Insights into how the campaign office of Vice President Atiku
Abubakar at Asokoro, Abuja was raided by agents of the State
Security Service (SSS) on Tuesday have emerged.
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Atiku
Photo By: Sun News Publishing |
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Details of the invasion, in which an American intern working
in the office was seized and detained for about 12 hours came
as the SSS spokesman, Ado Muazu, claimed that the action was
in response to an alert by a neighbour, who allegedly noticed
that an unidentified foreigner lived in the neighbourhood
and that he went out discreetly.
The security outfit reportedly claimed not to have known that
it was an office linked with the vice president.
The Atiku camp however, described the claims as "laughable,"
in view of the fact that there were three embassies around
the office.
"Asokoro streets are full of Asians and Europeans walking
to their offices, homes or strolling their dogs," a source
pointed out, stressing that: "because Dr (Usman) Bugaje,
is the chairman (House of Representatives) Committee on Foreign
Affairs (and Atiku’s pointsman) it is to be expected
that foreigners are to be seen going in and out of any building
he uses as an office."
Eye-witness account said the team of the SSS officers, eight
in number, struck the National Development Project (NDP) building
housing the office located in 5, Queen Idiah Street, Asokoro
in two white Boxer Peugeot mini vans at about 6.00a.m.
An eyewitness revealed: "Some held their arms while others
left their coats open to display their’s. Each wore
a bullet-proof vest. One van patrolled the Upabi Asika Street,
adjacent to Queen Idah, while the second positioned itself
at the Ukpabi Asika Street gate of N.D.P. demanding right
of entry. They knocked on the main gate and the guard on night-shift,
simply identified as Usman, came out using the small gate.
He refused them entry but they showed him SSS identity cards
and their guns, insisting that they were on duty. He relented
and opened the gate for their van to come in.
"They consequently demanded to see all the gatemen and
any other person, in particular the whiteman. After assembling
the other gateman and two others on the premises and confiscating
their handsets, the operatives were told that no-one goes
to the boys quarters where the whiteman lives except Mathew,
the cook, who also lives there.
"But on their insistent one of the staff accompanied
one of the SSS men to wake Mathew up. When the latter came
out of his room, he, at first, tried to escape by scaling
the wall (assuming the men were armed robbers), failing which
he was brought to the car park where the rest of the staff
were assembled. His refusal to lead them to the whiteman’s
room earned him a kick and a slap from the operatives. Then
he changed tact and agreed to lead them to the room.
The eyewitness further disclosed: "At gun-point, four
of the operatives, with a toolbag in tow marched the staff
to Rehan L. Iftikhara’s room, the U.S citizen and an
ICT intern, who came under the Global Internship International
Programme, University of Califonia, Santa Cruz, USA, to train
civil society staff). When he opened the door, they burst
in, ushering the rest of the staff into the room. They showed
him a search warrant and demanded to see his passport, saying
they were investigating suspicious activities. They made a
thorough search of the room, behind doors, ceiling, under
the bed and a detailed search of all his bags. They made a
list of things they wanted to take away, including a laptop
and other computer disks and accessories. At this point, the
team and Rehan had their first disagreement over the vague
terms they were using to describe the items. He insisted on
proper designations and descriptions.
"After collecting items to take with them, they moved
everyone back to the main office, heading for Rehan, ground
floor office. It was empty, save for a second laptop. They
grabbed papers on table in the opposite cubicle and also grabbed
another equipment in yet another cubicle, at which point a
battery unit fell down and broke. They also disconnected the
power cords of the monitor and hard disk on the receptionist,
computer and added it to the confiscated list.
"Next, the operatives demanded to see the office of Dr
Usman Bugaje, the coordinator of the office and a member of
the House of Representatives, but none of the staff had the
keys. Nevertheless, they took Usman, the guard, Mathew and
Rehan upstairs and used a battering ram to force open the
first electronically locked door and a special crow-bar and
other burglary tools in their toolkit to open the electronically
controlled second door, damaging the security camera on the
door.
"Upon entry, it was a frenzy of grabbing all contents
of the desk, drawers and some items from the side cabinets.
All items taken from the project coordinator’s office
were lumped together as documents from Dr Bugaje office on
the confiscated list. They asked Rehan to sign, but here he
strongly protested that he had no idea of what they took from
Dr Bugaje and could not sign such a vague description. After
insisting that he should not meddle into government business,
being a foreigner and similar other threats, he signed in
the presence of Mathew. "At that point, they loaded the
items into their vans and departed with Rehan too. At 7a.m,
in Yellow House the SSS house, Rehan was dropped in an office
and apparently forgotten. With nobody saying anything to him,
he became fidgety by noon and persistently demanded to know
his formal, specific charges. He was continually denied. He
was ejected into another office.
"Meanwhile, as soon as the SSS team left, the efforts
began to reach the project coordinator, Dr Bugaje and Rabiu,
the office manager, civil society groups and the U.S Embassy
as well as get a lawyer to try to get back the intern from
his abductors. About 1p.m, Chinedu, a lawyer from the Constitutional
Rights Project (CRP) led a team to the SSS headquarters. After
preliminary enquiries, those at the gate initially denied
that a whiteman was being held there. The team went back to
CRP to enable Chinedu draft and print such a letter. They
returned to submit the letter and were kept waiting for almost
two hours after which Chinedu demanded to be taken to director,
operations of SSS.
After some delay, he was asked to go in, alone."
The eyewitness said that about this time Rehan had been moved
to a third office, still without anyone telling him why he
was arrested and detained. He said: "Without a mouth
wash, breakfast or simple explanation since dawn he spoke
to the man in the office, demanding that if only they asked
him questions maybe they may get answers that they sought.
The office at that point obliged and explained that they were
security officers who investigate reports. One report had
mentioned Rehan as a possible spy or agent of a foreign government.
However, the more Rehan opened up, explaining what he was
doing, the more they wanted to know everyone he knew or had
met and everything he said or did with them. He then wrote
a sixpage personal statement. He made it clear he had nothing
to do with politics, after detailing the database container
he was constructing for NDP, to be used at a future date.
The American refused to be drawn into who owned or funded
NDP. The SSS wanted to know:
•Why he was not being paid money?
•Who Professor Lubeck (his supervisor visiting Abuja
by co-incidence on a project to audit good governance in Nigeria)
was, that he kept phoning?
•Why was his visa extended?
•Why he changed his scheduled return to the US?
•Who he will be staying with in Kaduna and Kano? And
other such questions.
Daily Sun learnt that after asking Rehan
to retell the story a number of times probably to detect inconsistency,
the SSS operatives seemed satisfied. The officers, well after
4pm, told him that the US embassy and a lawyer had been asking
after him and that he would soon be allowed to go. He was
asked if he wanted water or was hungry?
It was gathered that by then Chinedu, the lawyer, had been
assured by the director, operations that it was just a routine
questioning and enquiry which had been completed. About the
same time, the US embassy team of three who had arrived earlier,
went inside the building, saw some people and left, having
been assured, like Chinedu, that Rehan would be released.
The American, Daily Sun gathered, was released
at about 6p.m. Rabiu, the office manager, was called in and
asked to bring the car to the SSS building to pick up the
confiscated items and Rehan. Back at NDP, Rehan was debriefed.
The office confirmed that everything removed had been returned.
"It would however, take a while to ascertain if all the
documents contained in the files that that were removed had
been returned," the eyewitness said.