HomeOthersClassifiedNo Policeman has right to slap civilian: Falana

No Policeman has right to slap civilian: Falana

Chairman of Alliance on Surviving COVID-19 and Beyond (ASCAB), Mr. Femi Falana (SAN), has asked the spokesman of the Nigeria Police Force (NPF), Olumuyiwa Adejobi, a Chief Superintendent of Police (CSP), to withdraw a statement credited to him that a policeman has a right to slap a civilian.

The lawyer urged Adejobi to withdraw the statement.

He said: “If the statement is not withdrawn within the next 24 hours, the Inspector-General of Police (IGP), Mr. Usman Alkali, should not hesitate to replace Mr. Adejobi with another police officer who has unqualified respect for the fundamental rights of the Nigerian people.”

The Force spokesman had allegedly said that “if a policeman should slap a ‘civilian’, the person has no right to retaliate. Even if a policeman not in uniform slaps a civilian, the civilian has no right to retaliate. More so, if he’s in uniform, it’s an act of disrespect to Nigeria to beat an officer in uniform.

“The disrespect is not to the policeman but to our nation and it’s a crime as enshrined in our criminal laws.”

But in a statement yesterday, Falana described Adejobi’s alleged position as a “highly inciting and provocative statement which has given the misleading impression that the Nigeria Police Force has authorised its officers to slap citizens and subject them to other forms of torture without any challenge whatsoever”.

The lawyer averred that a policeman does not have any right to slap a civilian, stressing that any policeman who assaults a civilian risks 25 years imprisonment under the Anti-Torture Act, 2017.

He added: “By virtue of Section 34 of the Nigerian Constitution, every citizen is entitled to the fundamental right to the dignity of their person.

“Accordingly, no citizen shall be subjected to any mental, physical or psychological torture. Both the Administrators of Criminal Justice Act, 2015, and the Police Establishment Act, 2020, have prohibited police officers and other law enforcement personnel from subjecting Nigerian people, including criminal suspects, to degrading, humiliating or inhumane treatment.

“Civilians are required to respect police officers who are discharging their lawful duties. The penalty for assaulting or slapping a police officer is three years imprisonment under the Criminal Code.

“In the same vein, police officers are equally mandated to respect civilians. Indeed, Section 2(b) of the Anti-Torture Act, 2017, states that torture is deemed committed when an act by which pain and suffering, whether physical or mental, is intentionally inflicted on a person to punish him for an act he or a third person has committed or suspected of having committed.

“The penalty for assaulting a civilian is 25 years under the Anti-Torture Act of 2017. In addition, the victim may sue for monetary compensation under the Anti-Torture Act and the Constitution.”

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