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I’d Rather Die In Detention Than Face Trial By Biased Judge Or Court—Nnamdi Kanu

The detained leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), Nnamdi Kanu, has declared that he would prefer to remain in detention for the rest of his life rather than be tried by a corrupt and biased court or judge.

Kanu made this statement in an open letter to the public, which he personally signed from his detention at the Department of State Services (DSS). The letter was made available through his Special Counsel, Barrister Aloy Ejimakor.

Kanu vowed that “if it will take the rest of my life in detention to produce me before a proper and impartial court, so be it”.

“But let me say this for the world to know: I will not succumb to any trial conducted by any judge or court whose jurisdiction does not pass constitutional muster. Not now, not ever,” he said in the letter.

“I have been compelled by the events of the past few days to take the unusual step of writing this Open Letter for the singular purpose of calling the attention of the general public to the serial executive and judicial fraud being perpetrated against me since my extraordinary rendition in 2021,” Kanu said.

He recalled that in a judgment entered on March 1, 2017, the Federal High Court in Abuja ruled that the “IPOB is not an unlawful group”.

“This landmark ruling made by the court before it turned unjust emanated in criminal proceedings that required “proof beyond reasonable doubt” and in which the federal government and my humble self presented our respective cases.

“Alas! Instead of the federal government to go on appeal as the law mandated (if they are dissatisfied with the judgment), the former Attorney-General, Abubakar Malami, went behind closed doors with a letter signed by late Abba Kyari and got IPOB proscribed/tagged a terrorist group in an ex parte proceeding conducted without notice to me or to the IPOB.

“This abominable incident was the earliest sign yet that the government and its judiciary have struck an unholy and fraudulent alliance to deny me my rights and thereby imperil the lives and liberty of millions who identify with IPOB.”

He further recalled that on October 26, 2022, a Federal High Court declared his extraordinary rendition and detention as unconstitutional.

According to the IPOB leader, the court stated that the “manner of arrest and detention of the Applicant (Mazi Nnamdi Kanu) in Kenya, his continued detention in Abuja, his subjection to physical and mental trauma by the Respondents”.

“The inhuman and degrading treatment meted out to the Applicant amounts to a brazen violation of the Applicant’s fundamental right to dignity of his person and threat to life under Section 34 (1)(a) of the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria (as amended),” he quoted the court as saying.

He noted that the court further ordered the Nigerian government to apologise to him and pay him compensation.

Kanu said, “In a responsible and well-ordered society, run by a responsible government, this judgment is sufficient to have ended my lengthy detention and encourage the federal government to constructively engage me on the issue of the self-determination agitation that triggered this whole saga.”

He also recalled that on October 13, 2022, the Court of Appeal held that “courts must never shy away from calling the executive to order when they resort to acts of ‘executive lawlessness’”.

Quoting the Court of Appeal, he said, “The duty of the Courts is to maintain a balance between ensuring that law and order is obeyed and the protection of the individual from oppressive actions by the executive.

“By the forcible abduction and extraordinary rendition of the Appellant (Mazi Nnamdi Kanu) from Kenya to this country on the day of June 27, 2021, in violation of international and state laws, the lower Court or indeed any Court in this country is divested of jurisdiction to entertain charges against the Appellant.”

Kanu noted that despite the clarity of the Appeal Court judgment and its comportment with reason, the Nigerian government refused to release him from detention.

Anambra man of the year award
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