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TheInvestigatorTheInvestigator
Breaking News , Cross River
October 8, 2025
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Tinted Glass Permit: Police Still Harassing, Impounding Vehicles In Calabar 

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“The officer was still insisting that I go and get a permit for my vehicle glasses from the police and that the cost is N30,000,” he added.

By TheInvestigator 

Police in Calabar, the capital of Cross River, continue to harass drivers and impound vehicles under the guise of enforcing a tinted glass permit, despite an interim injunction preventing them from doing so.

Journalists in Calabar went out on Wednesday and discovered that a team of policemen and traffic warders had mounted a post in front of the popular Akim Police Station. The officers who were vigorously requesting tinted glass permits and even impounding vehicles without tinted glass were approximately 15 in number.

One of the victims, Mr John Osakwe, a journalist in the state who narrated his ordeal with the policemen, said he was driving from the stadium axis towards the police station and was asked to park.

“I parked and brought out my papers because they are all complete, but one of the officers came close, looked at my vehicle, and said the front glass is different from the back glass and asked for a permit.

“I asked him which permit, and he said a permit for using a factory-fitted tinted glass, and I told him my vehicle glass is not tinted.

“The officer who opened my car door and snatched the key from the ignition said they have been ordered from above to impound vehicles whose front glass looks different from the back glass,” he said.

Osakwe said as he continued to ask him his rationale for harassing him when his vehicle’s glasses were not even tinted. The officer said there were two types of tinted glasses: the dark one that prevents you from seeing inside the vehicle, and the ones that are not so dark.

He said, although they could see inside my vehicle, the policeman said the glass was a little dark, while the other officers came together to shout at me that the journalists who should know the law on the issue are feigning ignorance.

“When I called DSP Irene Ugbo, the Police Public Relations Officer (PPRO), her response was that we should try to get our documents complete and she asked me to hand over the phone to the officer. After a few seconds of discussion, my car key was handed back to me.

“The officer was still insisting that I go and get a permit for my vehicle glasses from the police and that the cost is N30,000,” he added.

Another resident, Mr Edem Udofia, who spoke to journalists, said his vehicle was impounded and driven into the police station because they said the glass of his bus was dark, even though the vehicle came that way.

 

“I have not gone in yet, I am still trying to see who I can call to help me in the matter, my family depends on that bus, if I don’t get it out today, it means there will be no food,” he said.

 

Speaking on the matter, Mba Ukweni, a Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN) said nothing gives the police the authority to impound vehicles on account of the glass being a little dark or tinted if nothing is incriminating in the vehicle and the papers are intact.

“The court has restrained the police from impounding vehicles or harassing drivers on account of tinted glasses; the police can’t do otherwise, they have to comply with the court order.

It would be recalled that a Federal High Court sitting in Warri had earlier issued an interim injunction restraining the police from implementing or enforcing the recently announced tinted glass permit policy slated to commence on Monday, October 6.

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TAGS: #cross river state#Extortion#Police#tinted glass permit
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