From Lifesaver to Lawbreaker: Ndola Clinical Officer Faces Justice After Violent Outburstš¤š³š©
The spectacle that stunned bystanders along the NdolaāKitwe Road has ended not with applause, but with iron bars. A clinical officer entrusted with preserving life cast aside his oath in a moment of reckless violence, transforming from healer to aggressor in a display that disgraced both his profession and the law.
Emmanuel Njovu, 32, a clinical officer at Ndola Teaching Hospital, now finds himself detained after an incident that has ignited public outrage. Instead of embodying restraint and professionalism, he responded to a routine traffic stop with fists and bootsāan eruption of aggression that starkly contradicted the discipline expected of a medical practitioner
Police reports indicate that the confrontation began when traffic officer George Ilyamupu, 31, lawfully stopped a Toyota Ractis near Lake Petroleum for failing to comply with traffic regulations, only a short distance from Hillcrest Police Post. What should have been a routine enforcement of the law rapidly devolved into an assault.
Witness accounts describe a disturbing transformation: a clinician claiming urgency for ālife-saving dutiesā yet finding ample time to unleash physical force upon a public servant simply executing his mandate. Repeated instructions to comply were met not with cooperation, but defiance. The officerās efforts to guide the suspect to the police post were reportedly answered with blows severe enough to leave him in visible distress.
Members of the public were compelled to intervene, pulling the injured officer from the assault while others recorded the unfolding violenceāfootage that has since spread widely, capturing a moment of professional betrayal that many have condemned as both shameful and indefensible.
Authorities have charged Njovu with assaulting a police officer under Section 250(c) of the Penal Code. His actions now stand as a stark reminder that professional titles do not excuse lawlessnessāand that those entrusted with care bear an even greater responsibility to uphold restraint, dignity, and respect for the rule of law.
Source: Kalemba

āPolice reports indicate that the confrontation began when traffic officer George Ilyamupu, 31, lawfully stopped a Toyota Ractis near Lake Petroleum for failing to comply with traffic regulations, only a short distance from Hillcrest Police Post. What should have been a routine enforcement of the law rapidly devolved into an assault.ā
Was this one of the cited Roadblocks in the circular and directive issued last week? If not its not legal as no5 subsequent directive was issued and as such the public are unaware.
True its a crime to assult an officer in uniform. But traffic officers too abuse their status in the manner the deal with the public. And I speak from such an experience. They dont know nor understand some of the laws they seek to enforce.
The Inspector and The Minister of Home Affairs need to look closely at Traffic officers in general and their conduct. An army officer is serving time for a similar offence after conviction. The occurrances of officers being assulted is too numerous and sometimes not reported. Why are they being assulted.
Please look closely into this issue.
Yes an offence has been committed. however, check for the underlying factors that led to the violence , too.
so unfortunate.
Struck off for bringing the profession into disrepute.
Traffic police are generally a nuisance. They behave more like predators than law enforcement officers. The corruption that is synonymous with the traffic department is beyond question. These officers are not after the wellbeing of the road user but rather want to line their pockets with illicit cash and will go to any extent to squeeze money out of the hapless motorist.
I recall an incident when a I was stopped at a speed trap and the officer insisted I was over the speed limit of 100Km/hr. Fortunately, when I overtook a truck on a dual carriage way going uphill, I noted the speedometer was at about 80 Km/hr. The traffic cop pulled me to the side. I asked him to show me the camera evidence so that I can verify that my speedometer was faulty. He told me that he was busy and when I insisted, he threatened that he would be harsh with me if I insisted he leave his work station to show me the evidence.
To cut a long story short, he had no choice but to let me go because I wasnāt overspending. What was of concern to me was that a police officer would LIE that I had committed an offence just to squeeze some money out of me. The question is how often does this happen? Such incidents are actually quite common.
The Clinical Officer has a Temper..
If the Police Officer pushes this case , the Clinical Officer will be in a world of Sh*t.
He will not only lose employment, but can find himself in Jail.
I suspect there was a woman passenger in his vehicle.. Some men lose it when with a woman.