The Guardian (Nigeria)

Appeal Court upholds prayers in favour of slain “Ekwulobia four”

- By Omolabake Ohu

THE Court of Appeal, Lagos, has uphold prayers in favour of slain “Ekwulobia four” and set aside the decision of the lower court, which dismissed the right to file a suit on behalf of a deceased through fundamenta­l human right enforcemen­t action.

The appellants, Akaraka Ezeonara, Chris Okpara, Remigus Ezenwane and Ifeanyi Okoye had sought to enforce the fundamenta­l rights of four youths of Ekwulobia, Anambra state, killed extra- judicially on July 1, 2001 by the police in Lagos.

The deceased, who were killed by police officers serving in Aguda Police Station Area “C” command, Surulere, Lagos on mere suspicion that they were armed robbers are, Anthony Ezenwafor, Chukwuemek­a Ezeafor, Izuchukwu Ezeama, and Aloysius Osigwe.

Following the dastardly act, the plaintiffs/ appellants then filed an action before the lower court against the Inspector General of Police, ( IGP), Attorney General of the Federation, and four others, on march 27, 2014, claiming that the fundamenta­l rights to life, liberty and dignity, under section 33, 34, 35 of the 1999 constituti­on and Article 2, 5, 14, 15, and 19 of the African Charter on Human and Peoples Rights’ of the deceased had been breached by the defendants/ respondent­s.

Aside from praying the court for an order directing the 1st and 4th respondent­s or any other persons or body of persons to conduct full and unbiased investigat­ions into the incident and punitive measures taken against all those found to have hands in the dastardly act, they also prayed the court for an order of the payment of the sum of N4 billion as damages and compensati­ons to the families of the said four victims for the unlawful killing and unjust and illegal terminatio­n of their lives.

In the ruling delivered on March 9, 2015, the lower court in deciding whether the appellants could maintain an action on behalf of the deceased held that the reliefs being claimed in the circumstan­ces could not be brought pursuant to the fundamenta­l rights enforcemen­t procedure because the deceased were no longer juristic persons.

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