• Thursday, March 28, 2024
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BusinessDay

#EndSARS: NBA calls for respect of legal, fundamental rights of Nigerians

Ours is a broken system no one wants to fix, says outgoing NBA president.

The Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) has called on authorities, particularly security agencies to respect the legal and fundamental rights of the Nigerian citizens, following the ugly incidences that trailed the recent protests in Nigerian.

Olumide Akpata, president, NBA, made the call in a statement available to Businessday after receiving several calls and complaints from lawyers and Nigerians generally, about the recent public parade of hundreds of persons arrested and detained by the Nigerian Police on the suspicion of taking part in the looting and destruction of public buildings and private businesses and/or for contravening the curfew declared by various state governors in the aftermath of the #EndSARS protests that unfortunately turned violent.

In the statement, dated 29th of October 2020, Akpata, said while he has consistently maintained that the NBA is completely opposed to any act of arson, vandalism, destruction of public or private assets, or other forms of force or violence, the legal rights of citizens who are arrested on account of such allegations must be respected, especially their right to the presumption of innocence.

He explained that in many, if not most of these cases, these people have been held incommunicado for days without access to their families or legal practitioners of their choice and under inhumane or deplorable conditions in brazen breach of the express provisions of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria 1999 (as amended) which presumes all suspects and defendants innocent until proven guilty; prohibit the detention of citizens beyond 24-48 hours; forbid the subjection of Nigerian citizens to torture or to inhuman or degrading treatment; and mandates the police and other law enforcement agencies to bring such persons to court within 24-48 hours.

“It beggars belief that this conduct by the Nigerian Police is coming on the heels of the End SARS protests which were precipitated by the historical abuse of citizens by men and officers of the Nigerian Police especially those of the now-defunct Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS), and the aftermath of which is yet to fully die down.

“It is highly regrettable that the Police in particular continues to carry on business as usual despite being in the eye of the storm in recent times and in disregard of the wide outpouring of condemnation by Nigerians at home and abroad as well as foreign nationals and international organisations about the misconduct of some of their officers,” Akpata stated.

This gives the indication that the Police hierarchy has failed to get the message and/or is paying lip service to the calls for holistic Police reforms, he adds.

Hence, the NBA called on the Nigerian Police and the Attorneys General of the various States to immediately charge the suspects before courts of competent jurisdiction in accordance with contemporary requirements of the law, or to release them unconditionally.

Although he noted that the wanton destruction of public buildings and private businesses witnessed in the past week was highly regrettable; Akpata, however, said the cure for illegality cannot be illegality.

“I have asked the chairpersons of NBA Branches across the country to immediately monitor Police Stations within their jurisdictions to ascertain the extent of compliance of the Police with the fundamental rights provisions of the Constitution to enable us to take or facilitate adequate enforcement actions,” he said.