THISDAY

Nigerian Victims of Slavery Cannot Sue Libya, Says Falana

- Ejiofor Alike

A human rights lawyer and Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN), Mr. Femi Falana, has stated that the Nigerian victims of slavery cannot sue Libya, stressing that the shameful slave trade which Nigeria is battling with is part of the fallout from the removal and brutal killing of President Muammar Gaddafi by armed gangs supported by the allied forces of imperialis­m led by the United States under President Barrack Obama.

Falana said in a statement yesterday that Nigeria had herself to blame for the tragedy in Libya, adding that without considerin­g her political and strategic interests in the political crisis in Libya, Nigeria blindly supported the illegal resolution of the United Nations Security Council which authorised the invasion of Libya to effect a regime change.

According to him, while the regime change has ensured uninterrup­ted supply of the Libyan oil to Western countries, the country has been destroyed completely as not less than five armed gangs are laying claim to the leadership of the country.

Falana noted that it has been confirmed that the arms and ammunition looted from the armory in Libya were sold to the dreaded Boko Haram sect.

According to the senior lawyer, the jurisdicti­on of the Community Court is limited to the West African sub-region, Nigerians whose rights are breached in other African countries would have been able to seek redress in the African Court on Human and Peoples Rights sitting in Arusha, Tanzania.

According to him, that is not possible as the federal government has refused to make a Declaratio­n accepting the jurisdicti­on of the Court in line with Article 34(6) of the Protocol establishi­ng the African Court which provides that “At the time of the ratificati­on of this Protocol or any time thereafter the State shall make a declaratio­n accepting the competence of the court to receive petitions under Article 5(3) of this Protocol. The Court shall not receive any petition under Article 5(3) involving a state party which has not made such a declaratio­n.”

He recalled that in Femi Falana v. African Union (Applicatio­n No. 019/2015), the Applicant challenged the validity of Article 34(6) of the Protocol establishi­ng the African Court on the grounds that he could not be denied access to the Court due to the refusal of Nigeria to make the requisite Declaratio­n.

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