The police have named two officers allegedly killed on Monday by suspected members of the Indigenous People of Biafra.
The police said the officers, Joseph Akubo and Oliver Abbey, were killed during a raid on the Anambra home of Ifeanyi Ejiofor, the lawyer representing the IPOB leader, Nnamdi Kanu.
A police spokesperson said Mr Akubo, an assistant superintendent, was attached to the special anti-robbery squad. Mr Abbey, an assistant commissioner, was the area commander in charge of Oraifite.
The outlawed IPOB denied the allegation and accused the police of killing two of its members and destroying Mr Ejiofor’s home.
Newsmen reported earlier how at least four persons including two police officers were killed on Monday in Oraifite, Anambra State.
Meanwhile, the apex Igbo sociocultural organisation, Ohanaeze Ndigbo, has condemned the torching of Mr Ejiofor’s home.
The president-general of the organisation, John Nwodo, on Tuesday called for a judicial inquiry into the “unprovoked attack on a law-abiding citizen of the country whose only crime is that he peacefully objects to the maltreatment of his people”.
The police claimed Mr Ejiofor refused invitations over a petition alleging he was involved in “abduction, assault occasioning harm and malicious damage to property”.
Since the incident, Mr Ejiofor’s whereabouts remained unknown. The police on Tuesday declared him wanted.
Mr Nwodo, in the statement issued on his behalf by by his media adviser, Emeka Attamah, described the accusations leveled by the police against Mr Ejiofor as “spurious.”
“Assuming without conceding that Barrister Ejiofor was culpable on a charge of abduction, the only option in law available to the police is arrest and prosecute him under the laws of Nigeria and not deliberate arson and wanton destruction of his family home,” he said.