Nnamdi Kanu' s Ordeal: Human Rights Coalition writes EXPLOSIVE letter to UN Sec Gen, Vatican, US Embassy, British High Commission, Canadian and other embassies in Nigeria |
The Return Of State Terrorism In Nigeria: Continued Extra Judicial Detention Of Citizen Nnamdi Kanu As A Case-Study
1.
The United Nations
Secretary General
C/O
The UN Special
Representative in Nigeria
The UN House, 617/618
Diplomatic Zone
Central Business District,
Garki, Abuja, Nigeria
2.
The Apostolic Nuncio
(Pope’s Ambassador to Nigeria)
Vatican Apostolic
Nunciature in Nigeria
Pope John Paul Crescent,
Maitama
FCT, Abuja, Nigeria
3.
The United States
Ambassador to Nigeria
Embassy of the United
States, Plot 1075 Diplomatic Drive
Central District Area,
FCT, Abuja, Nigeria
4.
The Head, Delegation of
the European Union to Nigeria & ECOWAS
Europe House, 21st
Crescent, Off Constitution Avenue
Central Business District,
Garki, Abuja, Nigeria
5.
The British High
Commissioner to Nigeria
The British High
Commission, 11, Torrrens Street, Off Mississippi Street
Maitama, FCT, Abuja,
Nigeria
6.
The Ambassador of the
Federal Republic of Germany to Nigeria
Embassy of Germany, 9,
Lake Maracaibo Close
Maitama, FCT, Abuja,
Nigeria
7.
The Canadian High
Commissioner to Nigeria
The Canadian High
Commission
15, Bobo Street, Maitama, FCT, Abuja, Nigeria
8.
The Ambassador of the
Republic of France to Nigeria
The Embassy of France, 7,
Udi Hills Street
Off Aso Drive, Maitama,
FCT, Abuja, Nigeria
9.
The Brazilian Ambassador
to Nigeria
Brazilian Embassy, 324,
Diplomatic Drive
Central Business District,
Garki, FCT, Abuja, Nigeria
10.
The Japanese Ambassador to
Nigeria
Embassy of Japan, No. 9
Bobo Street
Off Gana Street, Maitama District
Abuja, FCT, Nigeria
11.
The Australian High
Commissioner to Nigeria
The Australian High
Commission, Fifth Floor, Auckland Center
48, Aguiyi Ironsi Street,
Maitama, FCT, Abuja, Nigeria
12.
The Indian High
Commissioner to Nigeria
The High Commission of India,
15, Rio Negro Close
Off Yedseram Street,
Maitama, FCT, Abuja, Nigeria
Your Excellencies,
The Return Of State Terrorism In Nigeria: Continued Extra
Judicial Detention Of Citizen Nnamdi Kanu As A Case-Study
(Onitsha Nigeria, 13th November 2015)- About us: International Society for Civil
Liberties & the Rule of Law is a leading nongovernmental rights
organization in Nigeria advocating for the
advancement of civil liberties & rule of law, democracy & good governance
and public security & safety. Intersociety was incorporated in
2008 in Nigeria and is based in Onitsha, Southeast Nigeria.
This letter of ours (Intersociety)
to Your Excellencies is also supported by the Coalition of Southeast (Nigeria)
based Human Rights Organizations, comprising the Anambra State Branch of Civil Liberties Organization (CLO), Center
for Human Rights & Peace Advocacy, Human Rights Club (a project of LRRDC),
Southeast Good Governance Forum, Forum for Equity, Justice & Defense of
Human Rights, Society Advocacy Watch Project, Anambra Human Rights Forum and
PADDI Foundation.
Background Information: Citizen Nnamdi Kanu is a
holder of Nigerian and British citizenship and resident of the United Kingdom.
He operates a UK based self determination mass communication outfit called Radio
Biafra London (RBL) and chairs a sister mass group called Indigenous
People of Biafra (IPOB); which membership cuts across the two oil rich
and politically strategic South-south and Southeast zones of Nigeria,
comprising eleven States of Rivers, Akwa Ibom, Bayelsa, Cross Rivers, Delta,
Edo, Anambra, Imo, Enugu, Abia and Ebonyi with estimated combined population of
over 60million people. The two geopolitical zones and their eleven States are
populated by Igbos, Ijaws, Ibibios, Urhobos, Itsekiris and other ethnic
nationalities.
IPOB has intimidating
followership running into millions; which cut across all the six geopolitical
zones of Nigeria and countries across the world including Your Excellencies’
countries. Nigeria, with over 250 ethnic nationalities dominated by Igbo,
Hausa-Fulani and Yoruba ethnic nationalities has steadily been gripped by
sustained triggers of a divided society such as ethnic
divisions, religious fundamentalism, political segregation and exclusion,
ethnocentrism, State terrorism, nepotism and favoritism, political and
administrative dominance, greed and corruption, abuse of office and disrespect
for human rights and rule of law.
The Nigeria’s hate
politics and violence has been age-long, leading to its bloody civil
war of 1967-1970 in which over two million citizens mostly citizens of
the old
Biafra (the agitating groups) were slaughtered. There are at least ten
major bloody ethno-religious disturbances that had hit the country from 1980
till date, leading to the death of tens of thousands of citizens of Southern Nigeria origin particularly Igbos
resident in the northern part of the country as well as destruction of their
properties worth tens of billions of naira.
The promotion, aiding and abetting of these unnatural
security threats and unsafe conditions by past and present federal
presidencies in Nigeria have resulted to entrenched structural imbalances, injustices
and violence; leading to increased agitation for right to self determination.
The agitation became pronounced immediately after Retired Major Gen Muhammadu
Buhari was sworn in as Nigeria’s sixth civilian President at the end of May
2015.
Nnamdi Kanu' s Ordeal: Human Rights Coalition writes EXPLOSIVE letter to UN Sec Gen, Vatican, US Embassy, British High Commission, Canadian and other embassies in Nigeria |
It also is very important
to inform Your Excellencies that the increase in agitation for right
to self determination under the present Buhari administration is not on
account of his ethnic background, but strictly because of his re-introduced
policies of political exclusion and segregation; leading to near-total
marginalization of the Southeast and South-south zones in most of his political
appointments and political office compositions. Other reasons for the increased
agitation for self determination include: promotion of policies of political
vendetta, ethno-political primordialism and excessive deployment and use of the
country’s secret police for State terrorism as well as gross disrespect for
human rights, rule of law and judicial pronouncements and independence.
The President’s divisive
policies are directly linked to his several negative public comments against
the people of the Southeast and the South-south zones who did not vote
massively for his party and candidacy in the March 2015 Presidential Poll. He
had severally been reported by local and foreign media to have vowed to run his
government (i.e. political appointments, political office composition,
infrastructural development and allocation of federal fiscal and material
resources) on account of percentage of votes received from each
geopolitical zone and we have severally cautioned him publicly too on
dangers inherent in conceiving and running such divisive government in a pluralistic and
multicultural society like Nigeria.
Citizen Nnamdi Kanu’s
ordeal in the hands of Government of Nigeria: He was arrested by the country’s
secret police called Department of State Security Service (DSS or
SSS) on 17th October 2015 at the Golden Tulip Essential
Hotel, Ikeja in Lagos State, Southwest Nigeria, hours after his arrival from
the UK and was taken to Abuja and detained at its dudgeon in the Federal
Capital Territory, North-central Nigeria. He was charged before the Abuja
Municipal Magistrate Court, located at Wuse Zone 11 on 19th October
2015. The criminal charges slammed on him are: Criminal Conspiracy, Managing
& Belonging to Unlawful Society and Criminal Intimidation contrary to
Sections 97, 97b and 397 of the Penal Code (applicable in Northern
Nigeria).
On account of the fact
that the charges preferred against him are within the jurisdiction of the
Magistrate Court and constitute bailable offenses, Citizen Kanu was
granted bail with hash conditions, which included a surety of Level 16 Civil Servant, who has a
landed property within Abuja metropolis in the sum of ten million naira. The
Magistrate Court further fixed 18th of November 2015 as trial
date and ordered that he should be kept in prison custody pending
fulfillment of his bail conditions. His bail conditions were judicially
fulfilled on 22nd October 2015.
But sadly, he has remained in the DSS captivity till date; a period of
22 days.
The trial Magistrate further
made four consequential orders (1 Bail, 2 Production of Citizen Nnamdi Kanu
before the Magistrate Court (twice), and 3 Transfer of Citizen Kanu to prison
custody) against the DSS, upon perusal of the bail conditions so
provided and satisfaction with same; and all the four court orders were flouted
with reckless abandon.
Position of Nigeria’s
Criminal Justice Administration: As Your Excellencies may know,
Nigeria’s criminal offenses are commonly defined and classified by three
sentencing categories involving simple offenses (maximum of six months jail
term), misdemeanor (maximum of three years jail term) and felonious offenses
(maximum of capital punishment). Magistrate Courts and their
equivalents are statutorily forbidden from trying criminal offenses involving
capital punishment and other higher sentencing (i.e. unlawful possession of
firearms, rape, manslaughter, terrorism, etc). These are strictly left in the
hands of Federal and State High Courts. Nigeria also operates a dual criminal
code of Penal Code (for northern Nigeria) and Criminal Code (for southern
Nigeria). Penal Code is a mixture of Islamic and orthodox criminal laws.
The two criminal codes are
operated alongside their procedural laws (formerly Criminal Procedural Act and
Criminal Procedural Code: now renamed Administration of Criminal Justice Act
2015). There are also various criminal laws of the States cut across the 36
States in the country. All of these criminal codes, laws and their procedures
are subject to the provisions of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of
Nigeria 1999. Also, by virtue of Section
315 of the country’s Constitution, the referenced criminal codes, laws and
procedures are made subsidiary laws to the 1999 Constitution.
Further, Section 1 (3) of
the1999 Constitution states: “if any other law is inconsistent with the
provisions of this Constitution, this Constitution shall prevail and that other
law shall to the extent of its inconsistency be void”. Section 1 (1) of
the same Constitution further states: “this Constitution is supreme and its
provisions shall have binding force on all authorities and persons throughout
the Federal Republic of Nigeria”. It is important to further recall
Your Excellencies that President Muhammadu Buhari had on 29th May
2015 sworn by the same Constitution to “abide by, uphold, protect and enforce its
provisions at all times”.
Nigeria’s International
Treaty Obligations: Nigeria is a leading member of the United Nations and the
African Union and had signed, ratified and domesticated (as case may be)
relevant and important international human rights and regional treaties
particularly those that have binding or legal force on all authorities
and persons. Among them are the International Covenant on Civil &
Political Rights (ICCPR) of 1976 (year of entry into force) and the
African Charter on Human & Peoples Rights (ACHPR) of 1981.
While Nigeria ratified the
ICCPR
in 1993, it had earlier in 1983 signed, ratified and domesticated the
African Charter on Human & Peoples Rights (ACHPR) (presently cited
as the African Charter on Human & Peoples Rights Ratification &
Enforcement Act of 2004).
The municipal
applicability and enforcement of the ACHPR had also been judicially
reviewed and certified by the Supreme Court of Nigeria in Abacha and Others v Fawehinmi (2001) AHRLR 172 (NgSC 2000),
which ruled that ACHPR is (domestically) justiciable
or enforceable, with its status higher than ordinary legislation, but lower
than the Constitution. This
followed its earlier domestication by the Second Republic National Assembly of
Nigeria in 1983 (in accordance with Section 12 of the present 1999
Constitution).
Use of DSS for State
Terrorism: The legal powers and duties of the DSS
are contained in Section 2 (3)(a)(b)(c) of the National Security
Agencies Act Cap 74, Laws of Nigeria 2004, to include: prevention and detection within
Nigeria of any crime against internal security of Nigeria, the
protection and preservation of all non-military classified matters concerning
the internal security of Nigeria; and such other responsibilities affecting the
internal security within Nigeria as the National Assembly or the President,
as case may be, may deem necessary.
In other words, the DSS was created with primary responsibility of
manning internal intelligence security of Nigeria and protection of VIPs. All
the powers and duties of the DSS as contained in the National Security Agencies
Act of 2004 are subject to the provisions of the 1999 Constitution and its Rule
of Law principles.
The DSS is also closest
to, and directly controlled by President Muhammadu Buhari. This is contained in
Section 3 (2) (a) of the Nigerian Security Agencies Act Cap 74, Laws of Nigeria
2004. The Service is one of the three successor-security intelligence agencies
of the moribund National Security Organization (NSO), which was extensively
deployed and used by Major Gen Muhammadu Buhari (as he then was in 1984 and
1985) to enforce his two infamous and draconian Decrees 2 of1984 (detention
of persons without trial) & 4(public officers protection against false
accusation) of 1984 leading to reported countless disappearances,
unlawful arrests, long custodial detentions, torture and unlawful killings
under his military regime. The remaining two intelligence organizations created
from moribund NSO are the National Intelligence Agency-NIA (for
external intelligence) and the Directorate of Military Intelligence-DMI (for
military intelligence).
It is therefore important
to inform Your Excellencies that the DSS has since June 2015 carried out at
least twelve State-terror invasions, arrests and detentions of Nigerian
leading citizens of politically and socially vocal backgrounds. The
circumstances and reasons for such invasions, arrests and detentions are
flimsy, politically vindictive and incoherent with the Fundamental Human Rights
provisions of the 1999 Constitution and its enshrined principles of the Rule of
Law. With just 163 days or barely six months in office of President Muhammadu
Buhari, the DSS has already run riot on not less than twelve leading citizens
in the country.
From Gordon Obua
(immediate past CSO to former President Goodluck Jonathan) to Sambo Dasuki
(immediate past NSA); from Rivers and Akwa Ibom States Resident Electoral
Commissioners and their six principal officers (arrested and detained while
defending their 2015 governorship poll results at electoral courts) to Hon
Justice Muazu Pindigi (chairman of the Rivers State Governorship Electoral
Court threatened by DSS and sacked by the Appeal Court President); and from
Sambo Dasuki (for the record second time) to Citizen Nnamdi Kanu, the list of
the DSS riotous conducts and operational brigandage in less than 180 days of
the Buhari’s Presidency has continued ceaselessly and uncontrollably.
Of all the coercive or
armed security establishments under the present Buhari’s administration, the
DSS is the most extensively used and deployed by the Presidency to perpetrate
and perpetuate all kinds of anti democratic and anti constitutional conducts;
otherwise called State terrorism.
Disobedience to Rule of
Law, Judicial Pronouncements & Human Rights Norms: The Buhari’s Presidency
in Nigeria is extensively using the DSS to pervert the course of justice
including flouting with reckless abandon, judicial pronouncements including
court orders. The constitutional rights of the Nigerian citizens to life,
dignity of human person, personal liberty, fair hearing, freedom of expression,
movement, peaceful assembly, association and freedom from discrimination have
been threatened and trampled upon by the Buhari administration using the DSS.
These rights are
judicially enshrined in Sections 33, 34, 35, 36, 39, 40, 41 and 42 of the
Fundamental Human Rights Charter of the 1999 Constitution of the Federal
Republic of Nigeria. Regionally and internationally, these rights are also
provided in the African Charter on Human & Peoples Rights (AU) and the
International Covenant on Civil & Political Rights (UN). By Article 1 of the ICCPR (UN), it is further
provided that: all peoples shall have the right of self-determination and by virtue
of that right they shall freely determine their political status and freely
pursue their economic, social and cultural development.
By Article 3 of the same ICCPR,
the States Parties to the present Covenant, including those having
responsibility for the administration of Non-Self-Governing and Trust
Territories, shall promote the realization of the right of self-determination,
and shall respect that right, in conformity with the provisions of the Charter
of the United Nations. By Article 20 of the ACHPR (AU), ratified and
domesticated by Nigeria, all peoples shall have right to existence
and they shall have unquestionable and inalienable right to self determination.
From the foregoing Your
Excellencies, it has been empirically established that Nigeria under Buhari’s
Presidency has observed in gross breach its constitutional, municipal, regional
and international human rights treaties’ obligations. We have also thoroughly
searched the 320 Sections of the 1999 Constitution of Nigeria and its
subsidiary laws and there is no provision where President Muhammadu Buhari
through his DSS is given power to continue to detain a citizen (Nnamdi Kanu),
who was charged to court by the same Buhari’s DSS with the same court at which
he was charged granting him bail based on “bailability” of criminal charges
preferred against him.
It is also unheard of in
the history of democracy and its constitutionalism in Nigeria that an
accused person with misdemeanor charges who was granted a judicial bail and
fulfilled all his bail conditions after three days has remained kept behind the
DSS bars for a period of 22 days. Also saddening is the reckless
flouting and rapacious disobedience by the DSS of four court orders (production
(twice), bail and transfer orders) made by the trial Magistrate between
October 23 and 28, 2015.
Our writing Your
Excellencies, therefore, is for Your Excellencies to take firm diplomatic,
political and bilateral/multilateral notice of continued detention of
Citizen Nnamdi Kanu in particular and the country’s steady drift into anarchy
and dictatorship in general.
In the past seven days,
mass protests involving millions of citizens of Nigeria including school
children, women and the elderly have gripped major cities of Awka, Onitsha,
Nnewi, Owerri, Umuahia, Okigwe, Enugu, Asaba, Uyo, Yanagoa, Port Harcourt,
Benin and Calabar in Southeast and South-south Nigeria as well as dozens of
foreign capital cities over the continued detention of Citizen Nnamdi Kanu. In
all these, President Muhammadu Buhari and his DSS have kept unholy sealed lips;
in reminiscence of State of terror during his military days
of 1984 and 1985.
Arresting and detaining
citizens outside judicial processes and pronouncements are the greatest threat
to democracy and rule of law in Nigeria and a clear return of State terrorism in
the country. This trend, if unchecked,
will not only lead to lawlessness, but will also compound the country’s fragile
contraption and further undermine and threaten its concocted and fragile Statehood.
The inability and unwillingness of the Buhari administration to frontally
address these landmines may most likely possess the capacity to undermine the
legitimacy of governmental powers and authority; which can be a recipe for
civil disobedience and collapse of traditional State power and legitimacy.
We, therefore, call on
Your Excellencies to bring Your Excellencies’ political, economic and
diplomatic influences, interests and pressures upon President Muhammadu
Buhari and his administration. He must be told in an unmistakable language to
release with immediate effect and unconditionally Citizen Nnamdi Kanu as well
as dropping all charges against him. President Buhari should also be advised to
drastically change his highly divisive governing styles above highlighted and
save the country from possible eruption into another round of civil
disturbances and violence of intractable proportions; propelled by his steady
promotion, aiding and abetting of triggers of social fragmentation and divided
society. When a State takes recourse
to reckless and naked application and use of State coercive power, its
traditional power and authority monopoly instantly becomes threatened and
endangered.
Yours Faithfully,
For: International Society for Civil Liberties & the Rule
of Law
Emeka Umeagbalasi, B.Sc. (Hons), Criminology & Security
Studies
Board Chairman
+2348174090052 (office)
Uzochukwu Oguejiofor-Nwonu, Esq., (LLB, BL), Head, Campaign
& Publicity Department
Obianuju Igboeli, Esq., (LLB, BL), Head, Civil Liberties
& Rule of Law Program
Mailing Address: 41, Miss Elems Street, Fegge, Onitsha,
Southeast, Nigeria
Supported By: Coalition of the Southeast based Human Rights
Organizations:
1. Comrade Aloysius Attah (+2348035090548)
For: Anambra State Branch of the Civil Liberties Organization
2. Comrade Peter Onyegiri (+2347036892777)
For: Center for Human Rights & Peace Advocacy
3. Comrade Samuel Njoku (+2348039444628)
For: Human Rights Club (a project of LRRDC)
4. Comrade Justus Uche Ijeoma(+2348037114869)
For: Forum for Justice, Equity & Defense of Human Rights
5. Comrade Chike Umeh ( +2348064869601)
For: Society Advocacy Watch Project
6. Obianuju Joy Igboeli, Esq. (+2348034186332)
For: Anambra Human Rights Forum
7. Comrade Alex Olisa(+2348034090410)
For: Southeast Good Governance Forum
8. Eze Eluchie, Esq. (+2348175177880)
For: PADDI Foundation
CC:
1. The Chairman of the Board of the National Human Rights
Commission, Abuja, Nigeria
2. Chief Justice of Nigeria, Supreme Court Headquarters,
Abuja, Nigeria
3. The National Security Adviser to the President, NSA
Office, Abuja, Nigeria
4. The Attorney General of the Federation & Minister for
Justice, AGF Office, Abuja, Nigeria
DEFINITELY NO AMOUNT OF INTIMIDATION WILL STOP US EVEN DEATH!!!
ReplyDeleteDefinitely no amount of intimidation will stop us even death!!! We are highly formidable and ready to die! Our Movement will turn into in-revisable full blown revolution from next week, State of emergency and military forces will never stop what is to come. You can release Nnamdi Kanu NOW!!! Or face a total collapse of this Country Nigeria (ZOO). We will not boost of our capacity in times of war! But we resolute for our sovereignty. Be warned!!! BIAFRA actualization is guaranteed! Anything short of that, Nigeria will turn to ashes. Our capability in term of war is unprecedented and unimaginable!!! Be Warned
DEFINITELY NO AMOUNT OF INTIMIDATION WILL STOP US EVEN DEATH!!!
ReplyDeleteDefinitely no amount of intimidation will stop us even death!!! We are highly formidable and ready to die! Our Movement will turn into in-revisable full blown revolution from next week, State of emergency and military forces will never stop what is to come. You can release Nnamdi Kanu NOW!!! Or face a total collapse of this Country Nigeria (ZOO). We will not boost of our capacity in times of war! But we resolute for our sovereignty. Be warned!!! BIAFRA actualization is guaranteed! Anything short of that, Nigeria will turn to ashes. Our capability in term of war is unprecedented and unimaginable!!! Be Warned