Police treated me the way they’ll never treat Hausa or Yoruba king, Igbo monarch protests

The Igwe Uzoubi Umuna Orlu, Imo State, Eze Boniface Okereke, has recalled his ugly encounter with a police officer.

The encounter reportedly happened during a recent clash between members of the Eastern Security Network (ESN) and personnel of the Nigerian Army in the monarch’s domain.

ESN is a militia group founded by the Indigenous Peoples of Biafra (IPOB), a group that wants to break away from Nigeria.

Okereke said a police officer from the North assaulted him.

“Orlu has no history of violence,” Okereke told Punch.

“Apart from the EndSARS protest in 2020, this was the first time they clashed. The Indigenous People Of Biafra (IPOB) members don’t live with us here. They came, struck and left.

“And that is why every traditional ruler was enjoined to find out if any youth in Orlu is among the people who are causing these pains.

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“The greatest humiliation of my life was when a policeman desecrated the culture of Igbo people by ordering a traditional ruler of my class and status to lie down on the road before my subjects.

“I suffered an embarrassing humiliation in the hands of mobile policemen at Carrot Junction here in the domain on Wednesday, January 27.

“At about 2pm, while I was returning from a meeting of the Orlu Traditional Rulers Council held at Umudioka ancient kingdom, on reaching the junction, a team of mobile policemen stopped me and one of them ordered me to get out of my car. I quickly hearkened to his order.

“Despite the inscription on my vehicle number plate asserting to my status as His Royal Highness, Eze B.C. Okereke, the traditional ruler of Uzoubi Umuna autonomous community and my physical appearance as an old man and verbal expression to him that I am the traditional ruler of this community, he still pointed his gun at me and ordered me to lie flat on the ground. I quickly obeyed him because he pointed his gun at me and I didn’t want him to shoot him.

“I lay flat on the floor for over eight minutes and it was thereafter that one of the policemen who later saw the inscription on my car and my regalia quickly urged me to stand and reprimanded the other overzealous cop.

“This humiliation, desecration of our cultural institution happened in the full glare of my subjects and passersby. It was an embarrassing situation, a big disgrace to my throne and disrespect to my person, community and the council of traditional rulers.”

“I have petitioned the Commissioner of Police in charge of the Imo State Police Command, informing him of the humiliation and urging him to investigate it. That was a humiliation that should not be swept under the carpet.

“This insult on a traditional ruler of my class cannot happen in Yorubaland or Hausaland. This must be corrected.”

Source
Punch

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