HURIWA alleged on Sunday that there is an unprecedented rise in the systematic extortion of victims of crime by police operatives and top ranked officers before their cases are investigated and resolved.
The Rights group said verbalisation of condemnation of this criminal tendency by police operatives as made earlier in the year by the Force public relations office was grossly insufficient.
HURIWA advised that the police should set up a data bank of police officers caught in the act of extortion and ensure they are sanctioned accordingly.
ranks who regularly perpetrate crimes against the citizens they are mandated to
protect.”
The statement reads further, “Meanwhile, victims of crime are obliged to pay the police from the moment they enter a police station to file a complaint until the day their case is brought before a court.
“In the shadows, high-level police officials embezzle staggering sums of public funds meant to cover basic police operations.
“Senior police officers also enforce a perverse system of “returns” in which rank-and-file officers are compelled to pay up the chain of command a share of the money they extort from the public.
“HURIWA said the aforementioned report by the USA based Non-governmental organisation (HRW), is not only factually accurate and have become even more widespread, but the Rights group is shocked that no legal or institutional efforts by the police or the Federal legislative body, has been made to checkmate these daredevil activities of the extortion rackets within the Nigerian police force that has constituted a very real and present danger to efficiency and effectiveness of policing tasks by the Nigerian police force.”