•Seeks investigation of AGs for not prosecuting murder suspects
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By Gboyega Akinsanmi
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Human rights lawyer, Mr. Femi Falana (SAN), has lamented the delay in prosecuting over 100 suspects arrested in connection with the killings in Benue State, fearing that the suspects might eventually escape justice.Â
Falana has also asked the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) “to investigate the refusal of state attorneys-general to prosecute murder suspects due to political pressure or sheer negligence of duty.â€
He canvassed these positions in a letter he addressed to the NBA President, Mr. Abubakar Mahmoud (SAN), last Friday, in which he commended the NBA leadership for conducting an inquiry into the reckless killing of unarmed people in Benue State.
Falana specifically, pointed out that the security operatives had arrested more than 100 persons, who were allegedly complicit in the killing of 73 farmers on January 1, 2018 in Benue State by suspected herdsmen.
He feared that the suspects might be released from custody, noting that they “have not been charged with culpable homicide in the appropriate courts by the state government.â€
However, Falana regretted that the NBA had failed “to monitor the prosecution of the scores of murder suspects arrested by the police or indicted by the judicial and administrative panels of inquiry set up by federal and state governments to probe violent civil disturbances in the country.â€
He said the rate of killings in the country had been on the rise due to what he ascribed to the refusal of several state Attorneys-General to prosecute murder suspects due to political pressure or sheer negligence of duty.
He reeled out instances of such acts of negligence on the prosecution, citing the case of Taraba State where some suspects were arrested and charged with murder for the brutal killing of hundreds of Nigerians in Mambilla local government in September 2017.
But according to him, the murder suspects have since been freed by the state government, which abruptly terminated the criminal proceedings.
He cited the killing of thousands of people including security personnel in Nasarawa, Plateau and Zamfara States, lamenting that all suspects arrested in connection had not been brought to justice by the affected state governments.
He said: “Between 1999 and 2007, an official squad was fingered in the unlawful elimination of not less than 70 people in Gombe State. The murder charges filed against the suspects by the police were struck out by the courts at the instance of the state government.
“The late Alhaji Umar Hassan who demanded for the prosecution of the culprits was charged with giving false information to the police by the State government!â€
He alleged: “The members of an official squad, which killed some politicians and students in Ekiti State from 2003-2006 were arrested and charged with murder at the High Court, sitting at Ado Ekiti. A retired army captain and his police orderly who killed the students were convicted and jailed.
“But both convicts were, however, granted pardon by the state governor in 2009. As if that was not enough, the murder charges pending against the other murder suspects were struck out by the trial court in 2014 for want of diligent prosecution on the part of the state government.
“The Ahmed Lemu Presidential Panel, which investigated the post-election violence in 12 northern states and Akwa Ibom State in April 2011 found that 856 people were killed. In the White Paper issued on the report the Federal Government directed that the culprits be prosecuted but the directive was not carried out by the states where the killings occurred.
“The National Human Rights Commission under the leadership of Prof. Chidi Odinkalu found that 55 people were killed in the pre-election violence, which occurred in Rivers State in 2015. The culprits were never prosecuted by the state government. Since then over 100 other citizens have been killed by armed gangs.
“The Justice Garba Commission of Inquiry, which investigated the violent attack on the Shiites by the Nigerian Army in December 12-14, 2015 found that 347 people were killed and secretly buried in a shallow grave by the murderers.
“In the white paper issued on the report of the commission, the state government directed that the suspects be prosecuted. But the Attorney-General of Kaduna state has refused to prosecute the murder suspects, the human right lawyer said.Â
In December 2016, Falana noted that the National Management Emergency Agency (NEMA) confirmed the killing of 204 people in Southern Kaduna, lamenting that the murder suspects had not been prosecuted till date.
He argued that since culpable homicide or murder “is a state offence you will agree with us that the attorneys-general of all the states in the country have failed to discharge their duties under section 205 of the Constitution.
“In fact, some of the Attorneys-General have a penchant for terminating murder charges by filing nolle prosequi. In the process, the Chief Law Officers of the states have breached their oaths of office and subverted the rule of law.â€