ECOWAS court backs Dansuki on unlawful detention suit.
The embattled former National Security Adviser, Sambo Dasuki, has defeated the Federal Government at the Economic Community for West African States (ECOWAS) court.
Dasuki won in the first leg of his suit, where he challenged his alleged unlawful arrest and detention since December 2015.
In his ruling on Monday, April 11, in Abuja, Justice Friday Chijoke Nwoke,
dismissed the government's objection that it had jurisdiction to
entertain Dasuki’s suit for the enforcement of his fundamental rights to
liberty and to own property as contained in the Nigerian 1999
constitution and African Charter on fundamental rights of persons.
The judge ruled against the Nigerian government on the ground that the objection was misconceived, frivolous and lacked merit.
In
the unanimous ruling by a three-member panel of the court delivered by
Justice Nwoke, it was held that the government's claim Dasuki’s case
emanated from his trial on certain offences was inappropriate since the
reliefs sought by Dasuki had nothing to do with his ongoing trial at the
domestic courts of Nigeria.
Continuing, the court
said government's claim that Dasuki ought to have filed contempt charge
against the Nigerian government for disobeying court orders cannot be
sustained because the case of the applicant is not ambiguous, in that it
has no root from any criminal trial in any court.
Justice
Nwoke said the claim by the Nigerian government has no place in the law
because there was no evidence that Dasuki had filed similar matter in
any international court.
“In our opinion, what
Dasuki brought before us as a case is an issue for the enforcement of
his fundamental rights to liberty and own property and against unlawful
arrest, unlawful detention and unlawful seizure of properties without
any court order or warrant of arrest.
“From
the totality of the issues brought before this court, it is clear and
there is no ambiguity that the applicant is seeking enforcement of his
right to freedom and not on the issue of his trial for any alleged
offence before any Nigerian court.
“Therefore,
the objection of the government and the request that the case of the
applicant in this matter be struck out on the ground of emanating from
any criminal matter has no basis, the claims and the request lack merit
and hereby dismissed and we declare that the application of Dasuki is
admissible to this court,” the ruling held.
The
court clarified that it is not in its place to decide whether the
applicant is guilty of the charges against him in the Nigerian courts or
not but to ascertain whether his continued detention, despite being
granted bail in criminal matters, constitute an abuse of his rights to
freedom.
Dasuki's counsels, Robert Emukpoeruo and Wale Balogun had court over the invasion of their client's homes in Abuja, Kaduna and
Sokoto and seizure of his properties without any court order.
They
also complained about Dasuki's alleged unlawful detention and asked the
ECOWAS court to award N500million compensatory damages in his favour
having been denied access to medical attention abroad as ordered by a
Nigerian court.


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