Commercial motorcyclists protest police extortions in Delta

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Okada riders

Commercial motorcyclists in Ogwashi-Uku community of Delta have withdrawn their services from Azagba village, Ogwashi-Uku road over alleged cases of police extortions.

The road leading to the Delta Polytechnic, Ogwashi-Uku was on Friday deserted by many commercial motorcyclists, who complained of high extortion by police operatives on the road.

The development left many students of the Polytechnic, who lived in Azagba and Iselle-Azagba villages, stranded as they depended on the cyclists, being the major source of transportation on the route.

A commercial cyclist, Mr Uche Ezendu, said that some of the cyclists were forced to withdraw their services on Friday due to alleged ”high rate of extortion by two police patrol teams” stationed on the road.

“We can no longer bear the high extortion. Everyday, we pay N100 to a SARS patrol team from Asaba and another patrol team from the Ogwashi-Uku Division on the same road.

“This extortion has been on over a long time and nobody is saying anything about the activities of these police teams. They just stationed themselves within a distance of four poles apart.

“Imagine two different police teams mounting a checkpoint on a four-kilometer road, collecting N100 each from cyclists, motorists and other road users. This is very outrageous if you ask me.

“We used to charge N200 as transport fare from Azagba to the Ogwashi, and that amount is what we also pay to the police teams on the road, so we are left with nothing after each trip,” Ezendu said.

Another cyclist, Peter Monye also corroborated Ezendu’s position, accusing the police patrol teams on the road of exploiting the cyclists and hampering the ability to meet their daily targets.

He said: “Please, Oga journalist if you can help us tell the government that we are suffering in the hands of these two police teams on this Polytechnic road. They are making our daily business very difficult.

“Do you know that as early as 7 a.m., the SARS team from Asaba are already positioned, collecting N100 and if you don’t comply, they will seize your bike and keep you there for hours.

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“As if that is not enough, the other police team from the Ogwashi-Uku Division, which operates with a white Hilux truck, will also hold you down, just within a distance of 500 metres from the SARS men.

Monye, who appealed to the state police command to intervene in their plight, said the two police teams usually turned down the cyclists’ plea for a N50 bargain.

He said that the situation had become very difficult for the cyclists, many of who were operating on a higher purchase agreement, to operate and render daily accounts to the owners.

According to him, “Many of us are on a higher purchase agreement, if this act of police extortion continues like this, we cannot meet up our target. So, today, we are leaving the road for the policemen.”

Also, a student of the Polytechnic, Miss Anthonia Ukonu, described the activities of the police teams on the road as ”highly disgraceful to the image of the Nigeria Police force”.

She regretted that the activities had forced the cyclists to hike their fare, making it difficult for many students to go to school daily.

“Before now, the bike operators used to charge us between N100 and N150 from Azagba to the Polytechnic, but now they are charging us between N200 and N300, which is very exorbitant, considering the short distance.

“But who do you blame, when the police are collecting N100 from the bike men at two separate location on the same road. imagine today, no bike on the road, and we are stranded,” Ukonu lamented.

Contacted, the spokesperson of the Delta Police Command, DSP Andrew Aniamaka, on phone said that the command would investigate the allegations and take necessary action against any officer found extorting motorists.

“We are going to investigate these allegations. First and for foremost, I will reach out to the officers in charge of these two police units mentioned. I will inform the SARS commander and the DPO in Ogwashi-Uku about these allegations.

“We don’t condone any act of official misconduct because issues like this bring bad image to the Nigeria Police and we will not allow that,” Aniamaka said.

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