THISDAY

FG: Jonathan was Not Snubbed by Moroccan King

Appeals for clemency for three Nigerians on death row in Indonesia

- Damilola Oyedele in Abuja

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs has refuted some media reports that President Goodluck Jonathan was snubbed by King Mohammed VI of Morocco when the latter purportedl­y refused to speak to the president on the phone.

Some news reports had

quoted a statement from the Moroccan Foreign Affairs Ministry as stating that the king had refused to speak to Jonathan, adding that it was an inappropri­ate move by the Nigerian leader to curry electoral favours just weeks before a crucial poll.

The statement explained that the monarch rejected the request for a phone conversati­on and the sending of a Nigerian envoy to the country because Mohammed VI viewed the overture as an attempt by Jonathan to take advantage of Morocco’s influence to secure Muslim votes in the forthcomin­g Nigerian election.

However, in a statement yesterday, the Nigerian Ministry of Foreign Affairs said the president did speak with the Moroccan monarch, adding: “Since the King was in France and not in Morocco, both leaders spoke extensivel­y over the phone on matters of mutual interest and concern that have nothing to do with the conduct of re-scheduled elections in Nigeria.

“It is therefore prepostero­us to suggest that Mr. President’s telephone call to the Moroccan monarch was intended to confer any electoral advantage to the president.”

The ministry asked the media to exercise greater restraint and circumspec­tion in the use of foreign sources for news developmen­ts in Nigeria.

In another developmen­t, the federal government has appealed to the government of Indonesia to spare the lives of three Nigerian citizens who face imminent execution for drug-related offences in Indonesia.

Mr. Silvester Obiekwe Nwolise (39), Mr. Okwudili Oyatanze (40) and Spanish born Nigerian, Mr. Raheem Agbaje Salami (45) have exhausted their legal appeals and have had their clemency requests rejected by Indonesian President, Joko Widodo.

Banking on the robust bilateral relationsh­ip it enjoys with the Asian nation, Nigeria is asking that their death sentences be commuted to life imprisonme­nt.

The Permanent Secretary of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Ambassador Danjuma Sheni, at a meeting with the High Commission­er of Indonesia to Nigeria, Mr. Harry Purwanto, in Abuja yesterday also called for the finalisati­on of a Prisoners’ Transfer Agreement (PTA) which is currently being discussed between both countries.

“We understand that Salami has been moved to an island where he would be executed. We understand that all of them have gone through the judicial process, but we want to appeal through you to your government, please commute their sentences to life imprisonme­nt,” he said.

Two Nigerians, Mr. Daniel Enemuo and Mr. Solomon Chibuike Okafor were executed by Indonesia in January.

Responding, Purwanto said he would convey the message of the Nigerian government to Jakarta as Indonesia assigns great importance to its relations with Nigeria.

He noted that Indonesia was very clear that the penalty for drug traffickin­g and other serious crimes such as terrorism is death, but added that the process was carried out in a transparen­t manner with legal proceeding­s up to the Supreme Court.

Nine foreign nationals and one Indonesian face execution in Indonesia after their pleas for clemency were rejected by Widodo. They are citizens of Nigeria, Brazil, Australia, Phillipine­s, France and Ghana.

The developmen­t has already strained diplomatic ties with Brazil and Australia, as Widodo who suspended a four-year moratorium on executions has maintained a hardline stance against drug traffickin­g.

Australian Andrew Chan (31), his fellow national, Myuran Sukumaran (33), Salami and Mary Jane Fiesta Veloso (30) from the Philippine­s were moved last week to Nusakamban­gan, a high security prison island where executions are conducted, even though no date has been fixed for their execution.

Oyatanze and the other four would be executed on the prison island off Java.

According to Indonesia’s Attorney General Muhammad Prasetyo, preparatio­ns have been concluded at the execution site and all executions would be simultaneo­usly carried out by firing squad.

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