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Wife of police inspector who died in cell speaks

Wife of police inspector who died in cell speaks

Oluwabukola, the bereaved wife of the 47-year-old police inspector, Taiye Atobiloye, who died in a cell at the D Division of the Kogi State Police Command has accused the police of killing her husband for rejecting special duty.

WITHIN NIGERIA recalls that Atobiloye died in a police cell following his detention for being absent from duty for two days at the Zone 8 Command, Lokoja, Kogi State.

After four stillbirths, Oluwabukola’s hope of being a mother after 12 years of marriage just ended as she kept wondering how her husband died after seven days of being held incommunicado in a police cell in Lokoja.

“How could the police do this to one of their own?” she asked rhetorically.

“I want the world to know what they did to my husband. They collected a lot of money from him and tortured him to death,” she wailed.

According to PUNCH, during a meeting at the Oke Onigbin Police Division, Kwara State early April 2023, the Divisional Police Officer, Stephen Aigbogun, reportedly announced that a particular inspector would be deployed on special duty to Zone 8 Police Command, Lokoja, Kogi State.

The deceased’s wife alleged that the affected police inspector, however, found a way to dodge the assignment and her husband was picked as a replacement.

Oluwabukola, a teacher in a public school in Kwara State, said the development created a sharp discord in the division, as Taiye rejected the deployment.

However, a senior officer reportedly prevailed on the Ikosi, Kwara State indigene, to go and wait at Ilorin while he pleaded on his behalf with the divisional officer.

“My husband went to Ilorin on Tuesday, April 3, as the officer promised to call my husband the next day.

“But throughout that day, he did not. My husband called him on Wednesday night and he said a signal had been sent for my husband to report to Lokoja.

“My husband said he could not just like that as a family man and that he would need to raise money for his transportation and accommodation. He promised to go the following Monday.

“But from Good Friday, the police started calling him from Lokoja and asking where he was,” she added.

According to her, after getting enough money, Taiye travelled to Lokoja on Easter Monday with some medical papers indicating that he was not fit for the special assignment.

The PUNCH gathered that in 2019, the police inspector was involved in an accident while going for night duty.

His leg was said to have been crushed by a motorcycle.

At the time, he was hospitalised and underwent treatment after a series of X-rays at the University of Ilorin Teaching Hospital.

Oluwabukola said her husband went to Lokoja with copies of his medical reports to appeal for a reversal of the deployment.

An Assistant Area Commander was said to have expressed shock at the posting of the inspector and promised to send another signal for him to return to Kwara.

According to the wife, Taiye was made to part with some funds to make the signal quicker.

“The assistant area commander assured him that the new signal was already being typed. He (the assistant area commander) said he was going to eat and my husband should not yet report.

“Before the man would return, he and the DPO at Oke Onigbin had spoken and reached another agreement.

“Because my husband had spent a lot of money, some of which he borrowed from me, without getting the letter, he left Lokoja on Thursday, April 13.

“When he returned, I asked why he did not stay and he said his spirit was troubled and that was why he returned home. I told him to go back since he did not have any other job and his uniform was still there. He promised to return next Tuesday,” she added.

Oluwabukola said by Monday, the Oke Onigbin Divisional Traffic Officer called her and demanded her husband’s whereabouts and why he had yet to report for the special assignment.

She said Taiye took the phone from her and promised to return to Lokoja the following day.

She further stated that, “When my husband got to Lokoja the following morning, he called me and said he was asked to go to ‘D’ Police Division and that he would be detained there for absence from duty without permission.

“He also called me and said he was behind the counter with other policemen on duty. He said he would be put in a cell and I should not bother because it was normal police procedure, but by the following day, he would be released.

“By 8pm that night, I called him, but nobody picked up the call. Throughout that day, the phone rang out. The following morning, I called him more than 20 times but nobody picked up the phone.

“On the third day, I did the same thing and nobody picked. I became afraid and called his brother in Lagos to inform him,” she added.

Taiye’s brother was said to have spoken with the Oke Onigbin DPO, who also wondered why the inspector’s phone was collected from him.

Oluwabukola said on the fourth day when she tried her husband’s phone, it was switched off.

However, while she was in church on Sunday, one of her husband’s friends in Ilorin called her phone.

“I did not pick up the call because we were still in service. I saw the message he sent after the service that my husband was in critical condition.

“I called the man and he said I had to come to the hospital that my husband was sick and that he had messed up the cell where he was held.

“I told the man that he was only a family friend and why was he the one they called and not me or another family member?

“I asked the man to give me the phone number of the person who gave him the information.

“He said my husband’s phone was used to make the call and that the caller didn’t give his name,” she added.

She said she alerted family members of her husband to the development, adding that the deceased’s brother called the Oke Onigbin DPO on the phone, but he didn’t take his call.

Oluwabukola said when she called her husband’s phone number again, nobody picked up the call for two days.

However, around 4pm on Monday, April 24, she said Taiye’s brother called to inform her that her husband had died in the cell.

“He said the DPO of Oke-Onigbin called him. I told him that there was no way my husband would be dead because I had been calling his phone and no one picked.

“Immediately, I called his number again and someone, who identified himself as Inspector Musa or Isa picked up the call. I asked him why he was with my husband’s phone for seven days and he should return the phone to him.

“He then switched off the phone. I called the DTO of Oke-Onigbin and requested to speak with the DPO. I asked the DPO where he sent my husband to and what he had done to my husband. He said I should not tell him that rubbish. He said my husband went on duty and cut off the call,” she added.

Saturday PUNCH gathered that the matter was reported to the office of the Kwara State Commissioner of Police, who promised to get to the root of the matter and ensure justice was served.

Oluwabukola, while demanding justice, lamented the manner in which her husband died despite being a policeman.

“Aside from the accident that he had that broke his leg, my husband was not sickly. Maybe he was poisoned or the cell was sprayed with chemicals.

“I want the world to know what they did to my husband. They collected a lot of money from him and tortured him to death,” she added.

The bereaved teacher described her husband as gentle and loving, saying she had advised him to quit the police work, but he asked for three more years.

“We were married for 12 years. By this time of the day (12 noon), he would have called me about six or eight times to ask after my welfare. He was a very cheerful man.

“Around the time he had the accident that affected his leg, I also had a minor one that affected my hand and that hindered my ability to wash clothes. Because of that, he only allowed me to cook while he washed the clothes; he spread and ironed them and cleaned the house.

“They took him from me just like that. We have had stillbirths more than four times. And now, they are asking me to come and pick his corpse as if he was an animal,” she stated.

Oluwabukola’s elder sister, Folashade Alase, who was among the visitors, wondered why the police would cut off communication between the inspector and his family.

“Now that he is dead, they are asking us to come and pick up his corpse,” she stated.

A source told the PUNCH that the victim was soiling his body while in the cell and the police abandoned him till he died.

“The ‘D’ Division DPO, Lokoja, Adigun Salami, must explain what happened to him in the cell. I was told he defecated until he died without getting medical help. We want to know who gave the order that he should be left in the cell,” the source added.

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