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Nigeria Police at a Crossroad: The Extra Judicial Murder of Mene Ogidi

EFFURUN, DELTA STATE — The image is now seared into the digital memory of a nation: a 28-year-old man, wrists bound in cold steel, kneeling on the dusty ground of the Warri-Sapele Expressway. He isn’t fighting. He isn’t running. He is cowering in fear as he begs fo his life.

Mene Ogidi was offering the only currency he had left which is information, in exchange for his life. Moments later, that life was extinguished by a single, point-blank shot.

The killer? Not a rival gang member or a panicked vigilante, but Assistant Superintendent of Police (ASP) Nuhu Usman, the very man sworn to uphold the law and protect the citizens of Nigeria.

The Incident: From “Textbook Success” to Extrajudicial Execution

The tragedy began on April 26, 2026, at the bustling Benin Motor Park. Acting on a tip-front transport union members regarding a suspicious package containing a Beretta pistol and ammunition, operatives from the Effurun Area Command moved in.

By all accounts, the initial operation was a success. Ogidi was apprehended, the contraband was seized, and the suspect was neutralized. He was “subdued and processed,” according to legal standards. Under the Nigerian Police Force (NPF) manual, the next step should have been an interrogation room and a court of law.

Instead, a viral video which is shaky, raw, and undeniable, captures the horrific detour from justice:

  • The Plea: Ogidi is seen pleading with officers, offering to lead them to the “higher-ups” who sent him to collect the weapon.
  • The Cooperation: He was not a threat; he was a witness willing to dismantle a criminal network.
  • The Execution: ASP Nuhu Usman, the team leader, ignored the tactical value of a living witness and the moral weight of a surrendering man. He pulled the trigger to snuff off the life of a helpless hapless citizen that was already tied up and subdued.

A Nation Ignited: The Digital Reckoning

The video did not just “circulate”; it exploded. Traversing WhatsApp, X (formerly Twitter), and Instagram, the footage hit a nerve in a country still scarred by the memories of the #EndSARS movement.

“What we witnessed was murder committed in broad daylight by a man wearing a police uniform against a man wearing handcuffs,” echoed the sentiment across Nigerian social media.

The outrage was so visceral that the Delta State Police Command was forced into an uncharacteristically swift admission of guilt. SP Bright Edafe, the State PPRO, pulled no punches, labeling the act a “clear violation of police regulations.”

Accountability or Performance?

The fallout has been immediate:

  1. Arrests Made: ASP Nuhu Usman is currently in custody.
  2. Federal Intervention: The Inspector-General of Police (IGP) has ordered the entire team transferred to Abuja for investigation and prosecution.
  3. Collective Responsibility: The IGP’s directive suggests that the officers who stood by and watched the execution are just as liable as the man who pulled the trigger.
Status of the CaseDetails
Primary SuspectASP Nuhu Usman (Arrested, Dismissed from Police and awaiting prosecution)
Location of TrialAbuja (Federal Transfer)
ChargeExtrajudicial Killing / Violation of Rules of Engagement

The Cruelest Discovery

Perhaps the most haunting element of this tragedy is how the Ogidi family found out. Having reported Mene missing, they spent days in an agonizing limbo. There was no official call from the police, no formal notification that their son had been “neutralized.”

They discovered he was dead the same way millions of strangers did: scrolling through a social media feed. They watched their loved one beg for his life and die on a smartphone screen, a violation of human dignity that transcends the shooting itself.

The Bottom Line

Nigeria stands at a familiar, painful crossroads. The evidence is incontrovertible; the “fog of war” excuse does not apply to a man in handcuffs. The question remains: Will the Nigerian judicial system bridge the gap between an arrest and a conviction?

The world is watching Effurun. The ghost of Mene Ogidi, and the millions of Nigerians who have seen “Blood on Handcuffs,” are waiting for more than just a press release. They are waiting for justice.


For more breaking news and in-depth analysis on justice and human rights, visit www.abtnews.net.

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