There were indications on Thursday that
the Inspector-General of Police, Suleiman Abba, had ignored a resolution
by the House of Representatives to reinstate one Inspector Simon
Anyanwu, who was said to have been wrongfully dismissed from service.
Anyanwu, who is currently hospitalised
for diabetes, had petitioned the Speaker, House of Representatives,
Aminu Tambuwal, over the termination of his appointment without recourse
to police disciplinary procedures following which the House on October
16, 2014 directed the police to reverse Anyanwu’s dismissal and convert
same to retirement with all his entitlements, salary arrears,
allowances, gratuity and pension paid.
The Clerk to the National Assembly,
Salisu Maikasuwa, had dispatched the Reps’ resolution, the votes and
proceedings on the issue to the IG, but checks showed that the police
boss had yet to restore Anyanwu into service or pay his entitlements as
directed.
In his petition, Anyanwu explained that
he travelled for medical treatment for which a leave certificate was
issued by the police authorities, and that his problems started when he
was abducted by ritual killers while travelling back to his base.
The petitioner claimed he was neither
queried nor given an orderly room trial, adding that he petitioned the
IG, and the Police Service Commission but that none of the steps yielded
any result.
When contacted on Thursday, the Force
Public Relations Officer, Emmanuel Ojukwu, asked Anyanwu to resend his
petition, assuring that his matter would be looked into and the right
things would be done.
“Let him send his petition afresh, it would be looked into and the right things would be done,” he said.
Meanwhile, Abba has threatened to deal with policemen that embark on any strike.
The IG also warned officers of dire
consequences of breaching extant rules and regulations as applicable to
the Nigeria Police Force.
Gossipers Magazine had on Wednesday
published a report that about 15,000 policemen, who were promoted from
the rank of sergeant to Inspector and those promoted from the rank of
Inspector to Assistant Superintendent of Police, were planning to go on
strike in March, 2015 over non-payment of their promotion arrears for
over a year.
But the police, in a statement on Thursday by Ojukwu warned the men against the planned strike.
The statement read, “The attention of
the Police High Command has been drawn to a media publication captioned,
‘Policemen threaten strike over unpaid salaries’.
“At the outset, it is pertinent to state
that, the leadership of the Nigeria Police Force is mindful of its
responsibility towards the welfare of the workforce; part of which is
promotion and recognition of hard work.
“For the avoidance of doubt, the Nigeria
Police Force is working assiduously with relevant government
departments and agencies to effect the payment of the promotion arrears.
Meanwhile, all promoted officers have since January 2015 been enjoying
the salaries attendant on their new ranks.”
Abba expressed anger over the “recourse
to unapproved channels to air perceived grievances,” noting that the
police regulation provided enough windows for aggrieved officers to
ventilate their grievances.
“The IG is miffed that officers have to
recourse to unapproved channels to air their perceived grievances. The
IG therefore warns such officers of the dire consequences of breaching
extant rules and regulations,” the statement added.
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