Church members arrested during service for noise pollution
38047
The
 police in Lagos have arrested six persons for allegedly disturbing the 
peace of residents of Olaomibiyi Street, Ogba, during a church service.
The members – Ngozichukwu Onyebuchi 
(44), Clement Eromosele (26), Chukwudi Akwegbu (26), Chibuzor Chukwu 
(18), Godspower Enudi (21) and Okorie Livonus (36) – were arraigned in a
 Lagos Magistrate’s Court sitting in Ogba.
They were accused of converting a residential apartment to a church.
PUNCH Metro learnt that the 
landlord and residents of the building where the defendants gathered to 
worship had complained that the congregation caused noise pollution 
whenever they prayed.
They were said to have cautioned the worshippers to lower their voices, but the members reportedly declined.
Our correspondent gathered that the 
church was reported to the police at the Pen Cinema division, who 
arrested the six members on January 14 during Sunday service, while the 
others were said to be at large.
They were brought before a Chief 
Magistrate, Mrs. T. Akanni, on two counts of engaging in a conduct 
capable of causing a breach of the peace.
The offence, according to a police 
prosecutor, Inspector Clifford Ogu, is punishable under sections 410 and
 166 (1) (d) of the Criminal Law of Lagos State, Nigeria, 2011.
The charges read, “That you, Ngozichukwu
 Onyebuchi, Clement Eromosele, Chukwudi Akwegbu, Chibuzor Chukwu, 
Godspower Enudi and Okorie Livonus, and others still at large on 
Olaomibiyi Street, Ogba, Lagos, on January 14, 2016, at about 8am in the
 Lagos Magisterial District, did conspire to commit felony to wit: 
conduct likely to cause a breach of the peace.
“That you and others still at large on 
the same date, time and place, in the aforementioned magisterial 
district, did unlawfully convert the residential apartment of the 
aforementioned house to a church and disturb peace of the landlord and 
other tenants as you were praying on top of your voice, thereby 
committing an offence punishable under Section 166 (1) (d) of the 
Criminal Law of Lagos State, Nigeria, 2011.”
The accused, however, pleaded not guilty to the charges and elected summary trial.
The presiding magistrate, Akanni, 
admitted them to bail in the sum of N50,000 each with two sureties each 
in like sum. The magistrate added that the sureties must provide 
evidence of tax payments and their residential addresses to the court 
for the perfection of the defendants’ bail.
The case was adjourned till February 15, 2016, for mention

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