• Saturday, April 20, 2024
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Let court decide El- Zakzaky’s fate- Presidency

El- Zakzaky

The Presidency on Friday appealed to El-Zakzaky-led Shiite members to desist from needless violent street protests and await the decision of the court in Kaduna where their leader is currently being tried.

This is just as the Presidency vowed that no amount of pressures from the followers would compel President Muhammadu Buhari to stop h El-Zakzaky’s trial

In a statement by the Senior Special Assistant to the President on Media and Publicity, Garba Shehu, the Presidency said the issue of El-ZakZaky was before a court in Kaduna and that his supporters should focus on his on-going trial instead of causing daily destruction, disruptions and public nuisance in Abuja.

In an apparent reaction to the persistent protests by the group which appear to have defiled all government efforts to curtail them, the Presidency said that: “It is wrong to be in court and resort to violence at the same time in order to get justice for anybody accused.”

The Presidency warned that the destruction of public property in the name of protests was not within the right of this group of Shiite members, adding that “no government anywhere would have tolerated a situation where any group would take over public roads in cities as they have done in Abuja and interfere with the rights of other citizens who are prevented from reaching their destinations.”

“We imagine a situation where families are taking their loved ones to hospital for emergency treatment and they are held up needlessly by the protesters. No government anywhere in the world would turn a blind eye to this unlawful behaviour.

“As far as this country’s Ministry of Justice is concerned, the case involving El-Zakzaky is no longer in its domain. The Federal Government no more has hands in the matter and to that extent, the government at the centre can be said to be clear of any alleged violations of court orders as being trumpeted everyday,” the statement noted.

“These rallies and street dances ostensibly to openly insult the President and other leaders, threatening bloodshed will lead nowhere because President Buhari will not ask the country’s judiciary to abandon due process and set a suspect free,” it added.

The Presidency also assured the group that Buhari’s administration was determined to enforce the decision of the court clearly issued, adding that “the administration has absolutely no hand in the on-going court case and the courts are free to determine the bail request and the final outcome.”

It warned members of the sect that the mentality that they were above the law and that their own rights were superior to other people’s rights was unacceptable.

“You can’t be provoking other citizens by interfering with their own rights on public roads and disrupting their businesses and call it democratic freedom. In democratic traditions, their rights end where the rights of others begin.

“Law-abiding citizens must avoid deliberate lawlessness. It is not within the rights of any group to enter protected public institutions such as the National Assembly by force to attack police and destroy public and private property,” it said.

The presidency urged the group to embrace dialogue and eschew violence in all their actions so that the citizens could continue to live together in peace.

“We therefore appeal to the Shiite group to stop deliberate provocations that result in violence and fatalities and allow the trial of El-ZakZaky to take its course.”

 

Tony Ailemen, Abuja