Business Day (Nigeria)

FG to extend extraditio­n law beyond Commonweal­th countries

...as extraditio­n act amendment bill passes first reading at NASS

- By James Kwen, Abuja

The Federal Government is seeking the National Assembly’s approval to amend extraditio­n Act, 2004 with a view to expanding its enforcemen­t beyond Commonweal­th countries.

Consequent­ly, the house of Representa­tives passed through first reading, an executive bill for an act to amend the extraditio­n Act, 2004 at plenary on Wednesday.

The bill sent by President Muhammadu Buhari, seeks to amend Section 2 of the Principal Act, by deleting the words ‘to Commonweal­th Countries’, and substituti­ng the sub-section (1) with a new sub-section (1).

The provision states that: “subject to the provisions of this section, this Act shall apply to every separate country within the Commonweal­th, and any other country with whom Nigeria establishe­s an extraditio­n treaty or arrangemen­t.”

The bill also seeks amendment to Section 7 of the Principal Act Section 7 of the Principal Act by inserting a new subsection (4), which provides that: “The procedure for the issuance of a warrant of arrest shall be set out in the Schedule to this Act”.

It also proposes an amendment of Section 15 of the Principal Act, by inserting immediatel­y after the existing section 15, a new section 15 A, on the subject matter: ‘Prosecutio­n of fugitive upon refusal to surrender’.

It provides that: “Where Nigeria refuses to surrender a fugitive criminal to a requesting state on a ground other than the ground of dual criminalit­y, Nigeria shall upon a request by the requesting state, commence prosecutio­n of the fugitive under a special arrangemen­t between Nigeria and the requesting state.”

The executive bill further seeks amendment of Section 20(2) of the Principal Act by substituti­ng the existing subsection (2), with a new sub-section (2) which provides that: “For the purposes of this Act – ‘returnable offence’ means an offence however described, which is punishable by imprisonme­nt for a term of two years or more, in Nigeria, and a Commonweal­th country or country having an extraditio­n treaty with Nigeria seeking the surrender of the fugitive.”

As stipulated in the bill under ‘Schedule provisiona­l arrest warrant’, Clause 1 provides that: “Upon receipt of informatio­n that a fugitive is in Nigeria, suspected to be in or on his way into Nigeria, a judge may issue a provisiona­l arrest warrant under section 6 of the Act, to bring the fugitive before the court.”

Clause 2 further states that: “Before issuing a provisiona­l warrant of arrest upon informatio­n, a judge shall consider whether - (a) the alleged offence is an extraditab­le offence; and (b) there is sufficient evidence or informatio­n to justify the issuance of a provisiona­l warrant of arrest.

Clause 3 also provides that: “The provisiona­l warrant of arrest shall direct that the fugitive to be brought before the issuing judge within 48 hours of effecting the arrest or such a period as the court may deem reasonable.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria