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Leaked Nigeria Police Force Report Reveals 11 Custody Deaths in Awkuzu RRS between March and December 2022 under the watch of Three Notorious Police Officers, CSP Patrick Agbazue, SP Nkeiruka Nwode, and Inspector Harrison Akama, as Whistleblower Nnamdi Emeh Remains Detained Despite Bail

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I have obtained an interim investigation report issued from the office of the Inspector-General of Police at the headquarters of the Nigeria Police Force in Abuja. The document examined allegations arising from a social media campaign that accused officers of the Rapid Response Squad/Anti-Kidnapping Unit in Awkuzu, Anambra State, of serious abuses, including extrajudicial killings and organ harvesting.

The report, signed by Idris Abdullahi Abubakar, was circulated internally to senior police leadership for action, but was never made public neither was action taken against the policemen.

The case is linked to Suit No. FHC/AWK/60C/2023 before the Federal High Court in Awka.

According to court records:

Whistleblower Nnamdi Daniel Emeh was granted bail on May 17, 2023 by Justice F. O. Riman (now late).

His bail conditions were perfected in May 2024, and a release order was signed by Justice S. M. Shuaibu.

Despite this, the police obtained an ex parte motion blocking his release, and he has remained in custody ever since.

Although the report appears to attempt to minimize the allegations against these officers, it nonetheless identifies serious misconduct, egregious acts involving three officers of the Awkuzu unit: CSP Patrick Agbazue, SP Nkeiruka Nwode (popularly known as “Ruka”), and Inspector Harrison Akama.

The report acknowledges that at least eleven suspects died in police custody between ,, with the deaths classified as “sudden and unnatural.” It also revealed that the Awkuzu unit failed to maintain mandatory police records, including cell registers, crime diaries, station diaries, and prisoner lock-up registers—failures that investigators said made accountability and oversight extremely difficult.

Rather than focus on these findings, the investigation centered heavily on the role of Nnamdi Emeh, who had previously served as a corps member attached to the unit in an IT capacity. According to the report, Emeh allegedly had access to sensitive operational information and later used that access to launch a social media campaign accusing officers of grave crimes.

Police traced the dispute to the arrest of a suspect identified as Chibuike Ekweme, also known as “Temple,” described as a gun runner and suspected member of IPOB/ESN. During that investigation, Emeh reportedly handled the suspect’s mobile phones for forensic analysis. The report alleges that instead of conducting legitimate analysis, he hacked the device and arranged the transfer of ₦36 million from the suspect’s account to a bureau-de-change operator, allegedly retaining ₦4 million for himself before fleeing.

Following the incident, police arrested several individuals linked to the transaction, including a bureau-de-change operator and a bank employee. They were charged with conspiracy and murder and remanded at the Onitsha Correctional Centre, though their families later claimed they could not determine their whereabouts after the arrests.

Emeh subsequently began publishing allegations online accusing officers of the Awkuzu unit of extrajudicial killings and organ harvesting. The posts circulated widely on social media platforms, including Gistlover, prompting eighteen complaints from members of the public alleging brutality and misconduct by officers of the unit.

While the report rejected the allegation of organ harvesting, it confirmed serious operational failures within the police unit. Investigators found repeated violations of policing procedures, disregard for human-rights safeguards, and systemic failures in record-keeping.

The report recommended that the Assistant Inspector-General of Police for Zone 13, Ukpo, and the Anambra State Police Command submit documentation relating to the eighteen complaints received against the officers. It also recommended reorganizing the Awkuzu Rapid Response Squad to align with international policing standards and Nigeria’s criminal justice laws.

Further recommendations included briefing the public on the investigation to calm tensions and defending civil suits filed by families of detainees who allegedly died in police custody. Pending the outcome of the investigation, the report recommended redeploying CSP Patrick Agbazue, SP Nkeiruka Nwode, and Inspector Harrison Akama from Zone 13 to Force Headquarters in Abuja.

The report concluded that the Inspector-General of Police had reviewed and upheld its recommendations.

However, rather than leading to accountability for the officers implicated in the investigation, the whistleblower, Nnamdi Emeh, became the central target of prosecution. Despite being granted bail and fulfilling the court’s conditions, his release was halted by an ex parte order obtained by the police, and he has remained imprisoned since 2024 while the officers named in the report have continued their careers within the police force.

P.S: LET ME STATE THAT I COULD NOT GET THE FULL REPORT AS IT WAS MUTILATED BY THE POLICE HIERARCHY, HELLBENT ON SHIELDING THESE OFFICERS AND BURNISHING THE IMAGE OF THE POLICE

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Why Workers Have Not Received February Salary – Accountant-General

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The Office of the Accountant-General of the Federation has explained why staff of the Federal Ministry of Steel Development and four other federal agencies have not received their February 2026 salaries.

The delay is due to gaps in the budget allocated for personnel costs in these organizations.

A statement issued by the Director of Press and Public Relations at the Accountant-General’s office, Bawa Mokwa, confirmed that the affected agencies include the Federal Ministry of Steel Development, the Nigerian Export Promotion Council, the National Rural Electrification Agency, Kamuku National Park, and the Council for the Regulation of Freight Forwarding in Nigeria.

The shortfall in allocated funds caused the hold-up in salary payments.

The office said the affected organisations have been asked to work with the Cash Management Office of the Federal Ministry of Finance to address the funding gaps.

Salaries for other federal workers outside these agencies have already been paid, the statement added.

The statement also addressed civil servants with salary accounts at Standard Chartered Bank, explaining that some could not access their funds because the bank requires a minimum account balance of seven million naira.

Despite the policy, the salaries were fully transferred to the bank.

The Accountant-General’s office assured workers that steps are being taken to resolve the delays and ensure payments are made promptly.

The 2026 federal budget sets aside about N8.36 trillion for personnel costs, with additional provisions for pensions and gratuities, reflecting the government’s planned spending on staff-related costs.

 

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When the revolution starts, we will remember how little you all cared about citizens- BBNaija;s Saskay calls out Minister of State for Defence, Matawalle Bello, for celebrating Zamfara gov’s defection to APC while being silent about the maiming of commanding officers by Boko Haram terrorists

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BBNaija star, Saskay, has berated the Minister of State for Defence, Bello Matawalle, for failing to issue any statement as it regards the k1lling of three Commanding officers during a battle with terrorists.

Dailytrust reports that in the last seven days, the Nigerian military lost three commanding officers in charge of forward operations bases following attacks by Boko Haram and the Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP) at different locations in Borno State. According to reports, the three commanding officers recently k!lled were Major U.I. Mairiga, who headed the Mayenti base; Lt-Col Umar Faruq, commander of the Kukawa base and the 101 Brigade; and Lt-Col S.I. Iliyasu, who served in Konduga.

Findings showed that most of the de@ths occurred during attacks on military bases or ambushes carried out by insurgents during clearance operations.

As some Nigerians took to social media to mourn the gallant soldiers who paid the supreme price while fighting the terrorists, the Minister on Monday evening, March 9, took to his X handle to celebrate the defection of Zamfara state governor, Dauda Lawal., to his party, APC.

Saskay in a post shared on X, called out Matawalle for not issuing a statement on the de@th of the soldiers in his capacity as Minister of State for Defence but deemed it feat to issue a statement celebrating the governor’s defection to his party, APC.

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Niger Delta youths demand termination of pipeline surveillance contract

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Niger Delta youths, under the aegis of Niger Delta Centre for Justice and Accountability, NDCJA, have called for immediate termination of the pipeline surveillance contract.

The contract, aimed at checking oil theft, is being handled by Tantita Security Services Nigeria Limited, TSSNL.

The youths also distanced themselves from recent comments by former Ijaw Youths Council, IYC, Worldwide President Udengs Eradiri, who defended the pipeline surveillance contract being handled by TSSNL.

NDCJA, in a statement released by Executive Director, Comrade Efe Justice, on Tuesday, described Eradiri’s position as self-serving propaganda designed to protect personal and vested interests.

The youths insisted that Eradiri does not speak for the Niger Delta people, noting that his views represent a narrow, self-interested perspective that overlooks the widespread suffering, economic sabotage and ongoing plunder of national resources that continue to afflict communities across the region.

“We have no affiliation whatsoever with Udengs Eradiri or the views he expressed in his recent interview. We distance ourselves completely from his assertions and reject the notion that critics of the Tantita contract are ‘enemies of Nigeria.’

“Such inflammatory language is a tired tactic used by those who benefit from the status quo to silence legitimate demands for accountability,” the Niger Delta youths said in the statement.

They chided Eradiri for allegedly acting as an apologist for what they described as a failed arrangement that continues to bleed the nation dry.

“Eradiri’s praise for Tantita ignores hard realities. Oil theft remains rampant, costing Nigeria up to $15 billion annually—hundreds of thousands of barrels per day disappearing into criminal networks.

“Recent discoveries of major illegal bunkering hubs, including in Abia State in early 2026, prove that the current model has not neutralised the threat.

“Criminals adapt, shift operations, and exploit gaps while the contract drains ₦48 billion of public money every year. If this is what Eradiri calls ‘success’ and ‘peace,’ then we are dealing with a dangerous delusion,” the statement added.

The youths observed that the pipeline surveillance contract has not eradicated oil theft but merely shifted its patterns. According to them, production gains are as a result of broader efforts, rather than the efforts of any singular entity.

They equally claimed that so-called thousands of jobs generated from the pipeline surveillance contract “often remain unevenly distributed, temporary, or tied to patronage networks, leaving widespread youth unemployment and community grievances unaddressed”.

To achieve lasting security and equitable benefits for the Niger Delta, NDCJA called for the complete decentralization of pipeline surveillance contracts.

The youths said decentralization would involve awarding separate, competitive contracts to different reputable companies in each oil-producing state, based on transparent bidding processes, verifiable track records in security and community engagement, and strict performance metrics.

They argued that such an approach would foster greater local inclusion, reduce the risks of favoritism or monopolistic control, and encourage innovation in surveillance techniques across diverse terrains and communities.

“Decentralization is not fragmentation but smart, inclusive security. By engaging multiple competent firms per state—selected through open, merit-based processes—we can ensure broader stakeholder participation, better intelligence gathering from host communities, and stronger deterrence against theft and vandalism.

“This model aligns with true federalism, promotes fiscal responsibility, and prevents any single entity from holding disproportionate influence over national assets.

“President Tinubu and well meaning Nigerians should ask Eradiri if there are no competent people in Bayelsa, where he is from, to handle pipeline surveillance contract for the state.

The Niger Delta youths urged President Tinubu conduct independent audit of existing contracts before any renewal or extension.

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