“I asked 'why'? He said he was a
police officer. He then asked me to show him my ID card. I did; he then asked
why I was looking like a girl in my ID card? I explained that I have had the ID
card for a while now. He then asked me to enter a bus as he claimed that I'm a
gay.”
Tosin Olakunle, a makeup artist, has
spoken up on how he had to bail himself out with N2,000 after he was arrested
by the Police on Monday for “being too slim and having a girl’s face”.
Olakunle, who goes by the name ‘Highdtosin’ on social media, is demanding
justice over his ordeal in the hands of the law enforcement officers.
Recounting the experience to Sahara
reporters, he said: “I was on my way to Ogudu on Monday 28th May, 2018 to style
a client. I alighted from a LAMATA bus at Ojota, but while I was walking to
take the next bus, I was stopped by a guy who asked me to introduce myself to
him.
“I asked 'why'? He said he was a
police officer. He then asked me to show him my ID card. I did; he then asked
why I was looking like a girl in my ID card? I explained that I have had
the ID card for a while now. He then asked me to enter a bus as he claimed that
I'm a gay.”
“I gave them my phone, my iPad to go
through to see if he can find anything incriminating there. I told him that I'm
a hairstylist, I don't have make up on, I don't have tattoos and piercing. But
he yelled at me.”
The hairstylist said that he was taken
from Ojota to Iwaya Police Station where he was detained in a cell with other
guys who were arrested between 9 am and 4 pm.
When he asked about the reason for
his arrest, he said the police officer told him: “You are too slim; you look
like gay.”
The stylist added that while all
those arrested by the police bribed their way to freedom, he could not push for
his bail, as all the cash he had on him was his transport fare.
“I had to call and transfer money to
someone who then came to pay N2, 000 at the station for my bail. They said I'm
a witch and deranged. I kept wondering what I did to have been arrested,” he
continued.
“I didn't argue with them, so that
they won't hit me like they did to other people. I was locked up by 9 am and
was released by 4 pm. I missed my client, ” he said.
When asked to give descriptions of
the policemen who manhandled him, the hairstylist said: “They were not wearing
proper uniform, but I remembered one of the guys there calling one of them
Sunday.”
Efforts to get the police perspective
of the incident proved futile.
SaharaReporters visited the police
station at Iwaya, but the officer who handled the enquiries said she was not on
duty on the day of the arrest.
When asked to check the record of
detainees, the officer declined, insisting that the reporter should check back
on Monday when the officers who were on duty at the time of the incident would
be at the station.
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