Connect with us

News

UK Court Of Appeal Hears IPOB Leader Nnamdi Kanu’s Extraordinary Rendition Suit.

Published

on

The appeal of the detained leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), Nnamdi Kanu’s extraordinary rendition, is currently being heard by the United Kingdom Court of Appeal.

It was reported that the UK Court of Appeal fixed June 22, 2023, to hear the appeal. On Thursday, Kanu’s Special Counsel, Barrister Aloy Ejimakor, when contacted by SaharaReporters, gave the background of the ongoing hearing in London.

Ejimakor said, “In an Order on May 8 2023, Lord Justice Lewis, a senior British Court of Appeal judge, granted the family of Nnamdi Kanu permission to appeal the UK High Court judgment that found that the British authorities could lawfully evade reaching any conclusion on whether Mr Nnamdi Kanu has been tortured, subjected to extraordinary rendition and arbitrarily detained.

RELATED:

Releasing Kanu is Not An Act Of Mercy But Simply Obeying Court Order: Lawyer.

Sit-at-home: Gunmen attack traders and raze vehicles in Imo.

“It will be recalled that in a ruling on March 23 2023, the UK High Court had declined the Kanu family’s suit for judicial review of the failure of the British government to reach a firm view in Nnamdi Kanu’s extraordinary rendition. This earlier ruling prompted an application for leave to appeal to the British Court of Appeal by the Bindmans, the Lead Counsel representing the Kanu family in the case.

“While assuming jurisdiction over the appeal, Lord Justice Lewis of the Court of Appeals noted that: “The grounds of appeal raise essential issues concerning the scope of the obligations on the respondent about requests for consular assistance in respect of British nationals detained abroad and the proper interpretation and application of the decision of the Court of Appeal in R(Abbasi) v Secretary of State for the Foreign and Commonwealth Office [2003] UKHRR 76.

“For those reasons, there is a compelling reason for the appeal to be heard within the meaning of CPR 52.6(1)(b). Permission is granted on all three grounds.”

“And citing the urgency arising from the continued solitary confinement of Nnamdi Kanu, the Court of Appeal ordered that the appeal hearing be expedited. Accordingly, the hearing was listed for Thursday, June 22 2023 and is currently underway.”

SaharaReporters reports that Kanu remained in solitary confinement at the detention facility of Nigeria’s secret police, the Department of State Services (DSS), since he was renditioned from Kenya in June 2021.

Although, the Nigerian government has not officially disclosed where its security agencies abducted Kanu.

SaharaReporters had reported that the Court of Appeal, Abuja division, had discharged Kanu on October 13, 2022, of the 15-count terrorism charges brought against him by the federal government.

UK Court Of Appeal Hears IPOB Leader Nnamdi Kanu’s Extraordinary Rendition Suit.

In a unanimous decision, the appellate court faulted the process through which Kanu was brought before the Federal High Court to answer to 15-count terrorism charges.

Reacting to the judgment, the Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Mr Abubakar Malami, SAN, had said the appeal court only discharged and not acquitted Kanu.

The appeal court ruled that Kanu’s arrest, abduction and subsequent arraignment before a Federal High Court violated the international convention on terrorism and, thus, robbed any court of law in Nigeria of necessary jurisdiction to entertain the suit.

Justice Adedotun Adefope-Okijie, who read the judgement of the three-man panel, noted that there was nowhere the federal government showed it complied with the procedures for the extradition of the IPOB leader from Kenya.

Reacting to the judgment, the Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Mr Abubakar Malami, SAN, had said the appeal court only discharged and not acquitted Kanu.

The appeal court ruled that Kanu’s arrest, abduction and subsequent arraignment before a Federal High Court violated the international convention on terrorism and, thus, robbed any court of law in Nigeria of necessary jurisdiction to entertain the suit.

It was further reported that the United Nations working group on arbitrary detention and human rights violations in July 2022 communicated to the Nigerian government demanding the release of Nnamdi Kanu within six months of communication and to pay him adequate reparations. The communication deadline elapsed on December 31, 2022, and Kanu remained in solitary confinement in the DSS cell.


Click Button Below to Join Our Telegram Groups
WhatsApp Telegram


For Advert Inquiries & News/Article Publishing

Call:+2348033888791, +2347069999005
E-mail: legalattorneyblog01@gmail.com

Click to comment

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.