Teachers alleged
that the armed security officials stormed the school premises at about 10am on
the invitation of a female DSS official who had come to beat up a teacher for
flogging her daughter.
Six teachers
at the Federal Government Girls College in Calabar on Thursday alleged that
they were beaten in the presence of pupils by operatives of the Department of
State Services, Cross River State Command.
One of the teachers, Mr.
Owai Owai, said he was flogged in front of his pupils by the DSS woman and her
husband.
Other teachers, who claimed
to have been beaten up when the school later became flooded with DSS officials,
identified themselves simply as Ndarake, Inyang, Udoh, Agba, Njor and the
college’s Chief Security Officer, John Ikpeme.
A security official,
identified as James, said the DSS officials who stormed the school in three
vehicles, shot repeatedly into the air before they forcefully gained entrance.
However, the state Director
of DSS, Mr. Fubara Duke, said the matter was a case of mistaken identity.
But PUNCH Metro observed
that the school gate had bullet holes, while some spent shells were seen on the
floor.
Owai, who teaches Civic
Education in the senior class, said trouble started when he flogged some pupils
for failing to sweep their classroom.
He said, “I was about to
teach when I noticed some junior pupils sweeping the classroom of the senior
pupils. I learnt that the senior pupils had imposed it on them. It was a wrong
precedent because all the pupils had been told to sweep their respective
classes.
“I punished the senior
pupils who ordered the junior ones to sweep. I gave each of them two strokes of the cane on their
palm and one of them challenged me for flogging her. Before I knew what was
happening, she telephoned her mother, whom I later learnt was a DSS official.
The mother came to the school with her husband and they started beating me.
“They used my own cane to
flog me in the presence of the pupils. My fellow teachers came in to stop them,
but they were rebuffed. Later, the DSS woman called her colleagues for reinforcement
and that was how the school became flooded with DSS officials. They started
beating teachers who ran into them.”
Another teacher, Amos
Princewill, said the DSS officials took away two mobile phones, a binocular and
N80,000 belonging to his colleagues who were molested.
But DSS Director, Duke,
said, “It was not true that they used guns. What happened was that there was a
mistaken identity somewhere. Our people responded to a call from them and on
getting there, a group of hoodlums that had earlier gone there took to their
heels.
“Meanwhile, a parent had
gone to the school to complain that her daughter was beaten up by a teacher.
She (the parent) was mistaken to be among the hoodlums and some teachers from
the school pounced on her. They even attacked a DSS official. I have complained
to the school authorities to take administrative action against what they did
to a member of my staff.

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