Tag: Tonye Okio

  • ‘Dickson after me for refusing to join PDP’

    Isreal Sunny-Goli, the only lawmaker in the Bayelsa State House of Assembly elected on the platform of the All Progressives Congress (APC) on Friday said the state Governor, Seriake Dickson, was after him following his refusal to join the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    Dickson in a damning statement accused Sunny-Goli of cultism and masterminding all the violent clashes that led to deaths and injuries in Twon Brass, Brass Local Government Area of the state.

    The governor lamented that despite all the petitions against the lawmaker, security agencies refused to arrest and prosecute him because of his membership of the APC.

    But the lawmaker in an interview denied all the allegations against him stating that Dickson and the PDP became desperate because he was contesting the Nembe/ Brass House Federal Constituency on the APC platform.

    Sunny-Goli, who represents Brass Constituency 1, said his persecution increased because he refused overtures to defect to the PDP and contest the federal seat.

    He said the PDP government in the state which was looking for ways to prosecute him on thumped-up charges because of his rising political profile

    According to him his two supporters were killed in Brass and a petition was forwarded to the Police to ensure legitimate means were taken to unravel those behind the alleged murders and bring them to book.

    Read Also: Ijaw can’t be intimidated, says Dickson

    He said: “Since August 23 when Kelly Ikurusi and Peter George were killed, APC in Bayelsa has been in mourning.  I don’t know why a government that claims it does not condone crime and criminality would encourage Bayelsa youths to prevent Police detectives from doing their work.

    “I have told the Police our concern and that is that we shall follow the path of the law and ensure that involved in the alleged murder are brought to book. No amount of intimidation would make us back down”

    Also the state chapter of APC described the order by Dickson for the arrest of Sunny -Goli as one of the many example of intimidation by the PDP.

    The Publicity Secretary of the APC in the state, Doifie Buokoribo, said it was unfortunate that the lawmaker, who was the victim of the attack was now been targeted for victimization by the self-styled PDP Restoration Government.

    “This is not the first time Dickson has embarked  on such venture, one of such occasions was the illegal manipulated incarceration  of chief Samuel Ogbuku and Tonye Okio.

    “We wonder why Dickson instead of allowing security agencies to do their job by unraveling the circumstances behind the brutal killing of three APC supports in Twon Brass is going round to cry wolf when the actual wolf is himself.

    “The governor should explain how the prime-suspect in the murder managed to escape arrest by security agencies carrying out their lawful duty if not with the support of the administration in the state”, he said.

     

  • ‘Why police are holding Tonye Okio’

    ‘Why police are holding Tonye Okio’

    Tonye Okio loves the social networking site Facebook and has used it to consistently call attention to alleged misgovernance in Bayelsa State and Nigeria. On October 26, policemen from Bayelsa State allegedly abducted him in his house in Abuja and drove him, shackled, to Bayelsa. He is now facing a charge of criminal defamation based on his Facebook postings. Seun Akioye spoke with Doifie Buokoribo, a human rights activist who says Tonye’s detention is political.

    Tell us the events that led to Tonye Okio’s arrest and why?

    Mr. Tonye Okio has been in detention since October 26. He was abducted from his residence in Abuja on October 26, by armed gunmen who didn’t explain their mission, nobody knew where they came from, and they didn’t identify themselves. We got to know that same day through a phone call by his sister who lived with him.

    His sister was there?

    When they got to the house, they forced their way into his house; they seized all their electronic gadgets to prevent them from reaching for outside help. When they took him, they just locked the young girl up inside the house and left. They didn’t tell her where they were taking him to, when that happened, we thought he had been kidnapped and there was panic everywhere. We tried to contact all the police stations nearby, nobody had any information.

    We called a contact in the Force headquarters who asked us to give him some time and we got to know it was the police from Bayelsa sent by Governor Dickson that had taken him and we tried to trace where he was and found he was at the Abuja headquarters of the police. So we were able to track him down and it was strange that the police had to come all the way from Bayelsa to come and arrest a citizen. Ordinarily, even if he had committed an offense, the thing to do is to possibly approach a magistrate court and get an order for his arrest.

    Even if the police needed him to explain anything, they would have invited him, but in this instance no such invitations were given, they just came and seized him and locked him up.

    You said his arrest was on the orders of the Bayelsa State governor, do you have a proof of the governor’s involvement in this despicable act?

    There is no evidence you need than the fact that the governor himself had complained to the police that Mr. Tonye Okio defamed him. And the police itself did issue a statement that they have arrested Mr. Tonye Okio for seditious publication. But sadly, maybe the police didn’t know that there was no such offense called seditious publication under our laws. There is no such an offense in our statue books, but at the end of the day they charged him for criminal defamation.

    Please continue, when he was taken to the Police Headquarters in Abuja?

    They just took him there possibly to lodge a formal report. The idea was to fly him to Yenagoa the same day, but somehow, they couldn’t do their ticketing and flight arrangement properly; so, when that failed, they then took him by road that same Saturday that he was abducted, they drove all night and arrived at Yenagoa at 3: am.

    Drove from Abuja?

    Yes they drove all night.

    In what condition was he transported to Yenagoa?

    From the affidavit sworn to by the lawyer, we gathered that he was chained legs and feet, blindfolded throughout the whole journey so he didn’t even know where he was, till they got to Bayelsa. We were told that he was taken to Government House where a set of fresh instructions were given before he was driven to the state CID where he was held for well over 10 days. Now during the period when he was held, he had to file for the reinforcement of his fundamental human rights because under our laws you cannot hold him for more than 24 hours.

    A day before the hearing of the suit, the police played a smart one by taking him to a magistrate court without prior information to him or his lawyers. The magistrate read the charges and when he pleaded not guilty the judge did a kangaroo stuff and remanded him and adjourned for two weeks.

    So he was taken back to the magistrate court after two weeks?

    Yes, this time the matter was properly heard, they applied for bail which the magistrate admitted him to under the condition that a serving permanent secretary in Bayelsa has to stand in for him with the sum of N5million. Now, Dickson is a complainant in this matter, every permanent secretary in Bayelsa is scared stiff to be involved in this matter. For an agent of the governor to come and release somebody the governor himself has locked up. You can imagine that kind of situation. There is no permanent secretary who is ready to stand surety for Tonye and his lawyer actually complained to the judge that this condition is not likely to be met because the complainant is the governor and the permanent secretaries are his agents.

    The sad thing is that it will appear that even the judiciary in Bayelsa is working in cahoots with the governor.

    Is that the only condition the court could have given him?

    That is what they have done, so technically they will say nobody is holding him, let him meet his bail conditions and go away but these are conditions Tonye cannot meet. The governor is the chief complainant in this matter, he is being represented in court as a complainant along with the police and then you ask his agents to come and bail him. What Tonye has now done is to apply to the High Court of Bayelsa for a variation of the bail condition. Three times the judge didn’t turn up until they fixed December 18 for a ruling, on that day too, the judge didn’t turn up, and the registrar then adjourned the matter to January 20. So we have a situation where an innocent young man, for exercising his rights to free speech has been in detention for well over two months, he has spent Christmas there and will spend the New Year, how callous can people be?

    Let’s revert to the accusations against him; do you have an insight into what this accusation could be?

    It was on the basis of his comments on Facebook. He was alleged to have written on his facebook page that a certain Southsouth governor has been caught with hard currencies in the USA; he didn’t mention any name of the governor but apparently governor Dickson was out of the country so maybe through innuendoes he felt he was the one. So for me as an activist and a Nigerian citizen, I expect if somebody has been defamed the option is to go to court not to use the police to harass anybody. The law doesn’t permit that. Dickson unfortunately is a lawyer and it is sad that an officer of the law can behave in this reckless manner he has chosen. He doesn’t own Bayelsa, it belongs to all of us, we are all citizens equal before the law. He is just a mere tenant in government house. Indeed, he was not elected governor by appointed by Governor Goodluck Jonathan who prevented Chief Sylva from standing for re-election.

    You sound as if there is a political tone to this?

    Certainly, make no mistakes about it, this is clearly a political vendetta, Tonye on his page has consistently criticised both Dr. Goodluck Jonathan and Governor Seriake Dickson. He believes they have not given the best to Bayelsa and to Nigeria, he believes they are a huge embarrassment to the people of Bayelsa state, Ijaw nation, to Nigerians and the black race. There is so much to be done both in the state and the federal level; there is now a state of anomy, so much lethargy. All you hear are stories of corruption, scandals. This is the worst of times to come from Bayelsa state, the worst of times to be identified as an Ijaw person. The kind of leadership that is offered by governor Dickson and his master Dr. Jonathan is so disappointing.

    Is that the crusade of Tonye Okio?

    Exactly, he believes we can do better. The only reason why he has to be abducted, arrested, kept in prison custody and kept him away for this long is to send a message that anyone who opposes the system will end up like Tonye, unfortunately they have not succeeded and they will not succeed. This style has been used by little dictators in the past and it has not worked.

    As a civil society activist who has also been critical of the government, do you have any fears for your freedom?

    I have come very far as an activist. As a teenager and young person I have led the student movement. I am far older now to entertain any fear from the little dictator. I was a pro democracy activist under the Babangida and Abacha dictatorship; I was a political journalist at The News/Tempo to entertain any fear. Nobody can fault my professional standing, whatever I say, I am prepared to defend anywhere in the world. But we have lawless elements that have no respects for the rules they themselves made, but God determines our life.

    How is Tonye faring now?

    It is better imagined than experienced, we should not wish this for our enemies, when you are deprived of your freedom from your family at this period. What this means is that they don’t have the intellectual capacity and the grace and broadmindedness to lead the people. If they cannot take criticism they have no right being in government. Tonye has only acted as a citizen to make political demands on the government. Nigeria belongs to us all, if you are a temporary occupant in government house, you have no greater right than others. For Dickson, am not sure he would pray his successor will treat Bayelsans the way he is treating them.

     

  • Sylva’s loyalist knows fate today on bail

    Sylva’s loyalist knows fate today on bail

    The Nembe High Court sitting in Yenagoa, Bayelsa State, has fixed ruling for today on an application filed by Mr. Tonye Okio, a loyalist of the former Bayelsa State Governor Timpre Sylva, seeking to review his bail conditions.

    A magistrate’s court last month asked Okio to provide N5 million and a resident permanent secretary as surety.

    Okio and the Managing Director, FAK Engineering, Mr. Fakuma Ilagha, were nabbed and detained by the police for alleged conspiracy and defamation against Governor Seriake Dickson.

    After spending over two weeks in a police cell, the duo were arraigned last month before Chief Magistrate J.B. Lockie at the Magistrate’s Court 3.

    While Ilagha was granted bail after satisfying the conditions, Okio remained helpless.

    His lawyers approached the High Court seeking a review of the bail conditions.

    The counsel, led by Bamidele Aturu, on Monday asked Justice Lucky Buofini to look into the terms of the bail granted Okio on November 21.

    They appealed to the court to make an order admitting the accused to a condition with “surety of a lesser rank than a permanent secretary.”

    Aturu said the application and the order were in line with the provisions of “Section 120 of the Criminal Procedure Laws of Bayelsa State and the inherent jurisdiction order of the High Court.”

    He said the application was backed by an 11-paragraph affidavit.

    Aturu averred that the application became necessary because the person purportedly defamed by his client was the governor and that the permanent secretary stipulated as surety was appointed by the governor.

    Said he: “The complainant is the Bayelsa Governor and the bail term is for a permanent secretary to serve as surety.

    “It is unlikely that a permanent secretary appointed by him will risk his career. It is wrong for the magistrate’s court to ask such a surety to stand.

    “We are asking the court to exercise his undoubted expression of justice and review the bail down to a deputy director.”

    But counsel to the state, Mr. Arthur Andrew Seweniowor, filed a counter-application asking the court to throw out the application.

  • Sylva’s loyalist sues Dickson, police

    Sylva’s loyalist sues Dickson, police

    After languishing in a Bayelsa State police cell for six days, Mr. Tonye Okio, a loyalist of former Governor of the state, Mr. Timipre Sylva, on Thursday initiated a court process to regain his freedom.

    Okio dragged the state Governor, Mr. Seriake Dickson, the police and the Attorney-General of the state before the state High Court sitting in Yenagoa challenging his “continued unlawful detention.”

    Okio, who was bundled from his Abuja residence to Bayelsa State by security operatives was initially believed to have been abducted by unknown gunmen.

    But the police in a statement signed by the Acting Police Public Relations Officer, Mr. Peter Ogboi, confirmed that Okio was being detained in the state police command.

    The police claimed his arrest and detention was part of an investigation into alleged activities of a syndicate specialised in spreading seditious information.

    Okio’s travails started shortly after he allegedly published in his Facebook page that a certain South-south governor was recently arrested in the United States of America with $5million.

    But Okio in a suit slated for hearing on November 6 is asking the court to award him N2billion for his unlawful arrest and detention and N20million as damages for the pain, trauma, anguish and loss he suffered from the activities of the defendants.

    He wants the court to declare that his arrest and detention is contrary to section 35 of the 1999 constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

    He also wants a declaration that his “arrest and detention on the basis of a publication on his Facebook account was a brazen violation of his fundamental rights.”

    He prayed the court to rule that the physical and mental torture he has been subjected to amounted to a denial of his right to dignity.