As part of moves to further
traumatise him, the Nigerian police, through the Special Anti-Robbery Squad
(SARS) on Tuesday froze the bank account of PREMIUM TIMES reporter, Samuel
Ogundipe.
Mr Ogundipe was arrested at
about 3.00 p.m. and driven from the SARS headquarters in Abuja to the IGP
Monitoring Unit at Force Headquarters where he was made to write a statement
concerning the source of a recent story
he wrote. He has declined giving his source as allowed by journalism
ethics.
Mr Ogundipe’s salary account
with Ecobank was frozen in an attempt to frustrate him. One of the police
officers handling the investigation,
Emmanuel Onyeneho, an inspector, was heard saying they had to freeze the
account to incapacitate the reporter.
At the Force headquarters,
where he was taken, a Deputy Commissioner of Police at the IGP Monitoring Unit,
Sani Ahmadu, was heard directing lawyers to “rush to court” to obtain a warrant
to detain Mr. Ogundipe.
They also repeatedly asked
the journalist to disclose his source.
Mr Ogundipe has been taken
back to the SARS headquarters in Abuja and is currently being detained there.
Apart from asking Mr
Ogundipe to disclose his source, the police also accused the reporter, who
covers the security sector, of publishing mainly negative stories about the
police.
Mr Onyeneho told Mr
Ogundipe that they believe the journalist had written more negative stories
than positive stories about the police and they considered that a crime.
He said the journalist must
disclose all his sources for his stories about the police, something Mr
Ogundipe professionally declined.
Aside Mr Ogundipe, this
newspaper’s editor-in-chief, Musikilu Mojeed, and its education correspondent,
Azeezat Adedigba, were also briefly detained and harassed by the police at the
SARS headquarters in Abuja.

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