Tag: abaribe

  • ABARIBE: The travails of an embattled senator

    THE arrest and detention of Senator Enyinnaya Harcourt Abaribe by operatives of the Department of State Service (DSS) might not have come as a shock to many, having stood surety for Nnamdi Kanu, the leader of the outlawed secessionist group, the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB),

    whose whereabouts are now a matter of conjecture.

     

    Still, there are many perspectives to the issue, depending on the side of the divide that one may be. The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) senator commands uncommon attention whenever he takes the floor of the Senate to make his measured contributions.

     

    And unlike the usual politician who speaks from both sides of the mouth, Abaribe does not double speak and would not eat his words.

     

    Many who are acquainted with his coarse criticism of the Presidency over the latter’s real or imagined ‘failures’ would certainly not be surprised that security operatives would beam their searchlight on him.

    Some say it is therefore possible that the Presidency and its agents were scratching for a dent on

    Abaribe in order to nail him.

     

    Thus, when in the early hours of Friday June 22, the news filtered in that Abaribe had been arrested at the premises of the Abuja Transcorp Hilton, not many were surprised. Before one could say Jack Robinson, the ubiquitous social media outlets had feasted on the development, alerting Nigerians to it.

     

    As no confirmation came from the secret police which was said to have picked up the senator, newshounds set to work, piecing issues together with the aim of figuring out the news behind the news about Abaribe’s arrest.

     

    The question on the lips of everybody was what he could have done to warrant an arrest. Could it be his vocal disposition on issues or his endorsement of the bail bond for Kanu’s release? Apparently, not many people thought he could be linked to gunrunning and sponsorship of a proscribed organisation as the DSS seemed to have claimed.

     

    Abaribe had been in and out of court since he stood surety for Kanu with his prosecutors insisting he should produce the IPOB leader in court or risk a jail term.

     

    The senator on his part has continued to lay the task of producing Kanu in court to answer charges of treason on the door steps of soldiers who invaded the IPOB leader’s residence a few days to the day he was supposed to appear in court.

     

    Although the DSS did not officially explain why Abaribe was picked up, his lawyer, Chukwuma Machukwu Ume, gave an inkling. Speaking a day after Abaribe’s arrest, Ume described the arrest as “shocking as it was curious.”

     

    A Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN), Ume spoke as though he was being frustrated in his job as an attorney to the detained senator. DSS operatives, who searched Abaribe’s Apo Legislative Quarters residence, Ume said, were specifically asked to “focus and search for arms and ammunition and for any other incriminating document,” while Abaribe’s alleged crime was “aiding and supporting a proscribed body, IPOB.”

    For Ume, Abaribe is “a known strong voice of the Igbo nation, hence his arrest is a clamp down on the region.” Ume also said that Abaribe’s disclosure that N30 billion was “planted” in the budget of the Power Ministry without the knowledge of the senate committee which he chairs may have been part of the reasons for his arrest. Abaribe, who is the chairman of the

    Southeast Senate caucus, had raised the alarm over the cut in the allocation to the zone in the 2018 budget. For him, no right thinking Igbo would support any cut on allocation for projects in the region.

    He expressed the commitment and determination of the caucus to find out who made the cut.

     

    He noted that they actually lobbied for the Enugu Airport Terminal building allocation to be increased to N3.5 billion until the Ministry of Aviation told them that what they had was an envelope which could not be increased beyond the N2 billion allocation. On the N30 billion, he said it was listed for the expansion and re-enforcement of infrastructure in the distribution companies to reduce stranded firms.

    Wondering how such a huge sum found its way into the budget, Abaribe said the allocation “never passed through the Senate Power Committee.”

     

    In April, Abaribe, while speaking on the floor of the Senate, pointedly accused President Buhari of ‘incompetence’ for his alleged inability to address insecurity in the country. The assertion did not go down well with some senators, especially those of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) extraction. Senate Leader, Ahmed Lawan, took exception to the assertion and asked Abaribe to withdraw it.

    What followed was a war of word with senators lining up along party lines. Abaribe had moved a motion in reaction to a comment made by Buhari in the United Kingdom where the president was reported to have said that bandits terrorising parts of the country were from Libya.

     

    “When a commander-in-chief cannot take care of invaders invading Nigeria, why is he still a commander-in-chief? Why do we continue to indulge him? Why do we continue to indulge this president that everywhere he goes, he tells everyone outside this country that he is totally incompetent, because it is obvious?, Abaribe said.It took the Senate President, Abubakar Bukola Saraki’s intervention to calm frayed nerves in the chamber. Few days after the explosive assertion, DSS operatives were said to have paid an unusual visit to Abaribe’s office to invite him for “a friendly chat.”

    Abaribe was said to have turned down the invitation and requested the operatives to put their invitation in writing. They never did, prompting speculations that they might have been taking their

    time and waiting for the zero hour to strike.

     

    Perhaps the last straw that convinced DSS operatives that Abaribe had crossed the red line was his comical call for the declaration of December 31, 1983 as “democracy destruction day” in recognition of the December 31, 1983 coup which brought Buhari to power then as head of state. Abaribe made the call in his contribution to the debate on President Buhari’s declaration of June 12 as Democracy Day.

     

    Although some senators took Abaribe’s comment as a side attraction, Buhari’s supporters in the chamber did not find it funny. While some called for Abaribe’s head, others said he should be ignored. Abaribe on his part was undaunted. Although Abaribe has been granted an administrative bail, it may be difficult to say what the future holds for him as he battles to extricate himself from the bail bond for the proscribed IPOB leader and other matters.

  • Abaribe gets bail, says lawyer

    THE detained senator representing Abia South, Enyinnaya Abaribe, has been released by the Department of State Services (DSS), his lawyer Chukwuma Machukwu Ume said yesterday.

    It was learnt that Abaribe was granted administrative bail.

    A statement by Abaribe’s legislative aide, Uche Awom, said: “About 6.32pm Tuesday, Senator Enyinnaya Abaribe worked to freedom after five days in the DSS gulag.”

    It said Abaribe, who was granted administrative bail, was released to his lawyers led by Chukwuma Machukwu Ume (SAN.)

    Ume was quoted to have spoken at the premises of the DSS facility in Abuja and “thanked Nigerians for standing up against the wrongs being done to Nigerian democracy with the arrest of Senator Abaribe”.

    The lawyer was also quoted to have said: “The collective calls and demand for his release have shown the great spirit of Nigerians for justice’.

    Abaribe was arrested last Friday by operatives of the DSS for allegedly supporting a prescribed body, the Indigenous Peoples of Biafra (IPOB) and also for alleged gunrunning.

  • Court refuses to order Abaribe’s release

    A Federal High Court in Abuja on Tuesday declined an oral application for bail filed by Chukwuma Umeh (SAN) on behalf of detained Senator Eyinnaya Abaribe.

    The court, however, ordered that the senator be allowed unhindered access to his lawyer.

    Umeh, who appeared for Abaribe in the criminal case against the leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), Nnamdi Kanu, said at the commencement of proceedings that his client was arrested over his role in the matter.

    Abaribe and two others stood as surety for Kanu, who is standing trial on charges of treasonable felony.

    Following Kanu’s sudden disappearance and his absence in court, Justice Justice Binta Nyako had on March 28 ordered the sureties to produce Kanu or show cause why they should not forfeit their N100million bail bond each and jailed until they produce the IPOB leader.

    Umeh told the court that his client’s arrest and subsequent detention had created tension in the country.

     

  • Constituents seek Abaribe’s release

    Constituents of detained Senator Enyinnaya Abaribe (Abia South), under the auspices of Obioma Ngwa Welfare Association, Abuja, have called for his release from detention of the Department of State Security (DSS).

    Senator Abaribe (Abia South) was arrested for alleged deal in fire arms but the DSS are yet to officially say why Abaribe was arrested.

    A statement, titled: “Appeal to the Department of State Service (DSS) for the Release of Distinguished Senator Enyinnaya Abaribe, Representing Abia South District in the Senate of the Federal Republic of Nigeria”, appealed to the Director of DSS, Lawal Daura, to intervene.

    The statement, signed by the chairman, Chief Achi Eric Egwuibe, reads: “We, the members of Obioma Ngwa Welfare Association, Abuja, a socio-cultural body made up of constituents of the detained Senator Enyinnaya Abaribe, received with dismay the shocking news of his arrest and detention by the operatives of the Department of the State Service (DSS).

    “We are shocked that three days after his detention, there are no concrete charges under the law against him.

    “We, hereby, appeal to the Director-General of the DSS, Mr. Lawal Daura, to ensure Senator Abaribe’s immediate release.

    “Indeed, he deserves his freedom being his fundamental human right as enshrined in the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria (as amended).”

  • Abaribe arrested over IPOB, alleged gun-running-Lawyer

    The Department of State Security (DSS) operatives arrested the Senator representing Abia South, Enyinnaya Abaribe, on Friday for allegedly aiding and supporting a proscribed body, the Indigenous Peoples of Biafra (IPOB).

    Abaribe’s lawyer, Chukwuma-Machukwu Ume (SAN) who disclosed this on Saturday also the DSS claimed that Abaribe was into gun running.

    Ume said the accusations were contained in a search warrant dated 2nd June 2018 which directed DSS operatives who searched Abaribe’s house to “focus and search for arms and ammunitions and any other incriminating document, while the alleged crime was aiding and supporting a proscribed body i.e. IPOB.”

    He said that the disparity and excruciating search of all corners and every item in the house lasted for about 5pm till 11:15 pm Friday.

     He noted that “Of all the 27 items seized and taken away, non could be all they wanted to see in terms of arms and ammunitions or stored bags of Ghana Must Go for sponsoring the said IPOB.

    “But unfortunately two of the 27 items include: The two handsets of two USA citizens found in the home.

    “One of the laptops taken included that of an educationist containing examination questions slated to be set for students on the 25th of June 2018.

    “All pleas for this questions to be copied was refused.”

    Ume said that they are worried at the turn of events especially when leader of IPOB Nnamdi Kanu was to appear in court on October 2017 in September, his house was brutally shut down.

    “Senator Abaribe, the surety to Nnamadi Kanu is to appear in court on 26th June 2018, but on 22nd June 2018 Senator Abaribe was arrested and detained incommunicado.

    Ume who spoke at a press conference in Abuja on the arrest and detention  said, “Yesterday in the forenoon hours our Senator Enyinnaya Harcourt Abaribe, a high ranking senator of the Federal Republic of Nigeria was arrested by officers of state security services.

    “The articulate senator who has contributed a lot to our nation building effort is of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    “His arrest was shocking as it was curious.

    “As his counsel, I have long ago complied with DSS stipulation for meeting with its detainee.

    “I have also requested for a meeting with the D.G of the services to know the reason for his arrest.

    “All fell into refusal ears at about 4:45pm I was alerted that officers of the services were heading to the senator’s residence.

    “I had to break my long wait at the DSS Head Quarters and rushed to the senator’s residence.

    “Primarily, the search warrant dated 2nd June 2018 focused and searched for arms and ammunitions and any other incriminating document while the alleged crime was aiding and supporting a proscribed body i.e. IPOB.

    “The disparity and excruciating search of all corners and every item in the house lasted for about 5pm till 11:15 pm yesterday (Friday).

     “Of all the 27 items seized and taken away non could be all they wanted to see in terms of arms and ammunitions or stored bags of Ghana Must Go for sponsoring the said IPOB.

    “But unfortunately two of the 27 items include:

    The two handsets of two USA citizens found in the home.

    “One of the laptops taken included that of an educationist containing examination questions slated to be set for students on the 25th of June 2018.

    “All pleas for this questions to be copied was refused.

    “We are worried at the turn of events Nnamdi Kanu was to appear in court on October 2017 in September, his house was brutally shut down.

    “Senator Abaribe, the surety to Nnamadi Kanu is to appear in court on 26th June 2018, but on 22nd June 2018 Senator Abaribe was arrested and detained incommunicado.

    “On 16th June 2017 via a letter to NSA Senator Ike Ekeweremadu was levied a corrupt officer

    “On 12th April 2018 Senator Shehu Sani was accused of aiding armed robbers

    “On 24th march 2018 Senator Dino Melaye was accused of aiding bandits

    “On 4th June 2018 Senator Bukola Saraki was accused of aiding armed robbers who massacred his own people.

    “On 27th February 2017 /2nd march 2017 His Excellency former Governor of Benue State Gabrial Suswam was clamped down

    “On 22nd June 2018 it is Senator Enyinnaya Harcourt Abaribe was arrested for purportedly aiding a proscribed organization.

    “These are certainly against the spirit of partisan politics very dear to our constitution and nation building process.

    “If in 2014/2015 opposition to PDP were muzzled like this way. The advantage the nation gained by unseating a party in power would not have been possible.

    “This man is a known strong voice of the Igbo nation. Hence this is a clamp down on the region”

    Ume also said that Abaribe’s revelation that N30 billion was smuggled into the budget of the Power Ministry without the knowledge of the Senate Committee on Power, Steel Development and Metallurgy may have also been part of the reason for his arrest.

    Abaribe who is Chairman, South East Senate Caucus, had raised the alarm over the cut in the budget allocation to the zone.

    He insisted that no right thinking Igbo would support any cut on allocation for projects in the South East region.

    Abaribe confirmed that the caucus is set to meet to find out what went wrong especially at what point the cut in the allocation was made.

    He said that “we are committed and determined to find out who made the cut.”

    He noted that they actually lobbied for the Enugu Airport Terminal allocation to be increased to N3.5 billion until the Ministry of Aviation told them that what they had was an envelope which could not be increased beyond the N2 billion allocation.

    Abaribe who is also Chairman, Senate Committee on Power, Steel Development and Metallurgy noted for instance that N30 billion was smuggled into the Power budget without his committee’s knowledge.

    He said that the N30 billion was listed for expansion and re-enforcement of infrastructure in the distribution companies to reduce stranded firms.

    The amount, he said, “never passed through the Senate Power committee.”

    He asked “where did such huge sum of N30 billion come from.”

  • IPOB’s Kanu: What next for Abaribe, others?

    Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) leader Nnamdi Kanu has not appeared at the Federal High Court, Abuja since April 25, last year, after Justice Binta Nyako granted him bail during his trial for alleged treasonable felony. The court has given his three sureties, including Senator Enyinnaya Abaribe, till June 26 to produce him or show cause why they should not be imprisoned. Alternatively, each surety could forfeit a N100million bail bond. Eric Ikhilae examines the case.

    Where is Nnamdi Kanu? The leader of  the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) has not been coming to court after Justice Binta Nyako of the Federal High Court, Abuja granted him bail on April 25, last year, during his trial for alleged treasonable felony.

    His absence from court since October 17, has put his sureties, including Senator Enyinnaya  Abaribe, representing Abia South, at risk of imprisonment or forfeiture of a N100 million bond.

     

    How it all started

     

    Kanu and IPOB, rode into the nation’s consciousness in 2015 through Radio Biafra (RB), one of the group’s information outlets and the internet.

    Audio and video recordings of their comments about Nigeria and its leaders and calls for the creation of the state of Biafra were freely broadcast on RB, YouTube, among other media.

    Kanu, who was said to be based in the United Kingdom (UK), remained elusive until October 14, 2015 when operatives of the State Security Services (SSS) arrested him in a hotel in Lagos.

     

    Kanu’s arrest

     

    According to court documents, SSS operative, Temisan John, averred that his team arrested Kanu at the Golden Tulip Hotel, Lagos in company of a young girl.

    John said: “On arrival at the hotel, the staff denied having Kanu in the hotel or having any knowledge of him, even when shown his photograph. The hotel’s guests manifest for about five days were also printed and the name was not found on any.

    “However, relying on accurate intelligence, the team decided to conduct a physical search on all the hotel rooms, leading to the arrest of Kanu in Room 303, where he was caught hibernating with a young girl named Maryam Ibezimakor, with all his broadcasting and communication gadgets set for use.

    “It was then discovered that Kanu checked in under the name Nwanekaenyi Ezebuiro. He was subsequently arrested and taken to the command headquarters.”

    Another SSS operative, Mohammed Ahmed, who led the team that searched the home of Kanu’s associate, Benjamin Madubugwu, at Ubulusiuzor town, in Ihiala Local Government Area, Anambra State, said his team recovered “two pump action guns loaded with ammunition; one Emerald Pump Action gun with serial number: TS870-113-00463  and “one Delta Magnum Pump Action gun s/no: 501.”

     

    Bail controversies

     

    Upon his arrest, Kanu was brought before Magistrate Shuaibu Umsman of the Magistrates’ Court, Wuse Zone 2, Abuja.  He was, in a First Information Report (FIR) filed before the court by the state, accused of engaging in “criminal intimidation” contrary to Sections 97(a) and (b) and 397 of the Penal Code. He was also accused of engaging in terrorism financing.

    He was arraigned before the court on October 19, 2015. He pleaded not guilty to the information and was later granted bail in the sum of N2 million and a surety, who must be a civil servant of Grade Level 16.

    Kanu’s lawyer, Egechukwu Obetta later accused the SSS of frustrating the bail granted his client by refusing to release him. Rather than release Kanu in compliance with the bail granted by the Magistrates’ Court, the SSS went before a Federal High Court, in Abuja with an ex-parte application marked: FHC/ABJ/CS/873/20015 for an order to further detain Kanu for 90 days.

    Justice Adeniyi Ademola, on November 11, 2015, granted the application brought, among others, under Section 27(1) of the Terrorism Prevention (amendment) Act 2013.

    Apparently contended with the order got from the Federal High Court, the DSS later discontinued the proceedings before the magistrates’ court and took no further steps on the case.

    Kanu’s lawyers saw an opportunity in this and returned to Justice Ademola with a fundamental rights application to challenge their client’s continued detention when no charge was pending against him before any court.

    Swayed by the applicant’s argument, Justice Ademola, in a ruling on December 17, 2015 ordered the DSS to release Kanu forthwith.

    The judge agreed with the applicant that there were no justifiable reasons for the state to keep Kanu in custody when no charge was pending against him.

     

    Arraignment at the High Court

     

    Before any major steps could be taken in relation to Justice Ademola’s ruling, the state filed a six-count charge against Kanu and two others before the Federal High Court, Abuja.  The others are: Benjamin Madubugwu and David Nwawuisi (said to be a Field Maintenance Engineer with MTN Nigeria Limited).

    They were charged with, among others, criminal conspiracy, treason, illegal importation of goods and possession of fire arms.

    At their first appearance before the Federal High Court on December 23, 2015, the defendants objected to being tried before Justice Ahmed Mohammed, whom the case was assigned.

    When the case was called, Kanu sought the court’s permission to speak, which the judge granted without objection from his lawyer, Vincent Obetta and the Director of Public Prosecution of the Federation (DPPF), Muhammad Diri, who led the prosecution team.

    Kanu said he lacked confidence in the court, and that based on information available to him he might not get a fair trial.

    He said: “I will not sacrifice the due process founded upon the principle of natural justice on the altar of speedy release from detention. I will rather remain in detention than subject myself to a trial that amounts to perversion of justice. There have been several rulings delivered by competent courts of jurisdiction, which the SSS never respected.”

    When asked to comment, Obetta agreed with his client and added that Kanu was at liberty to decide whether or not he has confidence in a court before which he was to stand trial.

    Diri, however, objected and insisted that it was not within the rights of a defendant to pick the court where he must stand trial.

    Diri relied on the provision of Section 396(2) of the Administration of Criminal Justice Act (ACJA) 2015 to argue that a defendant could only object to a charge after pleading to it. He urged the judge to proceed with the planned arraignment of the defendants.

     

    Judges’ withdrawal

     

    Ruling, Justice Mohammed overruled Diri’s objection and held that a defendant has the right to decide before which court he/she should be tried.

    “Justice is rooted in confidence. If a party has no confidence in this court, he has the liberty to say so. If it was the prosecution, who did not have confidence in the court, will it not say so?

    “Section 396(2) of the ACJA has nothing to do with the nature of objection raised by the first defendant. He is not challenging the competence of the charge, but his lack of confidence in the court to try him,” the judge said and withdrew from the case.

    On September 26, 2016 another judge of the Federal High Court, Abuja, Justice John Tsoho, who the case was reassigned, also withdrew following a petition by Kanu’s lawyers to the National Judicial Council (NJC).

    The lawyers accused the judge in the petition of making conflicting decisions in an application by the prosecution to be allowed to shield its witnesses from public view. To the defence, such ruling, which allowed the prosecution to hide its witnesses’ identity, would not guaranty fairness and justice for the defendants.

    Ruling on September 26, 2016 Justice Tsoho said: “I deem it unnecessary to allow the learned prosecution lawyer, S M. Labaran to make any response. Luckily, the procedure would have been to await the response of the NJC.

    “This court is minded not to prolong the issue, especially since they (the defence team) did not state which court it wants to handle its case. I have disqualified myself from sitting over this case.

    “Therefore, the case file shall be transferred to the office of the Chief Judge of the Federal High Court. This shall be the position of this court even if the NJC decides otherwise.”

     

    Re-arraignment

     

    The case was again re-assigned to Justice Binta Nyako (also of the Federal High Court, Abuja)  whose court Kanu and three others were arraigned on an amended charge of 11 counts, with the addition of a new defendant, Chidiebere Onwudiwe, described as IPOB’s National Co-ordinator.

    They are, in the amended charge, marked: FHC/ABJ/CR/383/2015, charged with terrorism, treasonable felony, managing an unlawful society, publication of defamatory matter, illegal possession of firearms and improper importation of goods.

    In a ruling on December 1, 2016, Justice Nyako rejected their bail applications on the grounds that the offences which they were being tried “are very serious in nature”, and therefore, not ordinarily bailable.

    She noted that the court has to exercise its discretion one way or the other, irrespective of what the charge is, but that some of the charges against the defendants could attract life imprisonment if proved by the prosecution.

    The judge dismissed the contention by the defendants that President Muhammadu Buhari had openly directed that they should not be released on bail. She said the President, as a Nigerian citizen, was at liberty to exercise his right to freedom of speech.

    The judge said the President’s comment was incapable of influencing the decision of the court. She said the defendants did not place before the court any new fact or law capable of persuading it to reverse an earlier ruling (by Justice Tsoho) where they were equally denied bail.

    Justice Nyako said: “The offences are serious in nature and carries very severe punishment if proven. I hereby, therefore, refuse bail of the applicants. But in the alternative, I hereby order accelerated trial of this matter to almost commence immediately, but not later than two months.”

    The defence rejected move by the prosecution to open its case. Instead, it challenged the competence of the charge, arguing that the proof of evidence submitted by the prosecution did not support the charge.

    In a ruling last March 1, Justice Nyako upheld the defence’s argument in relation to some counts in the charge and struck out six out of the 11 counts.

    The judge struck out counts 3,5,7,9,10 &11, relating to commission of acts of terrorism, improper importation of goods and managing unlawful society, leaving counts relating to criminal conspiracy and treasonable felony – counts 1, 2,4, 6 and 8, which relate to offences of conspiracy to commit acts of treasonable felony and other related offences.

    Shortly after the counts in the charge became reduced to five, Kanu’s lawyer approached the court again with another application for bail. This time, he raised the issue of his client’s health, which the judge later agreed to.

    In a ruling last April 25, Justice Nyako rejected the objection by the prosecution and granted bail to Kanu, with the exclusion of other defendants. The judge said her decision to grant bail was based on health grounds.

    In less than two weeks, Kanu was out of custody, having satisfied the bail conditions.

     

    Controversy over Kanu’s

    whereabouts

     

    The prosecution was to open its case on October 17. But when parties got to court, the other defendants were present with the exception of Kanu.

    Lead prosecution lawyer, Shuaibu Labaran noted that although the case was scheduled for commencement of trial, no proceedings could be conducted in the absence of one of the defendants.

    Labaran recalled that Kanu was granted bail on April 25, 2017 on health grounds and that “the court gave an order that he should go and attend to his health challenge and report back to court on monthly basis.

    He added that the three men, who stood sureties for Kanu should be ordered to appear before the court to show cause why the bail bond of N100 million, which each of the sureties signed, should not be forfeited and or, they should be committed to prison for failing to produce the 1st defendant.

    Responding, Ifeanyi Ejiofor, who represented Kanu, denied knowledge of his client’s whereabouts. “Ever since the Army raided his home on September 11 and 14, 2017, we have not seen the first defendant. I cannot tell if he is dead or alive,”Ejiofor said, urging the court to reject Labaran’s application in relation to the sureties.

    Also reacting, Ogechi Ogbonna, who appeared for Abaribe, said his client was without any information regarding Kanu’s whereabouts.

    Ogbonna informed the court about a motion he filed seeking, among others, an order discharging Abaribe as Kanu’s surety on the grounds that he was no longer interested in offering his consent to serve as Kanu’s surety in view of recent happenings. However, Ogbonna was silent on what his client meant as “recent happenings.”

    At that point, Justice Nyako told Ogbonna that at the moment in the case three options were opened to Abaribe and other sureties to the 1st defendants, which they could choose one.

    The first, according to the judge, was either Abaribe remains a surety or produce the first defendant in court and thereafter hands off from being his surety.

    The second was for Abaribe to forfeit the N100m bail bond if he could not produce Kanu in court, and third, that the court gives Abaribe time to produce Kanu in court.

    Ogbonna elected to work with the third option, following which the judge ordered the sureties to appear in court to show cause why bench warrant should not be issued against the first defendant, as prayed by the prosecution, or why they should not forfeit their N100m bond each or be committed to prison for failing to produce Kanu.

    Before further proceedings in the criminal trial, Justice Nyako heard and decided the case brought by IPOB against the Chief of Army Staff (COAS) over his (Kanu’s) purported disappearance.

    IPOB had by the suit, sought “an order of Habeas Corpus ad subjiciendum, commanding the respondent (COAS), to produce the applicant in court.”

    It was claimed in the supporting affidavit that no one has seen or heard from Kanu since September 14, 2017, when soldiers of Nigerian Army allegedly invaded his house “on a murderous raid, where life and mortar bullets were fired on unarmed and defenceless populace, leaving 28 persons dead and abducting many”.

    The COAS denied Kanu’s claim in a counter-affidavit, and argued that contrary to claims by the applicant, soldiers, who were deployed in the Southeast for ‘Operation Python Dance II, did not have any contact, whatsoever, with Kanu on September 12 or 14, or anytime thereafter as alleged.

    The respondent added that the Nigerian Army did not, at any time, arrest or take Kanu into custody within the period the military operation lasted.

    The COAS also denied the allegation that soldiers invaded the IPOB leader’s house in Afara-Ukwu Ibeku, Umuahia, Abia State.

    Justice Nyako gave her verdict on the case on January 27, 2018 and dismissed it.

    The judge observed that the applicant failed to provide sufficient and credible evidence to convince the court that Kanu was indeed in the custody of the Nigerian Army.

    Justice Nyako said:  ”The doctrine of last seen”, which the applicant relied upon, even though applicable in murder cases, has no statutory backing.

    The judge, who noted that Kanu was listed as the applicant in the case, said she was surprised that someone, who is to be missing, was the one seeking reliefs from the court.

    She said the supporting affidavit filed by Kanu’s lawyer, Ifeanyi Ejiofor, contained criminal allegations against the Nigerian Army that must be proved beyond reasonable doubt”.

    The judge added: “Has the applicant placed enough evidence to show that the respondent was the last to see the applicant? Was there any evidence that he was last seen with even one soldier?

    “The onus of proof will not shift from the applicant to the respondent except the applicant is able to prove that he was last seen by the respondent. This, they have failed to do.

    “This application fails and it is hereby dismissed. Be ready for your case,” Justice Nyako said.

    Shortly after the court’s ruling, Ejiofor urged the court to guide parties on how to proceed with the criminal case.

    In response, Justice Nyako said: “As far as I am concerned, the applicant is on bail. Was he not released on bail based on an undertaking by the sureties?

    “The sureties guaranteed to produce the applicant in court for his trial, so three of them should produce him. They made an undertaking and deposed to the fact that they will produce him to stand trial.

    “If there is any reason they cannot produce him, they should tell me on that date,” Justice Nyako said and adjourned to February 20, 2018.

    When parties returned to court on February 20, Labaran noted that Kanu’s continued absence was harmful to the progress in the case since it was a joint trial.

    He suggested that the trial be separated to allow the trial of Kanu separately whenever he turns up.

    The defence agreed with Labaran’s suggestion, following which the judge adopted it in a ruling and adjourned for the commencement of the separate trial of the other defendants.

    In relation to Kanu, the judge restated her order that the sureties should show cause why they Kanu was absent in court, failing which they either go to jail or forfeit their bail bond.

    The separate trial of Kanu’s associates commenced on March 22, during which the prosecution, before opening its case, re-arraigned the defendants on an amended charge, which now included Bright Chimezie as a defendant.

    Bright Chimeze, Benjamin Madubugwu, Chidiebere Onwudiwe and David Nwawuisi are now being tried separately. The prosecution called its first witness, whose identity was kept from the public, but was simply identified as “AB”. Further hearing in that case has been scheduled for May 21.

    However, when parties returned to court on March 28, Abaribe and his co-sureties were present.

    Labaran informed the court that the business of the day was for the sureties to show cause why they should not forfeit the bail bond or be imprisoned for failing to produce Kanu in court as ordered.

    In a ruling, Justice Nyako ordered that an enrolled copy of the court’s order be served on Abaribe and his co-sureties to enable them produce Kanu on the next day or show cause why they should not be jailed or forfeit their bail bond.

    The judge adjourned to June 26. When the court resumes on the next date, beyond the affidavits to be filed by Abaribe and his co-sureties in response to the order for them to show cause, the court is also expeted to look at a fresh applications filed the prosecution

    The application seeks, among others, the revocation of Kanu’s bail on the grounds that he has allegedly breached the bail conditions. It also prays for the issuance of bench warrant for Kanu’s arrest should the sureties fail to produce him.

     

    What options for Abaribe and others?

     

    Lawyers spoke cautiously on the issue, noting that since it was still a pending matter, it was tidy to allow the court reach a conclusion one way or the other.

    Dr. Ben  Chukwueke  said the options opened to the sureties are as stated by the trial judge on October 17, 2017.

    He said:“To me, I don’t think the sureties can get out of this without losing something should they fail to produce the defendant, who they stood surety.

    “The judge has given them hints about what to expect. Although I cannot readily recall any similar cases before now, but I think that is why the sureties are required to sign bail bond,” he said.

    Abudllahi Usman said there was nothing wrong if the sureties were imprisoned to serve as deterrent to others, who cannot account for individuals they stood surety for.

    “The men in this case are enlightened enough to know the consequences of their action. If you agree to stand surety for a defendant, you know it is your responsibility to account for him/her if he/she absconds.

    “How do you account for an absconding defendant when you are unable to produce him? The judge knows what to do. There are options, including them forfeiting the N100m bond they each signed.

    “Without sounding sub judice here, I hope the judge will not be swayed by the status of the men involved in this case to become too lenient.”

  • IPOB: Produce Kanu or go to jail, court tells Abaribe, others

    Federal High Court in Abuja has ordered Senator Enyinnaya Abaribe and two others to produce leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), Nnamdi Kanu or risk imprisonment.

    Justice Binta Nyako said this in a ruling at the resumption of proceedings yesterday in the case of treasonable felony involving Kanu.

    Abaribe, representing Abia South, Tochukwu Uchendu and a Jewish High Priest, Emmanuel Shallom Ben, signed a N100m bond each on April 25 last year as sureties for Kanu, who was granted bail by the court on health ground.

    Kanu has since failed to attend subsequent proceedings in the case, prompting the trial judge to, on October 10, 2017, order the three sureties to either produce Kanu in court or risk either being sent to jail or to forfeit the N100m bail bond they each endorsed.

    On February 20, 2018, Justice Nyako ordered Abaribe and his co-sureties to, at the next hearing date, either produce Kanu in court or show cause why they should not be imprisoned or forfeit the bail bond.

    When proceedings resumed yesterday, Abaribe and others were present. Prosecuting lawyer Shuaibu Labaran informed  the court that the business of the day was for the sureties to show cause why they should not forfeit the bail bond or be imprisoned for failing to produce Kanu in court as ordered.

    Lawyer to Abaribe, Chukwuma Umeh, (SAN), Franklin Chude representing Uchendu and Alloy Ejimakor  objected to Labaran’s position.

    Umeh noted that an enrolled copy of the court’s order of February 20, 2018, was not served on the sureties including his client.

    He said: “My lord, the ruling of your lordship has not been served on us, and an order having not been served on a party cannot be used against the party,  Umeh argued.

    Chudi and Ejimafor alligned themselves with Umah and urged the court to discountenance Labaran’s application that the sureties be made to show cause why Kanu was still absent in court.

    Responding, the prosecution counsel argued that “justice cannot be sacrificed on the altar of technicality”.

    Labaran pointed out that Abaribe’s lawyer had been appearing in the case since 2017. He noted that Umeh had filed an application justifying why Abaribe cannot be made to produce Kanu in court.

    Labaran said he has responded to Umeh’s application. He said: “We have joined issues with the 1st surety on his application, but his sudden u-turn this afternoon is belated.”

    He  urged the court to disregard the arguments by lawyers to Abaribe and others and proceed with the business of the day.

    In a ruling, Justice Nyako ordered that an enrolled copy of the court’s February 20, 2018 order be served on Abaribe and his co-sureties to enable them produce Kanu on the next day of show cause why they should not be jailed or forfeit their bail bond.

    The judge adjourned to June 26.

  • Court gives Abaribe, others Feb 28 to account for Kanu’s whereabouts

    Court gives Abaribe, others Feb 28 to account for Kanu’s whereabouts

    A Federal High Court in Abuja has adjourned to February 28 for three sureties to leader of the proscribed Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) Nnamdi Kanu, including Senator Enyinnaya Abaribe, to either produce him in court or show cause why each of them should not forfeit his N100 million bail bond.

    The court had at the last proceedings on December 5, 2017, adjourned to yesterday for the sureties to explain why Kanu suddenly stopped attending court and account for his whereabouts.

    Abaribe has filed two applications. One is asking the court to discharge him as surety to Kanu. The other wants the court to inspect Kanu’s house in Abia State, where he was said to have been last seen.

    The trial judge, Justice Binta Nyako, also granted an application by the prosecution yesterday and ordered that Kanu’s trial be separated from those of his co-defendants.

    Kanu was in 2015 charged before the court with three others on treasonable felony charges.

    The others are the National Coordinator of IPOB, Chidiebere Onwudiwe; an IPOB member, Benjamin Madubugwu; and a former Field Maintenance Engineer seconded to the telecommunication company, MTN, David Nwawuisi.

    The court, in a ruling on April 25, 2017, granted bail to Kanu, but rejected others’ bail application.

    Kanu has ceased to attend court, with his lawyer, Ifeanyi Ejiofor, claiming he (Kanu) had been missing since some soldiers invaded his home in September last year.

    Yesterday, his co-defendants (who are in prison custody) were brought to court, Kanu was absent.

    The development prompted the prosecution lawyer, Shuaibu Labaran, to apply that the trial be separated to prevent further delay.

    Labaran noted that Kanu’s continued absence from court since he was granted bail in April 2017 has frustrated progress in the case

    He said: “In the circumstance, the prosecution shall be asking for the indulgence of your lordship to separate the trial so that progress can be made in this matter.”

    Lawyers to the defendants did not object to Labaran’s application, following which the trial judge granted it.

    Justice Nyako agreed with the prosecution that there was the need to separate Kanu’s trial from the others “to meet the justice of the case”.

    She said: “I hereby separate the trial of the first defendant from the rest of the defendants.”

    The judge also directed the prosecution to ensure that the charges were amended and served on the defendants before the next trial date.

    Upon complaint from Chukwudi Igwe, lawyer to another IPOB member, whose name has been added as defendant in an amended charge, Bright Chimezie, Justice Nyako directed the prosecution to act on his case.

    Igwe had complained that the State Security Service (SSS) was holding his client despite an order by a Federal High Court in Uyo, Akwa Ibom State, directing that he be released.

    He said, if by the next trial date the prosecution failed to reflect his client’s name in the fresh amendment to the charge, he would apply that the charge be struck out against Chimezie.

    The judge subsequently adjourned to March 20 for further proceedings.

  • Abaribe sues Army over Kanu’s whereabouts

    Abaribe sues Army over Kanu’s whereabouts

    •Judge absent at proscribed IPOB chief’s trial

    Senator Enyinnaya Abaribe (Abia South) has filed an application before a Federal High Court in Abuja demanding payment of N10 million to him for the psychological trauma he has gone through following alleged extra-judicial self-help actions of the Army Chief of Staff.

    Abaribe, who appeared as one of the three sureties for the bail granted to the leader of the proscribed Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) Nnamdi Kanu, filed the suit ahead of yesterday’s hearing in the trial of the IPOB leader.

    At the last adjourned date, the trial judge, Justice Binta Nyako, had ordered that Abaribe and the other sureties to appear in court to show cause why a bench warrant of arrest should not be granted against them.

    However, at the resume of sitting yesterday, Abaribe was in court.

    But Justice Nyako did not sit due to the judges’ conference she was attending in Abuja. She adjourned the trial till December 5.

    But in the application filed by Abaribe against the army, he is praying for an order of the court compelling the Chief of Army Staff to show cause why the Attorney General of the Federation should not be compelled to initiate contempt charges against him for his extra-judicial self-help conducts that allegedly frustrated the proceedings and course of  administration of justice in the bail and bail bond granted and executed in the trail of Kanu.

    The senator said the Chief of Army Staff’s actions ridiculed the court and made its power to appear nugatory as well as placing the applicant in a fixed up position. Abaribe said it was only the army that had the last contact with Kanu that can either produce him or explain the circumstances surrounding his whereabouts.

    Abaribe said to his surprise, the army subsequently declared IPOB a terrorist organisation and its members wanted.

    He added that all attempts and efforts thereafter made by him to contact Kanu by whatever means failed completely as there was no response and nobody, except the Army, could give any account of him.

  • Abaribe’s gamble

    The case involving Nnamdi Kanu, the leader of the proscribed Indigenous People of Biafra, IPOB, has been a hot topic since it began after his long period of incarceration by the Department of State Security, DSS. No sooner had he been released on bail than he began breaking every condition attached to the bail. He eventually committed the final act of defiance by jumping bail. For now, no one seems to know Kanu’s whereabouts, including his ‘brave’ sureties who are now engaged in finger pointing.

    Emmanuel El-Shalom Oka-Ben Madu, a Jewish High Priest, Tochukwu Uchendu, an accountant, and most significantly, Enyinnaya Abaribe, a senator representing Abia South, all valiantly stood as sureties for Kanu on a bail bond of N100 million each. After this, he was granted bail on very stringent conditions. Despite Kanu’s immediate display of disdain for his bail conditions, the brave trio stood firmly behind their man as he repeatedly broke every condition and made inciting comments. His disregard for constituted authority knows no bounds. Although the senator has now revealed that he cautioned Kanu against his excessive behaviour, it appears that the allure of openly associating with a cause that attracts wide support in Abia State was too much for the senator to contemplate backing out.

    The logic of becoming a surety to Kanu may not be difficult to decipher in Abaribe’s case, as it is no secret that he nurses the ambition to be governor of Abia State. The quest to score easy political capital in Abia may have now backfired on the ambitious senator. When his case came up last week, it was apparent that Kanu had, indeed, gone incommunicado as he was nowhere to be found. With this, the reality of possibly losing N100 million or imprisonment finally dawned on Abaribe. It, therefore, elicited a late reaction by the senator, through his lawyers, who applied for the senator to be discharged as surety for Kanu.

    In trying to make a case for the discharge of their client, the senator’s lawyers cited the military’s siege on Kanu’s home in September as extenuating circumstances, coupled with their belief that the military seized or fatally harmed Kanu during the said invasion. As is wide knowledge now, the court did not bulge, and the axe still dangles over the senator’s head.

    Beyond the histrionics of this case, it is evident that many people do not grasp the full import of standing surety for an accused person in a criminal case. People routinely stand surety for complete strangers in arranged transactions that involve receiving payment for putting their freedom and resources at risk. This form of touting is common in the courts in Nigeria, with court registrars and other court officials being sometimes complicit in the act.

    In this case, however, the senator’s ‘payment’, as it were, may be in the form of political capital the senator is hoping to reap. But this act may eventually cost him more if Kanu does not turn up between now and November 20, the time the court has graciously granted the senator to produce him. Unlike Ayo Fayose, the Ekiti State governor, and Femi Fani-Kayode who are courting friends in the South-east through their support for Nnamdi Kanu at no risk to their finances, the senator may now have to earn his keep.

    It is unlikely though that the senator and others are in any serious danger of imprisonment. This is because that eventuality is offset by forfeiture of the bail bond of N100 million which will suffice to discharge their responsibilities as sureties, if they can fulfil it. What many may not know which has contributed to touting in the courts in regards to bail bonds is the actual practice of the courts regarding sureties.

    The law concerning bail generally envisages actual deposit of the bail sums in court as security for the appearance of the accused at the next adjourned date. In practice, however, this sum is not actually deposited, as the sureties have always satisfied the courts by instead depositing title documents to properties of the value of the bail sum as security. The problem here is that, the value of property can be inflated, or the documents may not be authentic.

    Little is known about the other two sureties, but one can safely assume that the senator is “good for the money” so to say. There is another danger here, one that is far more significant to Nigerian law and it is shown by the boldness of the senator’s lawyers in asking that he be discharged as surety at this juncture. First, the accused has gone AWOL. Secondly, the claims that the military has seized Kanu, including the reports of many killed at his residence are unsubstantiated. The army has denied responsibility for his disappearance and the presidency has echoed its stance, so there is little to hold this claim before the courts.

    The answer to Abaribe’s legal team’s boldness can be found in the Administration of Criminal Justice Act (ACJA) 2015. Section 177 (1) of the ACJA allows a surety to apply “at any time” to be discharged as a surety. Sub-section (2) of that section further states that “on an application under sub-section  (1)…the court shall issue a warrant for the arrest of the defendant on whose behalf the recognizance was executed and on his appearance, shall discharge the recognizance either wholly or so far as relates to the applicant…”. This provision justifies Abaribe’s lawyers’ application and more importantly, seems to absolve the surety of responsibility for the whereabouts of the principal – the accused person.

    It seems, by this provision, that Abaribe’s application and a warrant of arrest for Kanu, will suffice to hold off further action on the sureties until Kanu is found. Although his appearance concludes the discharge, there is no compelling provision that triggers forfeiture in the interim. Depending on the attitude of the court in this case, we may be on for what will become an indefinite stay of proceedings, as this defective drafting is likely to lead to another adjournment come November 20, if Kanu remains missing.

    There is also the issue of a serving senator standing as a surety in a criminal case. Not many people have spoken out about this. The fact is, it is a potentially disruptive act on his senatorial duties. Assuming he cannot meet the bail bond, he would be liable to be committed to prison for six months. Therefore, committing to such risks is unfair to his constituents and the country as a whole as these considerations should have been in mind before Abaribe jumped to Kanu’s aid. As always, personal gain seems to have been at the forefront of his decision, true to the tendencies of the ruling elite.

    In developed countries, it would be unspeakable for a sitting senator to stick his head into a criminal matter in this way. Whether through negligence or through careful and deliberate political calculation, a senator of the federal republic has stuck his nose in a criminal affair. It appears he is now poised to explore legal loopholes to avoid responsibility for his actions. In the least, it will be only right for the senator to forfeit the N100 million bond for his lack of forethought and recklessness. In a country with a deficit of shame, however, it will not be surprising to see legal and political gymnastics carry the day again.

    In the final analysis, one would think that to save time, and having had prior knowledge of the claims of Abaribe’s lawyers, the prosecution ought to have obtained an official document or statement on oath from the Chief of Army Staff and/or the Presidency reiterating their innocence in the disappearance of Kanu or knowledge of his whereabouts. The way this case is turning out, Nigerians are not looking forward to months and years of stalling in this matter. As it stands, only swift action by the courts is paramount to show seriousness in putting the IPOB matter to rest. For now, the Kanu episode remains a festering sore on the face of the nation.