30 NIGERIANS LANGUISHING IN TANZANIAN PRISONS FOR 3 YEARS WITHOUT TRIAL

No fewer than 30 Nigerians who have been in detention in Tanzanian for about three years without trial, have cried out to the Federal Government to intervene to ensure that justice is served and save them from dying in foreign land.

Alleging starvation, torture and lack of basic provisions, the Nigerians said they were arrested at different times between 2010 and 2012 for sundry offences, including drug trafficking, but are yet to be arraigned, “due to lack of evidence and corruption” on the side of the Tanzanian law enforcement officials.
The Nigerians are being held in Keko Remand Prison, said to be notorious for its lack of basic amenities and congestion, which sometimes result in health problems and avoidable deaths.

Strangely, apart from praying for the intervention of President Goodluck Jonathan, the detained Nigerians believe that “the only other force” that can set them free from their incarceration is Pastor Temitope Joshua of the Synagogue Church of All Nations, Ikotun, Lagos.
The save our soul message was conveyed through a phone call from the prison in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania’s major port city, to the Daily Sun recently by the detainees who claimed that the Nigerian High Commission in the country has not lived up to its consular responsibility to them. They said the mission has been very insensitive to their plight.

According to the callers, one of who gave his name as Chris, and spoke on behalf of the Nigerians in hushed tone, those arrested for drug related crimes, had their documents, personal belongings and the substances in their possession, pilfered and sold by the Tanzanian drug enforcement agents for personal gains.

The result, Chris told Daily Sun, is that without exhibits and other incriminating pieces of evidence, the various cases involving the Nigerians have consistently been stalled for years as the officials do not have anything to work with in court.

The Nigerians also disclosed that the Tanzanian authorities have been blaming their inability to take their cases to court on lack of funds – a claim corroborated on phone by a Nigerian High Commission source in that country.

The telephone interview with the detainee lasted for some minutes at a particular time each day for about three different days, apparently because he was using an unauthorized set which he seemed to have limited access to.

His story: “In my own case, I was arrested in March, 2012. They took everything I had on me, including money, the day they arrested me and there is no trace of them now. More than a year and half after, they keep telling me that they are still investigating. The other Nigerian whose voice you are hearing, was arrested a year before me. There are many other Nigerians that were here before I was arrested, but nobody has been taken to court. They keep telling us that investigations are still going on.

“No court appearance, no medicine, no feeding, no water. We are dying gradually. The cell itself is like hell. Ordinarily, this cell where I am calling you from, is not supposed to accommodate more than 16 people, but there are about 50 black foreigners packed here like in the days of slave trade.
“There was a day the inmates decided to protest the inhuman condition in the prison, especially lack of water, and the result was that we were locked up and severely beaten. The water (supply) was cut and the protesters began to faint after day three of the protest. Yet, nothing has changed. Even when we informed the Nigerian embassy, they did not protest.”

Curiously, each time they hear the Nigerians bemoan their fate, the same drug law enforcement officers and warders responsible for their condition remind them that it is an irony that they are citizens of an influential country like Nigeria, and have a powerful prophet like Pastor T. B. Joshua, at home, and yet are suffering in a foreign land.

Chris went on: “One of the top officers of the anti-drug trafficking police here told us that he had visited the Synagogue in Lagos, and that T.B. Joshua is a powerful man of God who can help set us free using his spiritual powers. That is why we are praying that President Jonathan and T. B. Joshua hear about our case. We were told that if Joshua reads about our case in the newspaper, he will pray for us to be released”.

The prison inmates alleged that despite many efforts to get assistance from the Nigerian High Commission, all the help they have so far received was in form a visit to their cells in March, 2013, during which they were given “mere toiletries”.

Asked how he got the telephone number of the reporter, Chris who claims he hails from Imo State, disclosed that he copied the number from the motoring page one of the copies of The Sun “smuggled into the cell for us” by people he did not name.

Pressed further for proof, Chris added: “We managed to get some copies of The Sun and sports papers just to know what is happening at home… we saw names like Robert Obioha… ehm Onuoha Ukeh, Funke Egbemode…(The Sun columnists).

Contacted on phone, a top official of the Nigerian High Commission in Tanzania, who did not want his name mentioned, because, according to him, he did not have the mandate to comment on the matter, confirmed that the mission has been aware that some Nigerian are being held in Keko Remand Prison, but blamed them for being victims of their own greed.

He said that upon receiving information that “about 13 Nigerians” were being detained in the prison, the mission visited them with provisions, adding “we have been in touch with them. It should not be made to look like we don’t know what to do. We know what we should do, and we have been doing it; we are on top of the situation”.
Apart from contacting the families of some of them in Nigeria, the source said the High Commission also took the matter to the relevant authorities in Tanzania, including the office of the Director of Public Prosecution (DPP), where it was learnt, as the Nigerian inmates had earlier claimed, that there was no money to prosecute the cases.
He disclosed that even beyond the normal diplomatic channels, the mission had at different times reached out to some of the host agencies handling the cases, arguing, however, that there are limitations, and “we cannot perform magic, but we are not sleeping on the matter”.

He further disclosed that before the cases were brought to the knowledge of the High Commission, some of the Nigerians had already spent about two years in the prison, while the only lady involved refused to cooperate with the mission’s officials, apparently because she, like some of her colleagues, did not want to face the shame of her identity being exposed.

Dismissing the argument that if the Federal Government had intervened through the Foreign Affairs Ministry, the Nigerians would have received justice by now, the source stated: “It is not true. These are serious cases. It was their greed that landed them in this situation. They were desperate … when I visited them, I prayed for them, but it was their fault.

“Last year, a young Nigerian died in his hotel room in this country as a result of swallowing wraps of hard drugs which later burst in his stomach. We were contacted. So, some of these cases are as a result of their being desperate and that makes our work difficult”.

With the Tanzanian authorities insisting they don’t have money to prosecute the cases, some of which have been stalled for as long as three years, what is the way out?

“That is the point now and we are strategizing on that. The state says it has no money to hire judicial officials. If you don’t have money, why not deport the Nigerians you are detaining?” High Commission source asked rhetorically.

Reacting to the claim by the source that the High Commission has been discharging its responsibilities properly, and on top of the situation, Chris and his colleagues insisted that enough has not been done by Nigeria’s representatives in the country to ensure that the detainees get justice.

He retorted: “People from other embassies come here every week to see their citizens, but people at our own embassy don’t care. Even the warders and police officers here tell us that not enough has been done by our country to get justice for us. The truth is that it is not just lack of money that is keeping us here. They don’t have evidence against us. That is why they can’t take us to court. When they arrest you, they take all your documents, your money and sell the exhibit. And, if they don’t have money to send us to court and they don’t have proof, why still keep us in prison? Justice delayed is justice denied”

Maintaining his accusation of “insensitivity and incompetence” against the Nigeria mission in Tanzania, Chris added: “If they had come out boldly to demand justice or even hired lawyers on our behalf, by now all the cases would have been settled. Those people are not serious. They are arrogant. As if they did us a big favour, they keep reminding us that they came here with provisions. But, what they actually brought were pomade and one or two other things”.

Despite repeated request sent to the High Commission by Daily Sun for the High Commissioner’s comments, the mission refused to react officially to the detainees’ plight. Rather, it was gathered that the officials contacted the Nigerians in the prison and berated them for reporting the situation to the press back home, maintaining that diplomatic matters are not resolved through publications in foreign media.

Source:The Sun..Written by Moses Akaigwe

CKN NEWS

Chris Kehinde Nwandu is the Editor In Chief of CKNNEWS || He is a Law graduate and an Alumnus of Lagos State University, Lead City University Ibadan and Nigerian Institute Of Journalism || With over 2 decades practice in Journalism, PR and Advertising, he is a member of several Professional bodies within and outside Nigeria || Member: Institute Of Chartered Arbitrators ( UK ) || Member : Institute of Chartered Mediators And Conciliation || Member : Nigerian Institute Of Public Relations || Member : Advertising Practitioners Council of Nigeria || Fellow : Institute of Personality Development And Customer Relationship Management || Member and Chairman Board Of Trustees: Guild Of Professional Bloggers of Nigeria

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