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Lawyer, six others sue IG, Enugu monarch, demand N120b compensation

By Ameh Ochojila, Abuja
03 November 2024   |   6:20 pm
A Lagos based lawyer, Vincent Okafor and six others have dragged the Inspector General of Police, the Traditional Ruler of Agunese Mmaku autonomous community in Awgu Local Government Area of Enugu State, HRH Igwe Cyprian Maduabuchi Nevobasi, and 16 others, to court for alleged violation of fundamental human rights and freedom. The plaintiffs who are…
Court gravel. Photo/ junctioncity

A Lagos based lawyer, Vincent Okafor and six others have dragged the Inspector General of Police, the Traditional Ruler of Agunese Mmaku autonomous community in Awgu Local Government Area of Enugu State, HRH Igwe Cyprian Maduabuchi Nevobasi, and 16 others, to court for alleged violation of fundamental human rights and freedom.

The plaintiffs who are members of the Agunese Mmaku autonomous community, initiated the civil proceedings at the Federal High Court Enugu Division, through their team of lawyers, led by a Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN), Chukwuemeka Ofodile.

In suit no. FHC/EN/CS/198/2024, the applicants sought injunctive orders, declarative reliefs and directive orders against the defendants/respondents in the matter, including a compensation of N120 billion.

Joined as the 1st to 18 defendants/ respondents respectively are the Inspector General of Police, Nigeria Police Force, Commissioner of Police, Enugu State Command, Director-General of the Department of State Services (DSS), HRH Igwe Nevobasi and Mr. Onuselogu Nevobasi.

The remaining defendants/respondents are Mr. Jonathan Azubike Onuoha, Sir Laz Udeogboke, Oliver Chukwuobasi, Okekefi Iloham, Nnamdi Muodebe Okolo, Frederick Ngene, Patrick Ekweani, John Anugwa, Okonkwo Kenechukwu, Christian Chukwuemezie, James Chukwude and Ikechukwu Okpala.

Besides Okafor, the other plaintiffs are Chief Theophilus Chukwu, Mr. David Okeke, and Chiefs, Okeke Emmanuel Uwa, Ochie Moses Chuka, Okolie James Ikegwuonu, and Simeon Ogbonna Okike.

The suit commenced through a writ of summons and accompanying motion on notice, sought among other reliefs, a declaration that the invitation, arrest, and detention of the 1st to 7th plaintiffs/applicants by the 1st to 4th defendants, were illegal acts, done as agents of the 5th to 18 defendants, and therefore never lawful, illegal and a violation of the fundamental rights of the plaintiffs.

The court was also asked to declare as unlawful, illegal and unconstitutional, the invitation, arrest and detention of the 1st to 7th plaintiffs by the 1st to 4th defendants under the pretext that they were carrying out their duties under Section 4 of the Police Act, based on a complaint by the 5th to 18th defendants that the plaintiffs were purportedly a security threat to Agunese autonomous community.

Further reliefs include a declaration that the 5th to 18th defendants collaborated in setting the law in motion against the plaintiffs by making a false, malicious, ill-motivated and unfounded allegation of security threat, obtained by false pretence, with the intent to criminalise and incarcerate the plaintiffs, using the police, knowing full well that the allegation was fabricated and concocted, purely to punish and tarnish the reputation of the plaintiffs.

The plaintiffs asked the court to declare as “unlawful” their invitation and continued harassment by the 1st to 4th defendants/ respondents, on the basis of a withdrawn petition against them by the 5th to 18th respondents, which constituted false arrest, detention and imprisonment on a fabricated none existent complaint/petition.

Referring to the letter of withdrawal of the petition against them by the 5th to 18th respondents, dated April 28th, 2022, the applicants prayed for a declaration of the court that the purported arraignments of Vincent Okafor, Theophilus Chukwu and David Okeke, the 1st to 3rd plaintiffs, and others at large, by the police at various magistrate courts in Enugu State and their remand in Correctional Centre Enugu, for purportedly carrying out warlike undertaking against Nevobasi and Agunese indigenes and cyber stalking, constitutes illegality, false imprisonment and clear violation of the fundamental rights of the affected persons.

They asked the court to make a declaration that the 5th respondent (HRH Igwe Cyprian Nevobasi) falsely and with clear intention to deceive the public at large, holds himself out to the international community (Nigeria and South African Authorities included), with differing surname and identities, especially in his passport and other identification documents.

The plaintiffs consequently requested for an order of the Honourable Court, compelling Igwe Nevobasi to publish his correct personality under oath, instead of maintaining a dual deceitful personality, considering the high position he occupies as a traditional ruler in Enugu State.

No date has been fixed for the hearing of the matter in court.

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