A policeman identified
simply as Yemi on Tuesday in the Ilupeju area of Lagos State allegedly shot an okada
rider, Adigun Atilola, while trying to enforce the state traffic law.
It was learnt that Atilola,
who was riding with a passenger, was shot when he attempted to evade arrest at
Teju Junction on Ilupeju bypass.
Eyewitnesses said Yemi was
in company with five other policemen when he shot the okada rider at a
close range.
It was gathered that
Atilola’s passenger and some youths in the area who were angered by the
incident went on the rampage in the area.
The protesters set up
bonfires at the scene on Teju Junction and Coker Road Junction and prevented
free flow of traffic for hours.
When our correspondent
visited the scene, the protesters were seen attacking and beating up people
suspected to be policemen who were in mufti.
However, attempts by the
protesters to mobilise and burn down the Ilupeju Police Station was thwarted as
a combined team of policemen from the Rapid Response Squad, OPS Attack,
Mosafejo and Alausa Division who came in seven vans fired tear gas into
the air and dispersed them.
An eyewitness, Hammed
Adelaja, said Atilola was shot at the right part of the lower abdomen, adding
that the bullet pierced through him to the other side.
He said, “The incident
happened at about 10:30am and I was right there in my
office watching them. As soon as he was flagged down, the passenger he was
carrying came down but while trying to manoeuvre and zoom off, a policeman
grabbed him from behind and shot him at a close range.
“It was such a gory scene as
he lost so much blood. The policeman who shot him and his colleagues fled the
scene as soon as the incident happened.”
Another eyewitness, Happy
Utok-Udoh, said Atilola was taken to a nearby private hospital by
concerned residents from where he was referred to the Lagos State University
Teaching Hospital.
He berated the police for
being unnecessarily overzealous while attempting to enforce the traffic law.
“Nobody is saying they
shouldn’t enforce the law but they should do so with all sense of civility and
decorum. The approach was so wrong. Something should be done to contain their
excesses,” he said.
When our correspondent
visited Surgical Emergency of LASUTH, Atilola was said to have been taken to
the theatre for surgical operation.
Meanwhile, Atilola’s elder
sister, Rukayat Dada, who rushed to the scene of the incident wondered how an
unarmed citizen would be shot without a just cause.
She said, “He is a trained
motorcycle technician who was forced into commercial motorcycle business as a
result of unemployment. His first child is just barely six weeks old.
“My brother should not be
allowed to die as a result of police lawlessness. He is not an armed robber so
why should they shoot him? I wonder why our law enforcement officers are so
wicked.”
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