Ex-Imo Commissioner Slams N5m Rights Enforcement Suit Against Police Over Illegal Arrest, Detention 

Date:

BY ANTHONY OCHELA, ABUJA 

A former Commissioner, in the cabinet of the Imo state governor, Hope Uzodima, Dr. Fabian Ihekweme has slammed a N5 million suit against the Nigerian Police Force and the Imo state Commissioner of Police before a Federal High Court in Abuja over alleged gross violations of his fundamental human rights following what he describes as a “Gestapo-style” arrest by the Police in Imo state.

In the suit marked Suit No: FHC/ABI/CS/1809/2024, the plaintiff seeks an order of perpetual injunction restraining the Police from further arresting, threat of adoption, detention, intimidation, assault and harassing him  over frivolous and unsubstantiated allegation concerning his fundamental rights to freedom of expression.

He also wants an order of the court compelling and directing the Defendants to immediately release or grant him bail, pending investigation or charge him to court, as stipulated in sections 35(4) and (5) and 36 (1) of the 1999 Constitution.

A declaration that his arrest on November 28, in Abuja in most strange, intimidating, threatening, embarrassing, bizarre and gestapo manner by the Police in Imo state constitutes an infringement of his fundamental human rights and that, his continuous detention by the Police amounts to the violation of his fundamental human rights.

He equally wants the court to declare denying him access to his tam of lawyers by the Police since November 28 when he was arrested in Abuja and taken to Owerri violates his fundamental human rights and an award of  N5 million as damages against the Police for alleged harassment, assault, and illegal detention.

In an affidavit of urgency deposed to the wife of the plaintiff, Mrs. Ihekweme Excel Fabian said, the plaintiff is managing a severe health condition and his continuous detention without access to medicare will worsen his health condition and endanger his life.

“That the applicant is now suffering double jeopardy of unlawful detention and and imminent health risk that could endanger his life”, she averred and further stated the constitution provides for rights for fair trial within a reasonable time.

She said, the applicant ought to have been released on administrative bail or charged to court, at least two days after his arrest and provided by the Constitution and stated that the conduct of the respondents is arbitrary, illegal, unconstitutional, harsh, oppressive and void.

Share post:

Subscribe

spot_img

Popular

More like this
Related

In An Era Of Recapitalisation and Digital Disruption, Nigerian Banks Must Embrace Public Affairs

In today's rapidly evolving financial landscape, the Central Bank...

Shipowners To Get $700m Cabotage Fund

...As FG increases lending banks to 12 From Rotimi Asher Director-General...

Tinubu’s “Renewed Hope Agenda” Working –Wike

By Ismaila Jimoh, Abuja Minister of the Federal Capital Territory,...

ACF Celebrates Gambari At 85

 Arewa Consultative Forum ,ACF, has described the Emir of...