ECOWAS Court dismisses SERAP’s train attack suit against Nigeria
15 November 2024 |
4:21 am
The Court of Justice of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) has declared as inadmissible, a suit instituted by the Socio-Economic Rights and Accountability Project (SERAP) against the Federal Republic of Nigeria.
The Court of Justice of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) has declared as inadmissible, a suit instituted by the Socio-Economic Rights and Accountability Project (SERAP) against the Federal Republic of Nigeria.
The case, which sought to hold Nigeria accountable for alleged human rights violations, relating to a terrorist attack on the Abuja-Kaduna train route in March 2022, was declared inadmissible due to lack of victim status required for public interest litigation.
SERAP filed the case following the violence, where hoodlums bombed a train carrying over 970 passengers along the Abuja-Kaduna rail line near Rigasa, Kaduna.
The attack led to several deaths, injuries, and abductions, with more than 150 individuals still unaccounted for. The group argued that Nigeria’s alleged lack of adequate preventive measures violated the rights of passengers to life, security, and dignity, and requested compensation of N50 million for each passenger and victim’s family.
In the judgment delivered by Justice Dupe Atoki, the judge rapporteur, the court recognised its jurisdiction to hear the case, as it involved potential human rights violations within a member-state, under Article 9(4) of the ECOWAS Supplementary Protocol.
The court found the claim inadmissible on grounds that it failed to meet the victim status requirement essential for litigation under Article 10(d) of the same Protocol.
In its findings, the court said SERAP claimed to be acting in the public interest, citing previous incidents of terrorism in the region, including attacks on educational institutions and transportation services.
The court, however, determined that the case did not meet the criteria for a public interest action, or actio popularis, which requires that the alleged violations affect a large, indeterminate segment of the public or the general public itself.
The court highlighted that the victims of the March 28 attack were identifiable individuals rather than an indeterminate public group, making the claim unsuitable as a public interest litigation.
The reliefs sought, including specific monetary compensation, were directed at the identifiable victims of the attack rather than the public at large. The three-member panel of the court were Justice Ricardo Cláudio Monteiro Gonçalves (presiding judge), Justice Sengu Mohamed Koroma (panel member), and Justice Dupe Atoki (judge rapporteur).
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