The police in Kano have announced the arrest of
3,241 suspects since January in a series of raids of criminal hide outs
and black spots in the city, a whopping average of nearly 20 persons per
day.
The Kano State Police Commissioner, Musa A. Daura, said 2,741 have
been charged to court, he disclosed yesterday at a press conference.
Exhibits recovered from the suspects include 583 bottles of ‘Suck and
Die;’ 1,280 tubes of rubber solution; 100 packages of tramol drugs; 39
knives, 15 swords, 7 locally made pistols, and a large quantity of
Indian hemp.
Among the weapons he listed as recovered during
the period, the commissioner listed 60 rounds of live ammunition, two
AK-47 rifles, nine locally-made pistols and 74 cartridges, as well as
cutlasses, sticks, long swords and breaking equipment.
The force also recovered 30 motor bicycles, 98 GSM handsets, cattle,
30 bags of rice, gold, jewelry, and clothing materials, the
commissioner said.
Mr. Daura commended various people and bodies in
the state for the successful campaign, including security agencies,
religious leaders, traditional rulers, civil society, Hisbah and the
citizens for assisting the command with useful information.
Among the items he listed as recovered in that one incident were 14 homemade grenades, nine remote controlled IEDs, two rifles, one fabricated rocket launcher, 238 rounds of different calibre of ammunitions, four rolls of wire connector and 12 power source were found concealed in the vehicle.
The police commissioner also said that those items were found in a Golf 3 motor vehicle, registration number AG701KTN.
It is unclear why there is such wide disparity in the items recovered over a period of six months when compared with items recovered in one incident alone.
What is worse is that the Joint Task Force (JTF) in Kano, of which the police is a part, has made several other recoveries since then. Among them, on March 21, the JTF announced it had killed nine members of an invading Boko Haram gang. Brigadier General Iliyasu Abba of the 3 Brigade told reporters at Bukavu Barracks that the JTF also recovered from the invaders two AK 47 assault rifles, three pistols, two small guns, one long range small rifle and 29 magazines.
On March 28, JTF spokesman Captain Ikediechi Iweha told the News Agency of Nigeria in Kano the group had recovered six AK 47 rifles, one FN rifle, one General Purpose Machine Gun, one pump action rifle and one PPK pistol.
He also listed 10 AK 47 magazines, one SMG
magazine, one PPK pistol magazine, two smoke guns, 189 rounds of AK 47
ammunition, 43 rounds of 5.56mm SMG ammunition and eight rounds of 9mm
ammunition for PPK pistols.
“The rest are 15 hand held explosive devices
(IEDs), two (25 litres) containers of liquid chemical substance, 11 bags
of nitrate fertiliser, 200 empty containers of assorted beverage drinks
and other materials for making IEDs,” he said.
On May 2, Captain Iweha briefed the press on another incident in
which he said an K47 rifle, 46 improvised explosive devices, two
laptops, phones and their accessories were recovered from seven gunmen
who were arrested.
Similarly, on May 31, the JTF announced the
capture of 11 60mm anti-tank weapons, four anti-tank landmines, two
rounds of ammunition for a 122-mm artillery gun, 21 rocket-propelled
grenades, seventeen AK-47s with more than 11,000 bullets, and dynamite.
Yesterday’s statement by Police Commissioner Daura calls into
question how weapons and other items captured from dissidents are
accounted for, if at all, and whether the JTF and the police are being
transparently supervised.
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