A Nigerian lawyer and activist, Ayo Sogunro, has recounted how he slept in a police cell in Abuja after a married female friend visited him in his hotel room.
In a lengthy thread on Twitter on Wednesday, Sogunro stated that he arrived in Abuja for a human rights meeting last Friday and reached out to some of his friends to inform them of his presence.
A female married friend (name withheld) was his first visitor at the hotel and shortly after she arrived, the police arrived at his room.
He partly tweeted, “Of the people I texted, she was the first to get to my place. I had checked into the hotel around 6: 20 pm and she got there around 6:40 pm. Barely 15 minutes later, three police officers came to my door.
“When the police arrived at my door, they asked to be let inside.
“I denied them entrance and told them they had no authority to enter a private space without a warrant or a clear just cause. Instead, they just pushed me aside and made their way in.
“On seeing my friend, they asked her to come with them. We both asked why. The police replied that because my friend was a married woman, she should not have been in the hotel with me.”
After several arguments with the police, the activist and the female friend followed the police to the station.
The Divisional Police Officer at the station explained that they were in Northern Nigeria which is under the Penal Code, and it was suspicious for a married woman to visit a man, adding that the police officers were right to invade his room without a warrant.
After a long discussion with the DPO, he was taken to a cell where he spent the night.
“The night behind bars was philosophical. Later, I was more amused than angry. The idea of coming to do a human rights event in Nigeria only to end up in a cell was a hilarious and tragic testament to the Nigerian condition,” Sogunro said.