Why are the 4 cops charged with attempted murder still on duty?
News that matter in Papua New Guinea
Why are the 4 cops
charged with attempted murder still on duty?
PORT MORESBY: The two 21-year-old victims of police
brutality have returned home to recover from their injuries but they have
alleged the four cops charged with attempted murder are still on duty.
Senior Constable
Benjamin Naraboi asked why the four were still on duty when Internal
Investigations Unit director Chief Supt Emil Alpha reportedly said disciplinary
charges had been laid against the accused and that they were officially
suspended from duties.
The news update was published by The National:
Cops still free, dad
claims
March 24, 2022The
NationalMain Stories
POLICE commanders and supervisors must be
responsible for their officers’ actions, a senior constable says.
While son Samuel, 21, was recovering well at home, Senior Constable Benjamin
Naraboi was questioning why the four policemen who were charged with attempted
murder on his son, were still on duty, according to eyewitnesses.
Naraboi told The National, such actions by the four should not have
been taken lightly by their commanders and supervisors.
“Administrative actions should have been taken on the four by their commanders
and supervisors,” he said.
As a police officer, who had served in the force for nearly 27 years, he
understood that officers who were charged with murder, could not walk freely,
unless they were cleared by the courts.
The National understood that although both Samuel and William Michael had been
discharged from the hospital and were now recovering from home, the injuries
sustained during the incident would take some time to heal.
From both their mothers, Samuel was without part of his skull and William whose
X-ray results showed a broken jaw bone that would take up to eight weeks for
the braces inserted by doctors from the University of Papua New Guinea’s
medical faculty dental clinic to be removed.
“He gets dizzy from time-to-time and we have been very careful with his diet,”
Samuel’s mother Regina Naraboi said.
“We want him to regain his strength before his next surgery.”
William’s mother Judy Michael told The National, although
doctors had advised her son to remain at home until he had fully recovered, he
still wanted to attend classes at the university.
“He withdrew from studies last year when his father passed away and is now
determined to go back and finish his studies,” she said.
Both boys were on medication, according to their parents, but they would still
go for their medical reviews on the dates set by their doctors. Apart from
recovering, both families were still assisting police who were conducting
investigations on the case.
Chief Inspector of police Charles Winuan and his team who were working on
collecting more facts and evidence on the case, told The National that
investigations would continue until all those who had been involved were
identified and charged. “Once the medical reports of both boys are out, it would
confirm all the grievous bodily harm on the boys,” Winuan said.
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