Rule of Law and Accountability Advocacy Centre Rulaac

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Rule of Law and Accountability Advocacy Centre Rulaac Support RULAAC’s Human Rights Work

Every day, vulnerable and helpless victims of police brutality and other human rights violations turn to RULAAC for help.

We stand with them - seeking justice, holding law enforcement accountable, and restoring hope

Shout out to my newest followers! Excited to have you onboard! Nafiu Bayour Isiaq, Oyeleye Adegboyega, Marvin Pullmar, M...
28/03/2026

Shout out to my newest followers! Excited to have you onboard! Nafiu Bayour Isiaq, Oyeleye Adegboyega, Marvin Pullmar, Muhseen Yola, Joy Akaninyene, Jonathan Friday, Star Monday C. Enogu, Laro Lazarus Reuben, Akinwale Sunday, Itz Yp, Nura Aminu, Adekoya Opemipo, Saheed Alao

Two Years After the IGP’s Promise, Silence Still Shrouds the Nnamdi Emeh Investigation - While the Whistleblower Remains...
09/12/2025

Two Years After the IGP’s Promise, Silence Still Shrouds the Nnamdi Emeh Investigation - While the Whistleblower Remains Behind Bars

More than two years after the Inspector-General of Police announced a high-level investigation into the shocking allegations of extrajudicial killings, organ harvesting, extortion, and torture linked to officers of the Anambra State Command and the now-notorious Awkuzu/RRS complex, the Nigeria Police Force has still not released the findings of that investigation. Even more troubling: the young whistleblower whose revelations triggered the inquiry - NYSC member and IT consultant Nnamdi Emeh - remains in detention despite being granted bail by a court and fulfilling the conditions. His continued incarceration raises legitimate fears for his safety, and deepens the perception that the silence is strategic, not accidental.

In March 2023, RULAAC issued a statement calling for a transparent, impartial, and exhaustive investigation into both the allegations raised by Emeh and the counter-allegations levelled against him. We warned then - as we warn now - that nothing less than full disclosure and accountability would suffice. RULAAC and other civil society groups later reaffirmed this position, insisting that the whistleblower must be accorded due process and that the accused police officers must face open scrutiny.

Instead, the opposite happened.

The senior officers accused of running a criminal ring within Zone 13 and the Anambra CID Annex - including CSP Patrick Agbazue, SP Nkeiruka Nwode, and Inspector Harrison Akama - were invited to the Force Headquarters and allowed to return to their posts the same day. There was no suspension. No public update. No assurance that the officers were removed from positions where they could interfere with evidence or intimidate witnesses. As the months stretched into years, the panel reportedly submitted its findings - but the report has remained locked away from the public.

Meanwhile, the whistleblower who exposed the alleged atrocities was arrested, paraded, denied access to open judicial proceedings for weeks, and kept in police custody long after the police claimed the matter had been charged to court. Even after securing bail and meeting the conditions, he has not been released.

What message does this send? That exposing grave human rights violations is more dangerous than committing them. That the system protects the powerful and punishes the vulnerable. And that a police force repeatedly implicated in torture, extortion and custodial killings still struggles to grasp that accountability is not optional.

The Nigeria Police Force owes the public far more than silence. The allegations made by Emeh were not trivial. They were not imaginary. They were consistent with years of documented abuses associated with Awkuzu and other black sites in Anambra. They deserved - and still deserve - full, public, transparent investigation.

Two years later, the failure to release the investigative report amounts to a cover-up by omission. It erodes public trust, undermines ongoing police reform commitments, and endangers every whistleblower who dares to challenge impunity.

The demands are simple, lawful, and overdue:

1. Immediate release of the investigative report of the panel set up by the IGP.

2. Immediate release of Nnamdi Emeh in compliance with the court order granting him bail.

3. Prosecution - not protection - of any officer found culpable.

4. Institutional safeguards to protect whistleblowers within the police system.

5. Restructuring and reform of the RRS/Awkuzu operational environment, where a long history of abuses has been repeatedly flagged.

The continued detention of a whistleblower while implicated officers walk free is a stain on the justice system and a betrayal of the very principles the Nigeria Police Force swore to uphold. The truth cannot remain buried. The victims cannot remain forgotten. And Nnamdi Emeh cannot remain a pawn in what increasingly looks like an effort to silence accountability.

Nigeria cannot keep promising reform while punishing those who demand it.

Okechukwu Nwanguma, Rule of Law Advocate, and Executive Director, Rule of Law and Accountability Advocacy Centre Rulaac Rulaac

No doubt, the people currently occupying the saddle of leadership in the Southeast are, for the most part, irresponsible...
23/11/2025

No doubt, the people currently occupying the saddle of leadership in the Southeast are, for the most part, irresponsible, self-serving, visionless, and profoundly unpatriotic.

Yes, there is an unwritten and unmistakable agenda at the Federal level - one that successive administrations have quietly but consistently pursued - to politically sideline the Igbo and keep the Southeast perpetually weakened. But even that is not our greatest challenge.

The most crippling obstacle facing Ndi Igbo today is irresponsible political leadership at home.

Our governors, legislators, and political elites lack vision. They lack courage. They lack a sense of duty. They have turned public office into a personal enterprise. They have allowed the Southeast to decay while they enrich themselves, build empires elsewhere, and pretend to be victims of federal marginalization.

I have argued elsewhere - and I repeat it without apology - that the Southeast desperately needs a leadership revolution.

The enormous amount of energy being channelled into agitations for secession should be redirected toward demanding accountability from those who claim to lead us. Instead of fighting ourselves or destroying our future, we should be confronting the politicians who have stolen our present.

Our leaders must be compelled - by pressure, by civic mobilisation, and by unwavering public demand - to be transparent, accountable, and responsible. They must use federal allocations, internally generated revenue, and foreign development aids for the people - to build roads, schools, hospitals, industries, and functional local governments - not to fund their lifestyles, buy properties abroad, and leave the region in ruins.

Ndi Igbo do not lack talent, creativity, or resilience. What we lack - and what has cost us dearly - is leadership that actually cares about our collective destiny.

It is time to change that.

22/11/2025
On the Conviction of Nnamdi KanuThe conviction and sentencing of Nnamdi Kanu raise serious legal, political, and securit...
22/11/2025

On the Conviction of Nnamdi Kanu

The conviction and sentencing of Nnamdi Kanu raise serious legal, political, and security concerns. This case, which has dragged on for more than a decade, carries deep political undertones that extend far beyond the courtroom. Many Nigerians - including members of the National Assembly - have consistently maintained that the matter required a political solution, not a purely punitive approach.

It is also important to recall that the Federal Government repeatedly disobeyed several court orders directing Kanu’s release or granting him reliefs at various stages of the proceedings. This persistent disregard for judicial decisions not only violated his rights but also undermined public confidence in the justice system. When the state selectively obeys or ignores court rulings, it weakens the rule of law and fuels perceptions that justice is being driven by political considerations rather than legal merit.

Furthermore, the government has, in many instances, pardoned or negotiated with armed groups and individuals who have committed far more egregious crimes - including terrorism, kidnapping, and mass killings. Applying the harshest possible punishment in this case, while adopting lenient approaches in others, reinforces perceptions of bias and unequal treatment under the law.

The court should have considered the broader implications for peace and stability in the Southeast. A life sentence will not resolve the underlying grievances or end the agitation. Instead, it risks inflaming tensions, deepening resentment, and further polarizing the region. What Nigeria needs at this moment is de-escalation, dialogue, and a credible framework for political reconciliation.

Justice must be served, but it must be served in a way that promotes peace, fairness, respect for the rule of law, and national cohesion.

*Where Is President Tinubu?*  *What Is the Primary Purpose of Government?* By Okechukwu NwangumaThe news from Kwara and ...
22/11/2025

*Where Is President Tinubu?*

*What Is the Primary Purpose of Government?*

By Okechukwu Nwanguma

The news from Kwara and Niger States in the last 48 hours should shake any functioning government to its core. Instead, Nigeria drifts on - as if mass abductions, ransoms in the hundreds of millions, and the slaughter of innocents were now part of our national routine.

On Tuesday, terrorists attacked a Christ Apostolic Church in Eruku, Kwara State, killing at least three worshippers and abducting over 30 others. By Thursday, they were already calling families, demanding ₦100 million per victim. In Niger State, barely five days after the abduction of students in Kebbi, terrorists again struck - this time invading St. Mary’s Papiri Private Catholic Secondary School in Agwara. They kidnapped over 50 students and teachers in yet another pre-dawn raid. Some reports put the figure above 100.

Two mass abductions. Two States. Under 48 hours. And the President is… where?

*The Purpose of Government*

The first duty of any government, anywhere in the world, is painfully simple: to protect lives and secure territory. Everything else roads, reforms, revenue, rhetoric - comes after.

A government that cannot protect its citizens has failed at the most fundamental level. And in today’s Nigeria, citizens are no longer asking for prosperity or progress. They are begging - quite literally - for safety. For the right to go to school. To worship. To live.

*A Nation on Auto-Pilot*

Communities under siege are pleading for help. Local leaders like Chief Olusegun Olukotun of Eruku recount scrambling out of windows to escape gunfire. Families are receiving calls from the bush with ransom demands large enough to bankrupt whole villages. Security agencies admit they cannot yet determine how many children were taken from Papiri because chaos has become our new order.

The President - who should be leading from the front - is either aloof, absent, or unmoved. And Nigerians are tired of mourning children, burying victims, fundraising ransoms, and waiting for a Commander-in-Chief who acts only after public outrage forces him to acknowledge a tragedy.

*With Tinubu, It Will Only Get Worse*

This is not pessimism; it is pattern.

Under the Tinubu administration, terrorists have grown bolder, not weaker. Kidnappers operate more freely, not less. The security architecture, already broken, continues to decay. What Nigerians experience is not just insecurity - it is state incapacity, bordering on state collapse in several regions.

A government that cannot protect schools, churches, farms, highways, villages, and border communities is a government that has lost control.

*Enough Pretence*

We must stop pretending that the Nigerian state is functioning. We must stop pretending that “efforts are ongoing” is a strategy.
We must stop pretending that bandits will simply tire out and go away.

The President must immediately:

- Take direct, public, hands-on leadership of national security.

- Reorganize the security architecture based on competence, not patronage.

- Deploy technology, intelligence, and rapid-response capacity to vulnerable regions.

- Hold security chiefs accountable for measurable results.

- Declare a national emergency on mass abductions.

If President Tinubu cannot guarantee the safety of Nigerian children in their classrooms or Nigerians worshipping in their churches, then he must answer the question Nigerians are now whispering everywhere:
What exactly is he governing?

Because today, for many communities across the country, the Nigerian government might as well not exist.

17/11/2025

…Claims police lobby for posting to region Stephen Ukandu, Umuahia The Executive Director of Rule of Law and Accountability and Advocacy Centre (RULAAC), Mr. Okechukwu Nwanguma, has decried the proliferation of security checkpoints across South-East roads, describing the region as “a cocoa farm ...

17/11/2025

RULAAC Condemns FCT Policemen Who Stormed Man's House In Lagos, Whisked Him Away Despite Restraining Court Order

07/11/2025

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No. 7, Alhaji Afoke Street, Off 31 Road, Gowon Estate, Egbeda, Lagos
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