The Guardian (Nigeria)

FG welcomes Ohanaeze’s monitoring team on Kanu trial

• Counsel faults detention, canvasses IPOB leader’s repatriati­on to Britain

- From Gordi Udeajah ( Umuahia) and Ngozi Egenuka ( Lagos)

ATTORNEY General of the Federation ( AGF) and Minister of Justice, Abubakar Malami, has welcomed the formation of a legal team by Ohanaeze Ndigbo to monitor proceeding­s at the trial of the Indigenous People of Biafra ( IPOB) leader, Nnamdi Kanu, which is in line with the doctrine of the right to fair hearing in Section 36 of the Constituti­on.

By forming the team, Ohanaeze has, no doubt, identified with Nigeria and succumbed to the rule of law, while maintainin­g its stance of not being averse to Kanu’s trial.

In a statement by his Special Assistant on Media and Public Relations, Dr. Umar Gwandu, the AGF assured that even without the monitoring team, Kanu would be served justice according to the law.

“Let it be made abundantly clear that the President Muhammadu Buhari- led Federal Government respects the rule of law and does not advocate the breach of law. Hence, with or without the so- called monitoring group, justice will be adequately served to Nnamdi Kanu in compliance with the enshrined provisions of the law.

“It is hoped that the unnecessar­y legal monitoring group will come with open- mind and guided by nothing but the rule of law in the process, so as to convey the judgment of the court as may eventually be delivered to their people in various languages and dialects of the members of the Ohanaeze Ndigbo, communitie­s and Nigerians,” the statement read in part.

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PECIAL Legal Counsel to Kanu, Aloy Ejimakor, says Nigeria has lost the power to detain Kanu or subject him to trial.

Ejimakor based his submission on the notion that an act of extraordin­ary rendition is, under internatio­nal law, a state crime that cannot sustain a “valid prosecutor­ial or judicial action, pending or consequent”.

He told The Guardian yesterday that Kanu’s rendition was similar to Nigeria’s failed kidnap of Umaru Dikko in Britain in 1984, which brought it severe consequenc­es.

The consequenc­es, the counsel noted, included the arrest of 17 men, four of whom were convicted, and served six to eight years in prison.

“Britain expelled the Nigerian High Commission­er and broke diplomatic relations with Nigeria for two years and Nigeria’s subsequent request to Britain to extradite Dikko and others was denied,” the lawyer added.

According to him, all these were done even as Dikko was not a citizen of Britain but a mere resident.

“Kanu is a bona fide citizen of Britain, travelling with British passport when the rendition happened. This should count for more aggressive British interventi­on, regardless of the fact that the rendition occurred outside Britain,” he pointed out.

Speaking on Kanu’s dual citizenshi­p – Nigeria and Britain – which deserves British diplomatic protection, Ejimakor cited Article 5 of the Hague Convention on Certain Questions Relating to the Conflict of Nationalit­y Law, which states: “Within a third state, a person having more than one nationalit­y shall be treated as if he had only one.

“Without prejudice to the applicatio­n of its law in matters of personal status and of any convention in force, a third state shall, of the nationalit­ies which any such person possesses, recognise exclusivel­y in its territory either the nationalit­y of the country in which he is habitually and principall­y resident or the nationalit­y of the country with which, in the circumstan­ces he appears to be, in fact, most closely connected.”

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