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ECOWAS May Be Financially Broke (See Addendum)
The Economic
Community of West African States (ECOWAS) Community Court of Justice has
adjourned sine die (indefinitely) judgment in the case of former National
Security Adviser (NSA), Col. Sambo Dasuki (rtd) against the Federal Government
in which he challenged his unlawful detention by government since December 2015
in the custody of the Department of the State Security Service (DSS).
The court,
presided over by Justice Friday Nwoke had on May 16 reserved judgment till
today after taking final argument from Dasuki’s lawyer Mr. Robert Emukperuo and
government lawyer Mr. Tijani Gazali.
However,
journalists, lawyers and other observers who stormed the regional court in
Abuja today were taken aback when they were told that the much awaited verdict
of the court was not ready and that the new date for the judgment would be
communicated to lawyers when ready.
At the court
entrance, journalists, lawyers and observers were turned back by about twelve
security men who told them that the court management had mandated them to tell
everybody that judgment was not ready, prompting the people to leave one after
the other when the reality dawned on them that the court will not sit after
all.
Dasuki had
dragged the Federal Government before the ECOWAS Court praying the regional
court to intervene in his detention without trial since December last year.
The ex-NSA
asked the court to void the detention, the seizure of his properties and to bar
government from further detaining him without a lawful court order.
In the court
action instituted by his counsel Mr. Robert Emukpoeruo, Dasuki asked the court
to award in his favor a sum of N500 million as compensatory damages for his
alleged unlawful invasion of his house, detention, seizure of properties and
infringement on his rights.
He claimed
that government had put him on trial in three different high courts on
corruption charges where he was granted bail and that after his bail, he was
re-arrested on December 29, 2015 and has since been held incommunicado without
lawful court order.
Dasuki told
the ECOWAS Community Court of Justice that the federal government has no legal
or moral justification for his continued incarceration since December last
year.
The ex-NSA
who argued through his counsel, while making his final address predicated his
stance on Sections 293-296 of the Administration of Criminal Justice Act ACJA
2015 which outlines the procedure for keeping a suspect in detention for not
more than two weeks.
"To
accentuate the illegality of the arrest and detention of the applicant, the
ACJA 2015, S.293 to 296 thereof, set out the procedure for the detention of any
person pending trial or investigation. And in summary, that procedure requires
judicial intervention by a magistrate for it to be carried out and the maximum
detention time-frame is two weeks", he submitted.
Emukperuo
had earlier filed an application to amend the originating application by
including additional reliefs, a request the court granted, ordering the
defendant to respond, if any, within 15 days to the issues raised in the
amendment.
He prayed
the court to order the release of his client and as well order the government
to pay N500 million as compensation to Dasuki.
He recalled
how several courts had granted Dasuki bail and how President Muhammadu Buhari
had stated in a media chat that the ex-NSA cannot just be released.
He said his
client's arrest and detention by the defendant is without any legal
justification because it was not backed with any court order.
"The
critical issue that needs to be resolved is whether there is any legal
justification for the detention of the applicant by the defendant", he
said, adding that the only justification in the amended statement of defence
adduced by the defendant for detaining the applicant is the recourse to
national security.
"They
have not adduced before this court any judicial procedure that they have relied
on in incarcerating the applicant.
"They
have equally not relayed to the court any domestic legislation whatsoever to
justify the detention of the applicant.
"My
lord I submit that this is a classic case of arbitrary and illegal
arrest", he added.
The counsel
further submitted that the government has defied all known legal instruments or
legislation by not following its own laws.
He said
apart from its complete disdain for the laws of the land, government has also
not followed judicial orders given by courts of competent jurisdiction.
Emukperuo
said on the issue of being in possession of arms, Dasuki was granted bail on
self-recognition and the Ministry of Justice did not oppose the application for
bail, wondering why they had to still keep him in detention having not opposed
the bail application if they knew he was a security risk.
"It is
a spurious defence conceived in bad faith, and I urge the court to dismiss
it", he pleaded.
But the
Federal Government through its counsel, Mr. Tijani Gazali, had argued a
preliminary objection against Dasuki on the ground that he ought to have filed
a contempt charge against the government for alleged disobedience to court
order on the bail granted him but the ECOWAS Court ruled that the case of the
plaintiff was on his fundamental rights and has nothing to do with the domestic
court.
By PRNigeria
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