A Federal High Court in Lagos has dismissed a fundamental rights
enforcement suit filed by a former Minister of Aviation, Stella Oduah,
against the Attorney General of the Federation and three others.
Justice Okon Abang, who dismissed Oduah’s suit for want of jurisdiction today, ordered her to pay a cost of N15,000 to the AGF.
Oduah
had filed the suit in August last year praying the court to restrain
agencies of the Federal Government from questioning or prosecuting her
over the purchase of two armoured BMW vehicles at a cost of N255m by the
Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority under her watch as the Aviation
Minister in 2013.
In her suit, Oduah claimed to have already been
probed and exonerated by the House of Representatives Committee on
Aviation and the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission and urged
Justice Abang to declare that any further probe would amount to
violating her fundamental rights.
The respondents in the suit
were the AGF, the EFCC, the Independent Corrupt Practices and other
related offences Commission and the Inspector General of Police.
Oduah
alleged that the ruling All Progressives Congress intended to use the
respondents to persecute her, being a prominent member of the opposition
Peoples Democratic Party.
She claimed that the Federal
Government had perfected plans to try prominent members of the PDP on
trump up charges in a special Lagos State High Court, so as to turn the
country into a one-party state.
She begged the court to restrain the respondents from unleashing repression against her.
But the EFCC denied doing the bidding of the APC, claiming that it was independent.
It
furnished the court with a petition dated October 18, 2013 written by a
lawyer from the chambers of Mr. Femi Falana (SAN), calling for Oduah’s
investigation.
The EFCC disclosed that the said petition was
captioned, ‘Request for Investigation of Economic and Financial Crimes
of the sum of N255m by Aviation Minister, Ms. Stella Oduah’.
The EFCC urged the court to dismiss Oduah’s suit.
But
in his judgment, Justice Abang dismissed the EFCC’s objection for not
complying with Order 8 Rule 1 of the Fundamental Rights Enforcement
Procedure.
“The EFCC did not file any opposition in line with the law,” Justice Abang held.
The
judge, however, upheld the preliminary objection filed by the AGF, who
challenged the jurisdiction of the Federal High Court in Lagos to
entertain Oduah’s suit.
Counsel for the AGF, T.A. Gazali, had
contended that since the rights violation that Oduah alleged did not
happen in Lagos, it would be a violation of Section 46(1) of the
constitution and Order 2 Rule 1 of the Fundamental Rights Enforcement
Procedure to entertain the case in Lagos.
“From the whole
of the applicant’s averments, there is nowhere she mentioned that her
right was or is being breached by the respondents within the territorial
space called Lagos.
“There is nothing to show that the applicant was invited, arrested or detained in Lagos by any of the respondents in the suit.
“The
Federal High Court sitting in Lagos cannot assume jurisdiction to
entertain alleged breach of fundamental rights that did not take place
in Lagos State,” Gazali had argued.
Justice Abang upheld Gazali’s argument and dismissed Oduah’s case.
The
judge also held that if the Federal Government had any valid reason to
arraign Oduah in a Lagos State High Court as she alleged, it would not
amount a violation of her right.
Meanwhile, in another judgment,
Justice Abang also refused a prayer to stop the EFCC and the Department
of State Services from arresting and probing a former Special Adviser to
ex-President Goodluck Jonathan on Niger Delta Affairs and the Chairman
of the Presidential Amnesty Programme, Kingsley Kuku.
The judge
dismissed Kuku’s suit for lacking in merit, but restrained the
respondents from detaining him beyond 48 in contravention of Section
35(4)(5) of the Constitution.
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