The Economic Community
for West African States, ECOWAS, Court, Tuesday, ordered the Federal Government
to immediately release the erstwhile National Security Adviser, NSA, Col. Sambo
Dasuki, retd, from detention and asked that the Federal Government to pay him
N15 million damages.
Dasuki, who was NSA to former President Goodluck
Jonathan, has been in detention since November 3, 2015, when he was arrested by
security operatives over his alleged complicity in a $2.1billion arms
procurement fraud. Former national security adviser of ex-president Goodluck
Jonathan, Sambo Dasuki Though the ex-NSA eventually secured bail from three
separate courts he was dragged to by the Economic and Financial Crimes
Commission, EFCC, he was on December 29, re-arrested by operatives of the
Department of State Service, DSS, after he was released from Kuje Prison,
Abuja, having perfected all the bail conditions. Dissatisfied with the
treatment meted out to him by the government, Dasuki, through his team of
lawyers, filed a fundamental rights enforcement suit before the ECOWAS Court in
Abuja. Delivering judgment on the matter, the court, in a unanimous decision by
a three-man panel of Justices, declared the arrest and continued detention of
the plaintiff since last year as illegal, unlawful and arbitrary. The regional
court found FG guilty of violating the plaintiff’s fundamental human rights,
saying the action of the Nigerian government was in contravention of both
national and international laws on the right of persons and citizens to freedom
of liberty. Justice Friday Chijioke Nwoke who read the lead verdict, awarded
N15million against FG, as compensatory damages to Dasuki for the deprivation of
his right under Article 5 and 6 of the African Charter on People’s and Persons’
Rights to freedom of Liberty. The court maintained that action of the Nigerian
government in subjecting the plaintiff/applicant to indefinite detention
without trial was “condemnable”, since he was yet to be convicted before any
court of law. Justice Nwoke stressed that even if the applicant had committed a
crime, FG ought to follow due process of the law in trying him. The court held
that it was wrong for FG to continue to detain the plaintiff, even though he
had been granted bail by three different trial courts. More so, the ECOWAS
blasted FG for claiming that the ex-NSA was planning to stage a coup and wage
war against millions of Nigerians.SOURCE;VANGUARD

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