president of the senate, Senator Ike Ekweremadu, located at No. 10 Ganges Street, Maitama, Abuja. The police, however, stated at the end of the search that nothing incriminating was found,” he narrated.
“They met the steward, Oliver Ogenyi, and some of Ekweramdu’s staff and their children in the house. In spite of the fact that they were informed that the property is the guest house of the deputy president of the senate, they nevertheless proceeded to thoroughly search the house without establishing any contact with the deputy president of the senate or any of his senior staff.“The steward was taken away by the police to the Special Anti-Robbery (SARS) Office, Garki, Abuja, where the IGP Special Squad’s office is also located. Ogenyi was later released after making a statement.”
“The steward was taken away by the police to the Special Anti-Robbery (SARS) Office, Garki, Abuja, where the IGP special squad’s office is also located. Ogenyi was later released after making a statement.”

Anichukwu emphasised that his principal is a law-abiding citizen, who does not dispute the fact that security agencies are empowered by law to carry out searches on premises, but that the law requires the owner of the property or his representative to be informed or present during a search.He said Ekweremadu was worried about the manner in which his guest house was raided.

He said Ekweremadu was worried about the manner in which his guest house was raided.
“The questions are: Was there a search warrant? What were they looking for? Who searched the police officers before the search? Who supervised the search?” he asked.
“Instructively, this incident comes just a few weeks after Senator Ekweremadu, on May 3, 2017, read to the senate in plenary a written, but anonymous tip-off by a patriotic Nigerian on a plot to plant incriminating sums of foreign currencies, arms, and ammunition in a house linked to him under the pretext of the whistleblower policy. The aim, according to the source, was to rubbish, arrest, prosecute, and ultimately remove Senator Ekweremadu from office.
“It is also apposite at this point to inform Nigerians that the deputy president of the senate had received at least three different forewarnings from various highly-placed sources before the written tip-off he read before the senate, and they all pointed in the same direction: a clandestine effort to uproot the Senator from office by all means possible.
“Therefore, this latest act of desperation, intimidation, and disregard for due process further substantiates all the forewarnings.”

Anichukwu also said that agencies of the government were “currently scavenging through all the land registries and various banks within and outside the country to find incriminating reasons to arrest, embarrass, and prosecute him”.

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