A Yaba Chief Magistrate’s Court Lagos has remanded Alhaji Azeez Adekunle Lawal aka Kunle Poly and two others in the custody of the Nigeria Police Zonal Monitoring Unit, Zone 2 Headquarters, Onikan-Lagos for 30 days, over last Thursday’s mayhem at Idumota, Lagos Island.
Kunle Poly is the Lagos Island ‘B’ Branch chairman of the
National Union of Road Transport Workers (NURTW).
Those remanded alongside him were Prince Idowu Onikoyi
Johnson and Agboola Akeem Kosoko.
Chief Magistrate Linda Balogun gave the order following an
application by police counsel Morufu Animashaun.
Animashaun based his application on section 264(1), (2),
(3), (4) and (6) of the Administration of Criminal Justice Law of Lagos State
(ACJL), 2021; sections 4 and 10 of the Police Act, 2020, and sections 6(c),
35(1)(C)(5) and (7)(a) of the 1999 Constitution.
The prosecutor told the court that the order would enable
the police conclude investigation of allegations of threat to life and
property, violence, cultism, mayhem, conduct likely to cause breach of peace,
unlawful possession of firearms, conspiracy and murder against the defendants.
The prosecutor also supported the application with a
14-paragraph affidavit deposed to by Inspector Monday Ohion.
In a bench ruling, the Chief Magistrate held: “I have
listened to the submission of the counsel, as well as perused the application
for remand and the attached affidavit.
“I find merit in the application and it is accordingly
granted. The three defendants are to be remanded in the facility of the Nigeria
Police Zonal Monitoring Unit, Zone 2 Headquarters, Onikan-Lagos, for the next
30 days, to enable the police to conclude investigation”.
Operatives of the Lagos Rapid Response Squad (RRS), led by
its Commander, Olayinka Egbeyemi, a Chief Superintendent (CSP) arrested Kunle
Poly and the Treasurer of the Lagos State Council of the NURTW Alhaji Mustapha
Adekunle (aka Sego) last Thursday following the clash between factional union
members.
The RRS said the constant clashes in Idumota and its
environs intermittently crippled commercial activities in the area.
- Nation