Police trying to cover up student’s shooting –Lawyer
A
lawyer, Mr. Kolawole Olaniregun, has accused the Lagos State Police
Command and the management of Michael Otedola College of Primary
Education, Epe, of trying to cover up the shooting of a student, Jamiu
Babalola, in the school.
Olaniregun, who represents Babalola,
said he was surprised that instead of naming the policeman responsible
for the shooting and prosecuting him, the police had been trying to
cover up the act.
Babalola, a 200 level student of the institution, was shot on Monday during a protest at the college.
Olaniregun said, “I have spoken with the
DPO of Epe Division of the Nigeria Police, but he has not been
forthcoming about the identity of the policeman responsible. He had only
told me that investigation is going on.”
Olaniregun said the students were
appealing to the college to allow those who had made half-payment to
write the first semester examination.
He said, “The school authority said they
would refuse the students entry into the examination halls unless they
paid in full. The students protested, and the school authorities invited
the police to quell the protest.
“Policemen were deployed in the scene of
the protest. A yet-to-be-identified policeman, shot at the student. The
bullet hit Jamiu on the leg. He is currently in a critical condition at
the Olabisi Onabanjo University Teaching Hospital.”
Babalola, 20, who spoke with our
correspondent on the telephone on Thursday on the hospital bed, said he
was unhappy that the management denied that the incident happened.
He said, “The bullet pierced through my
left thigh and passed into my right thigh. Though I have been attended
to medically, there are still fragments of bullet in my legs.
“I am not happy that the management of Michael Otedola College of Primary Education denied that the incident happened.”
The spokesman for the state police
command, Ngozi Braide, said, “From preliminary findings, we are not sure
whether the shot was fired by the police or the students. But the
police have visited the wounded student in the hospital, and he said he
didn’t know who shot him.
“Meanwhile, we have arrested all the
policemen on duty on that day; they are in detention. Their rifles have
been collected and submitted for ballistic examination. We are not
protecting anybody. If any policeman is found culpable, he will face the
music.”
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