Wednesday, 24 July 2013

Fracas: Rivers' majority leader may face assault charge

The police, on Wednesday, continued the interrogation of the Majority Leader of the Rivers State House of Assembly,  Chidi Lloyd, 24 hours after he reported at their headquarters in Abuja.

 Lloyd was among the persons  invited by the police over  the July 8  fracas in  the assembly   in Port Harcourt. He was captured in a video assaulting a fellow lawmaker, Michael Chinda,  with the mace.

 The Punch had exclusively reported on Wednesday that Lloyd honoured the police summons but  was detained overnight   by a team of detectives who quizzed him.

 Findings indicated that the lawmaker may not be released on bail till Thursday (today) because the  detectives were not done with him yet as he had not given satisfactory answers to the questions put to him.

 It was gathered that he might face criminal prosecution for assaulting Chinda.

Our correspondents learnt that Lloyd would be released to his lawyers on bail because the  police authorities  did not want to detain him for over 48 hours without  arraigning him in court  as stipulated by  law.

A source at the Force Criminal Investigation  Department  said, "He is still being quizzed in connection with his role  in  the fracas. He has been under interrogation since yesterday (Tuesday) and from all indications he is going to face a criminal prosecution  for assault."

The police, in a statement on Wednesday, said   the lawmaker had so far shown a high level of cooperation with detectives, adding that his interrogation was still going on.

 The  statement by the Deputy Force Public Relations Officer, Frank Mba, reads in part, "The honourable member, who arrived  at the Force headquarters on Tuesday at about 4pm, in company  with  his lawyers, is currently helping police investigators in their efforts at unravelling the circumstances surrounding the crisis that occurred in the hallowed chambers of the state House of Assembly.

"The lawmaker has commendably, so far, shown a high level of cooperation with police detectives. Meanwhile, his interrogation is  ongoing."

The statement  quoted the Inspector-General of Police, Mohammed Abubakar,  as assuring Nigerians of  a quick, fair and unbiased investigation.

It added that  everything  would be  done to ensure that justice was done.

But the  Peoples Democratic Party in Rivers State and the  assembly speaker, Mr. Otelemaba Amachree, have disagreed over the invitation and detention of  Lloyd by the police.

While the PDP maintained that the police were  right to have summoned  the Majority Leader, Amachree argued  that they ought to have invited all the parties   to the  fracas.

Amachree, who spoke  with The PUNCH  through his Special Assistant, Media, Mr. Jim Okpiki, wondered why  the  anti-Rotimi Amaechi lawmakers  who hit the Majority Leader with a camera stand were not also invited for interrogation.

He said, "If they (police) want justice to be done in this matter, they should realise that there are two sides to a coin. On that day, somebody said 'shoot the governor' and that person was not invited by the police.

"Another person boasted about how he hit the Majority Leader but   he has not also been invited by the police. Lloyd was not the  aggressor; he only retaliated after being  hit several times with a camera stand.

"The other party should also be invited by the police.  We  hope that the police will not resort to torturing him(Lloyd)."

But the  Special Adviser to the state Chairman of the PDP, Mr. Jerry Needam, stated that there was no need for the police to invite the anti-Amaechi lawmakers since    they  had already interviewed  the governor and others involved in the crisis.

Needam argued that a  police panel, which visited the state,  must have  gone through its  findings before deciding   that only Lloyd  as well as the the governor's  Chief  Security Officer  and Aide-De-Camp    should be  summoned.

Describing Lloyd's action as "barbaric  and unacceptable," Needam explained that it was necessary for the CSO  and ADC  to   also honour the  invitation .

He said, "It is wrong for anybody to say that other parties should have been invited by the police. We can remember that Governor Amaechi used the police in the past against some of us. Now, the situation has changed and that is why they are angry.

"What Lloyd did was bad. We should be condemning him for injuring  a fellow lawmaker."

In Abuja also on Wednesday, the  United States  Department of State donated Explosives Ordinance Disposal remote control robots to the  police.

 The robots are capable of carrying out safe detonation of  IEDs  and   demobilising explosive -laden vehicles.

 Demonstrating the capacity of the robots, an EOD robot technician,  stated that the robots   could  locate and defuse suspicious and hazardous explosive items from remote places. He added that   they were also capable of firing "disrupters" and delivering counter IED charges that could demobilise and render an IED useless.

 The IG, who received the robots,    promised to put them to effective use across the country.

 He enjoined other  countries  and corporate organisations to take a cue from the US  by supporting the police and other security agencies in their  fight against crimes and terrorism in the country.


Punch

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