Members of the #BringBackOurGirls coalition have asked a
court to order the Federal Capital Territory Commissioner of
Police, Joseph Mbu, to pay them N200m as damages for violating
their rights.
Their request is contained in a suit they filed at a Federal High Court
in the FCT on Tuesday challenging the ban on rallies in the FCT by Mbu.
Shortly after their lawyer, Femi Falana headed for the
court, Inspector-General of Police, Mohammed Abubakar,
over-ruled the CP.
He said since the Nigeria Police Force had not issued any order banning
peaceful assemblies/protests anywhere in Nigeria, the ban announced by the
controversial FCT police commissioner could not stand.
Mbu had said on Monday said that the trend the protests for
the release of the over 200 Chibok schoolgirls by Boko Haram was
taking made the ban necessary.
He claimed that shortly after the #BringBackOurGirls’ Group protested on
April 28, another group ‘‘ReleaseOurGirls’’ emerged, a development he said
constituted a security threat to the FCT.
“Protests on the Chibok girls are hereby banned with immediate effect.
As the FCT police boss, I cannot fold my hands and watch this lawlessness
(protests). Information reaching us is that too soon, dangerous elements will
join groups under the guise of protest and detonate explosives aimed at
embarrassing the government,” the CP had said.
His announcement immediately drew criticisms from human rights lawyers
and activists with the Oby Ezekwesili-led BBOG vowing to contest the ban in
court.
But Abubakar, who spoke through the Force Public Relations Officer,
Frank Mba, on Tuesday, said the NPF only issued advisory notice enjoining
Nigerians to apply caution during rallies, particularly in the FCT and its
environs.
This he said, was against the backdrop of the current security
challenges in the country, “coupled with a recent intelligence report of a
likely infiltration and hijack of otherwise innocuous and peaceful protests by
some criminal elements having links with insurgents.”
The IG said the Police high command regarded peaceful
rallies as the constitutional and democratic rights of Nigerians.
He stressed the need for the organisers of rallies to ensure that they
sought proper advice and guidance from the Police before engaging in
such so as to avoid any unpleasant circumstances.
Abubakar said, “The Police high command wishes to inform the general
public that the force has not issued any order banning peaceful
assemblies/protests anywhere in Nigeria.
“The Police only issued advisory notice, enjoining citizens to apply
caution while holding rallies, particularly in the FCT and its environs.”
The IG called on the general public to see the present position of the
force as a necessary sacrifice for the peace of the nation.
He said, “Citizens are strongly advised to reconsider their positions on
the issues of rallies and protests in FCT until the existing threats are
appropriately neutralised and removed from our midst by relevant security
agencies.”
Abubakar reassured Nigerians of the commitment of the police to the
protection of lives and property and advancing the course of democracy in the country.
When contacted for her reaction, the BBOG Coordinator and former
Minister of Education, Oby Ezekwesili, said the group had instituted a suit
against the FCT police in court.
She added that she would not speak further until the issue
was decided by the judiciary.
In the suit, the BBOG asked an FCT Federal High Court to
award N200m to its members as damages for the violation of their rights by the
CP.
Falana, a Senior Advocate of Nigeria and a rights activist, had in the
suit he filed on behalf of the BBOG members,
contended that Mbu’s directive constituted a violation
of his clients’ “fundamental rights to freedom of conscience, expression,
assembly and association as guaranteed by sections 38, 39 and 40 of the 1999
Constitution.”
He added that such directive violated the said rights of his clients
guaranteed under Articles 8, 9, 10 and 11 of the African Charter on Human and
Peoples’ Rights (Ratification and Enforcement) Act, 2004.
The plaintiffs urged the court to, among other prayers, declare
that Mbu’s decision to ban protests and rallies in the FCT with effect from
Monday (June 1) was illegal, unconstitutional, null and void.
One of their four prayers read thus, “An order of perpetual injunction
restraining the respondent, his agents and privies from further preventing the
applicants or aggrieved Nigerians from taking part in protests and rallies in
exercise of their freedom of expression, assembly and association as guaranteed
by sections 38, 39 and 40 of the 1999 Constitution and Articles
8, 9, 10 and 11 of the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights
(Ratification and Enforcement) Act, 2004.”
Apart from Ezekwesili, who is the 10th plaintiff, others are
Hadiza Bala Usman, Mr. Samuel Yaga, Mrs Rebecca Yaga, Mrs Sarah Ishaya, Mallam
Dunama Mpur, Lawan Abana, Dr. Pogu Bitrus and Dauda Iliya.
The Kibaku Area Development Association, Maryam
Uwais, Bashir Yusuf, Jibrin Ibrahim, Jibrin Ibrahim, Saudatu Mahdi, Bukky
Shonibare, Rotimi Olawale and Florence Ozor are also plaintiffs.
The first plaintiff, Usman, deposed to a 25-paragraph affidavit in
support of the suit, in which she said that the BBOG movement never engaged in
any form of violent protests.
She averred that a group of the Women for Peace and Justice, to which
she belonged, had been engaged in daily advocacy and campaign for 31 days “on
the plight of the abducted schoolgirls. ”.
She added that the group had on May 28, 2014, written a letter to the IG
and Mbu, notifying them of its activities which were being
conducted “with utmost civility.”
The protesters, after filing the suit staged a short
procession to the National Human Rights Commission which is located along the
same Trigris Crescent. They sang solidarity songs and brandished their protest
banners.
Before the IG’s directive , a former Lagos State Commissioner of Police,
Alhaji Abubakar Tsav and the National Publicity Secretary of Afenifere, Yinka
Odumakin, described Mbu’s action as a clear case of the violation of the rights
of Nigerians to hold peaceful protests.
Tsav said, “The ban by the Police over Chibok girls protests in Abuja is
a rape of justice to mankind and a denial of the rights of the people to hold
peaceful demonstration.
“This is clearly a deliberate attempt by the Federal Government to cover
its inefficiency and awful failure to provide security for the people.”
On his part, Odumakin said, “Freedom of assembly is constitutionally
guaranteed in a democracy and the police authorities must respect that.
“While there is need to maintain public order, there is no evidence that
the protests have degenerated to likely breach of public peace, except the
police have information that we don’t have.”
Falana and other human rights lawyers like Bamidele Aturu, Festus Keyamo
and Femi Aborisade called on the IG to sanction Mbu for
embarrassing the police.
Falana, who insisted that his clients would not withdraw
their suit despite Abubakar’s intervention, recalled that Mbu “had in the same
way embarrassed the police in Rivers State.”
He said, “We did not sue the IG ; we only sued the FCT Commissioner of
Police. Even with the IG ’s clarification, we will not withdraw the suit
because the CP has already violated their (protesters’) rights and
we have no instruction to withdraw the case.
“The IG came out to say that Nigerians were entitled to police
protection when they are demonstrating peacefully. But having come to that
conclusion, it is hoped that Mbu will be sanctioned.
“This was the way the way he repeatedly embarrassed the police when he
was CP in Rivers State. He deliberately promoted tension there
until the IG intervened by asking the police to give protection to
those who wanted to demonstrate.
“With this clarification given by the police will continue to give
protection to the women.”
Keyamo said the police authorities should deploy Mbu to “a small
computer department, where he would be playing computer games all day.”
“Let the IG deploy him to the computer department instead of allowing
him to be embarrassing the police, himself and his family all the time. This is
exactly what he did in Rivers State, allowing himself to be used by
politicians,” Keyamo said.
Aturu suggested that Mbu should “be evaluated by the Police
Service Commission to determine whether he knows what the police should be
doing in a democracy.”
He added that the citizens should condemn the PSC for allowing people
like Mbu to remain in the police.
He said, “I have since been vindicated that Mbu’s unguarded statement,
which he passed off as a directive, must have really embarrassed the police.
“I think the people should even by criticising the PSC for allowing
people like Mbu to remain in the police.”
On his part, Aborisade said, “It is not enough
for the IG to overrule Mbu. Mbu ought to be sanctioned through suspension
and/or expulsion from the police f for the assault, which his purported ban or
protests had caused Nigerians.”
Yu pple r mad OOo! 200m 4wot nah God wot's dis nah those children r suffering n yu r here doin biz wiv their lives.
ReplyDeleteI tire oooo!!! 200m? Chai dis ppl self come and collect naa
ReplyDeleteAnd that is why I don't blame the man that ban them because u can see that most of them are not even concerned they are just doing politices with the whole thing
ReplyDeleteThieves..oleeee
ReplyDeletewot'll they do wiv d money if I may ask?
ReplyDeleteOby na waa for u 200m for which yeye group. Mbu for leave dem make Bh bomb dem.....thieves. what have you so called protest achieved..for they are sincere they should go to sambisa forest to protest not in fct.
ReplyDeleteHw much 'l d parents of d abducted girls nw charge FG?
ReplyDelete