Nigeria's police told to share bribes with superiors
New York, 18 Aug-(ANA)-Corruption in Nigeria's police has become institutionalised and junior officers are expected to share bribes, US-based Human Rights Watch says.
Their report describes a system of "paying returns" when officers are expected to pay up the chain of command a share of extortion money.
It says officers have to pay bribes within the force to get posts and are expected to meet monetary targets.
A police spokesman said the study had "largely embellished innuendoes".
"The Nigeria Police Force has come a long way from its colonial era of oppression and has survived many years of neglect and under-funding," Emmanuel Ojukwu said in a statement.
Motorists at checkpoints, traders, businessmen, sex workers and those under arrest are extremely likely to encounter threats and demands for money.
There are also numerous cases of shootings and deaths at checkpoints when civilians refuse to pay, correspondents say.
The Human Rights Watch says often victims of crime unable to pay will not get justice.
Meanwhile, wealthy criminals are able to bribe officers to drop a case or influence an investigation.
Police interviewed by Human Rights Watch, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said they were given no budget to carry out their duties.
The report accuses senior police officers and government ministers of failing to tackle deep and entrenched police abuses.
Correspondents say successive governments have in the past admitted the scale of police corruption - but few recommendations by official investigations and reform groups have been heeded. (ANA)