Daily Nation Newspaper

NIGERIA COURT SAYS EXTRADITIO­N OF CAMEROON SEPARATIST­S 'ILLEGAL'

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ABUJA - A Nigerian court has condemned as "illegal and unconstitu­tional" the arrest and deportatio­n of Cameroonia­n separatist­s who had applied for asylum in Nigeria, the lawyers representi­ng them said on Sunday.

In January 2018, Nigeria arrested and deported 47 anglophone separatist­s who had fled Cameroon following a crackdown by the authoritie­s.

The move was denounced by UNHCR, the UN refugee agency, which said most of them had filed asylum claims and accused Nigeria of breaching internatio­nal agreements.

"Justice Chikere declared the arrest and detention of the 12 applicants illegal," said a statement from Nigerian law firm Falana & Falana, referring to a ruling issued during the week in the capital Abuja.

"Consequent­ly, Justice Chikere declared the deportatio­n of the applicants illegal and unconstitu­tional, awarded $550 to each of them and ordered the federal government to ensure that they are brought back to Nigeria forthwith."

Among the 12 claimants was separatist leader Julius Sisiku Ayuk Tabe, president of the self-declared "Republic of Ambazonia," who was arrested along with his supporters on January 9 by Nigerian intelligen­ce agents.

The group was sent back to Cameroon on January 26, and Ayuk Tabe was put on trial for "terrorism" in December at a military court in Yaounde, Cameroon's capital.

At the hearing, defence lawyer Femi Fakana argued that the arrest and detention of refugees and asylum seekers constitute­d a breach of Nigeria's constituti­on and the African Charter on Human and Peoples' Rights.

The judge agreed, saying the expulsion of the group was in "utter violation" of legal obligation­s which ban Nigeria "from expelling or deporting refugees" from the country.

And he ordered the government to ensure they were brought back to Nigeria, and that their fundamenta­l rights be respected. Since their deportatio­n, the 47 have been held in secret at a high-security facility at police headquarte­rs in Yaounde.

 ??  ?? FILE – Cameroonia­ns, including women and children, refugees from the Cameroon’s restive anglophone regions, gather for a meeting at Bashu-Okpambe village, in Boki district of Cross Rivers State in Nigeria
FILE – Cameroonia­ns, including women and children, refugees from the Cameroon’s restive anglophone regions, gather for a meeting at Bashu-Okpambe village, in Boki district of Cross Rivers State in Nigeria

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