The
prominent civil Rights Advocacy group – HUMAN RIGHTS WRITERS ASSOCIATION OF
NIGERIA (HURIWA) has condemned the Kano state police command over the extra
judicial killing of a 26-year old 'boy' Abdulkadir Nasir who was surrendered to
the police voluntarily by his father – Nasiru Madobi.
HURIWA
also condemned as abominable and unconstitutional the failure of the Department
of State Services (DSS) to release the duo of Omoyele SOWORE and Olawale Bakare
from the dungeons of the Secret police even after they met the stiff bail
conditions slammed on them by the Federal High Court presided over by Ijeoma
Ojukwu(Ms).
HURIWA
also condemned the reported use of lethal weapons by the DSS to disperse
activists who had gathered on the DSS' premises to demand that the DSS obey the
Federal High court orders and release SOWORE and Bakers.
"HURIWA
is hereby urging the European Union and the United States government to impose
sanctions on the government of President Muhammadu Buhari which has become
autocratic and has serially disrespected binding decisions of the competent
courts of law which is provided for in Section 6 of the Constitution.
HURIWA
specifically affirmed that the relevant constitutional provisions confers the
judicial powers of Nigeria on the courts as stated unambiguously in Section
6 thus:" (1) The judicial powers of
the Federation shall be vested in the courts to which this section relates,
being courts established for the Federation. (2) The judicial powers of a State
shall be vested in the courts to which this section relates, being courts
established, subject as provided by this Constitution, for a State. (3) The
courts to which this section relates, established by this Constitution for the
Federation and for the States, specified in subsection (5) (a) to (1) of this
section, shall be the only superior courts of record in Nigeria; and save as
otherwise prescribed by the National Assembly or by the House of Assembly of a
State, each court shall have all the powers of a superior court of record. (4)
Nothing in the foregoing provisions of this section shall be construed as
precluding:- (a) the National Assembly or any House of Assembly from
establishing courts, other than those to which this section relates, with
subordinate jurisdiction to that of a High Court; (b) the National Assembly or
any House of Assembly, which does not require it, from abolishing any court
which it has power to establish or which it has brought into being. (5) This
section relates to:- (a) the Supreme Court of Nigeria; (b) the Court of Appeal;
(c) the Federal High Court; (d) the High Court of the Federal Capital
Territory, Abuja; (e) a High Court of a State (f) the Sharia Court of Appeal of
the Federal Capital Territory, Abuja; (g) a Sharia Court of Appeal of a State;
(h) the Customary Court of Appeal of the Federal Capital Territory, Abuja; (i)
a Customary Court of Appeal of a State; (j) such other courts as may be
authorized by law to exercise jurisdiction on matters with respect to which the
National Assembly may make laws; and (k) such other court as may be authorized
by law to exercise jurisdiction at first instance or on appeal on matters with
respect to which a House of Assembly may make laws. (6) The judicial powers
vested in accordance with the foregoing provisions of this section - (a) shall
extend, notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this constitution, to all
inherent powers and sanctions of a court of law (b) shall extend, to all
matters between persons, or between government or authority and to any persons
in Nigeria, and to all actions and proceedings relating thereto, for the
determination of any question as to the civil rights and obligations of that
person; (c) shall not except as otherwise provided by this Constitution, extend
to any issue or question as to whether any act of omission by any authority or
person or as to whether any law or any judicial decision is in conformity with
the Fundamental Objectives and Directive Principles of State Policy set out in
Chapter II of this Constitution; (d) shall not, as from the date when this
section comes into force, extend to any action or proceedings relating to any
existing law made on or after 15th January, 1966 for determining any issue or
question as to the competence of any authority or person to make any such law.”
The
Rights group said the Inspector General of police Mohammed Adamu should be
compelled by President Muhammadu Buhari and the National Assembly headed by
senate president Ahmed Lawan to immediately arrest all the police operatives
responsible for the brutal killing of the Kano boy so they are prosecuted and
legally sanctioned for premeditated murder.
HURIWA is also worried that Nigeria
has speedily regressed to a state of impunity and lawlessness by armed security
forces.
The
Rights group also wants the National Assembly to constitute a special police
detention facilities’ audit teams to undertake forensic audits of all police
cells with a view to shutting down all identifiable “death camps” administered
by the police whereby suspects are held, tortured and extra-legally executed by
the police.
HURIWA
canvassed that credible civil Rights advocacy groups should be included in the
police audits teams that will undertake the assessment tours of police
detention centres all across Nigeria to find out the torture chambers
administered by the Nigerian Police Force.
HURIWA
lamented that despite the existence of abundance of knowledge of 'execution and
torture chambers and cells' even known to the public in which hundreds of
suspects may have been extra-legally slaughtered by the police, the National
Assembly and the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) are not in a hurry to
transparently expose these evils, name, shame and prosecute indicted police
operatives.
HURIWA
in a statement by the National Coordinator Comrade Emmanuel Onwubiko and the
National Media Affairs Director, Zainab Yusuf, recalled that police in Kano
TORTURED to death a 26-year-old man, Abdulkadir Nasiru, after his father took
him to police station for questioning even as HURIWA gathered from media
reports that the father handed over the son to the Madobi Police Station after
policemen went to his residence in search of him over a case of neighborhood
gang fight.
HURIWA
recalled that Madobi, the father of the deceased told the media that as a
law-abiding citizen, when his son returned home he took him voluntarily to the
police station for interrogation.
HURIWA
quoted the media as reporting the bereaved father as stating that “A quarrel
ensued when a policeman started slapping and beating him in my presence after
an argument. When another officer joined the quarrel to beat him, he started
retaliating."
HURIWA
recalled further that the father stated to the media that three more policemen
soon took sticks to beat his son to a pulp and added that the situation made me
leave the police station immediately as I could not stand the pain of seeing my
son being beaten on a simple matter that can be resolved among parents.
HURIWA
states thus: “This classical case of targeted execution of the 26 year old
Citizen demonstrates the lack of respect for the sanctity of human life which
is covered under section 33(1) of the Nigerian constitution and states thus:
“Every person has a right to life, and no one shall be deprived intentionally
of his life, save in execution of the sentence of a court in respect of a
criminal offence of which he has been found guilty in Nigeria.” The United
Nations rapporteur on torture and extra-legal executions had on two occasions’
indicted Nigerian security forces including police over wanton extrajudicial
killings of suspects but till date nothing has changed.”
HURIWA
also stated that the implication is that most people wouldn't trust the
Nigerian police force with information of any known crime since their
operatives have become torture experts and extra-legal executioners in flagrant
disregard of the Constitution.
No comments:
Post a Comment