By Fadehan Oyeyemi Former President of the Nigerian Bar Association, NBA, Joseph Daudu SAN, human rights lawyers and a rights advoca...
By Fadehan Oyeyemi
Former President of the Nigerian Bar Association, NBA,
Joseph Daudu SAN, human rights lawyers and a rights advocacy group, the Centre
for Social Justice and Accountability, CSJA, have demanded that the Federal
Government strictly adhere to the principle of the rule of law, fairness and
justice in handling the case of the suspended Governor of the Central Bank of
Nigeria, CBN, Godwin Emefiele.
While Daudu expressed optimism that President Bola Tinubu,
with his background as a democracy advocate, will not support arbitrariness,
Maxwell Opara, Abdulazeez Tijani and Anthony Akpua of the CSJA said the way the
Federal Government handles the case will shape the way international business
communities and related interests relate with it.
They spoke on Saturday in reaction to the various court
pronouncements on the government’s continued detention of Emefiele and his
planned arraignment by the Department of State Services, DSS, on a charge filed
before the Federal High Court in Lagos.
Daudu said: “I do not think that the President, who is a
newly minted President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, will like to start
his administration with the organizations under him disobeying court orders.
“He (Tinubu) was at the forefront as a NADECO man to
chastise military governments for disobeying court orders.
“Now that power is in his hand, we will see whether he,
himself, will obey court orders,” the ex-NBA President said in reaction to
Thursday’s judgment by Justice Hamza Muazu of the High Court of the Federal
Capital Territory (FCT).”
Justice Muazu, who gave the DSS seven days within which to
either charge Emefiele to court or release him, noted in the judgment that the
alleged offences for which he was being held were bailable because they were
not capital in nature, adding that he was not accused of killing anybody.
On his part, Opara noted that from his experience, the DSS
was creating the impression that it was above the country’s law.
He said he was not surprised about how Emefiele’s case was
being handled “because the secret police has made disrespect to rule of law
part of its life”.
“Talking about the rule of law or tendering court’s judgment
before the DSS irritates the management of the agency,” he said and urged the
President to overhaul the agency.
Tijani said Tinubu must prove and establish that he is a
true Democrat, not a semi-democrat like some of his predecessors.
“For more than four months, the DSS had sought to arrest
Emefiele. Between that time and now, it ought to have completed its investigation.
DSS cannot hide under Administration of Criminal Justice Act (ACJA) 2015 to
hold a Nigerian citizen till eternity because ACJA is inferior to the 1999
Constitution,” he said.
“The 1999 constitution is so specific and categorical on how
long a Nigerian citizen should be held. It gave a maximum of 48 hours. That is
the Supreme Law on the fundamental rights of the citizens and must be obeyed to
the letter.
“That aspect of the Constitution does not permit an arm of
security agency to hold a Nigerian citizen down and unlawfully begin to fish
for evidence, as in the instant matter, to charge him to court. That is not our
law.”
Tijani urged Tinubu to take steps and establish that he is
not taking sides with any security agency disrespecting the rule of law.
“Tinubu, as a true democrat, who had used the larger part of
his life to fight for human rights, must use his new position to compel
institutions, especially security agencies, to operate within the ambit of law.
“Arbitrariness must be eradicated. It is safer to respect
the rule of law and use the instrument of law to checkmate criminality without
breaching the rule of law.
“Emefiele’s case will be a big test to President Tinubu in
his avowed commitment to the rule of law. Emefiele’s rights must be respected
until the law court says otherwise,” Tijani said.
Akpua noted that the whole world was watching the way the
Federal Government was handling the Emefiele case, with its capacity to shape
the way the country is viewed by international investors in the area of respect
for the rule of law.
In a two-count charge marked: FHC/L/437/2023, filed on July
13 at the Federal High Court in Lagos by the DSS, Emefiele is to be subjected
to trial for unlawful possession of one single barrel shotgun (Jojeff Magnum
8371) without a licence, which is said to constitute an offence under Section 4
of the Firearms Laws of the Federation 2004 and punishable under Section 27 (1)
(b) (i) of the same act.
The suspended CBN Governor is equally accused of having, in
his possession, 123 rounds of live ammunition (cartridges) without a licence,
which items were said to have been unlawfully kept at No. 3B Iru Close, Ikoyi,
Lagos “on or about the 15th June, 2023.”
Emefiele was arrested on June 10, 2023, a day after
President Tinubu suspended him, and he is still being held in the custody of
the DSS.
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