Friday, 29th March 2024
To guardian.ng
Search
Breaking News:

Tarfa withdraws N5b suit against MTN, EFCC

By Joseph Onyekwere
25 February 2016   |   12:45 am
A SENIOR Advocate of Nigeria (SAN), Mr. Rickey Tarfa, yesterday withdrew the N5 billion fundamental rights violation suit he filed against the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) and four others. The senior lawyer had filed the suit alleging violation of his right to privacy by the respondents.
Rickey Tarfa

Rickey Tarfa

A SENIOR Advocate of Nigeria (SAN), Mr. Rickey Tarfa, yesterday withdrew the N5 billion fundamental rights violation suit he filed against the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) and four others. The senior lawyer had filed the suit alleging violation of his right to privacy by the respondents.

Following the withdrawal of the suit, the trial judge, Justice Mohammed Idris, awarded a punitive cost of N10,000 against Tarfa in favour of each of the five respondents.

Tarfa had filed the suit following his arrest on February 5 by EFCC operatives on the premises of the Lagos State High Court in Igbosere where he was alleged to have hid two suspects in his car to prevent their arrest.His two mobile phones and Mercedes Benz SUV with Registration No. KJA 700 CG were confiscated by the EFCC.

Tarfa alleged that the respondents violated his right to privacy by allegedly scrutinising his call logs. He, therefore, urged the court to declare that the respondents violated his rights protected by Section 37 of the Constitution when, without a court order, MTN allegedly made the call log on his mobile line 08034600000 available to the EFCC and other respondents who in turn allegedly released the information to Sahara reporters and other online media.

He had also urged the court to hold that the respondents acted unlawfully when they accessed his bank details, client’s information, private and confidential information contained in his iPhone 6 and Samsung 6 without a court order or any reasonable cause.

Tarfa, who had urged the court to award N5 billion damages against the respondents in his favour, stressed that no amount of money could adequately redress the “unquantifiable and irreparable damage done to him, his reputation, business and goodwill.”

But a lawyer from his chambers, Olatunde Oladele, appeared before Justice Idris yesterday with an ex-parte application to discontinue the case.

Oladele gave no reason for Tarfa’s decision to withdraw the case but an inside source told The Guardian that the telecommunication giant, already encumbered with crisis, is considering the option of out-of-court settlement with the senior advocate in order not to add to its existing controversies.

Counsel to EFCC, Mr. Wahab Shittu and Rotimi Oyedepo, who also appeared in court, said they were not opposed to the withdrawal of the suit but urged the court to award a punitive cost against Tarfa.

“My Lord, we have no objection to the discontinuance of the suit but we want the court to award a punitive cost against the applicant; our names have been flying around in the major newspapers since yesterday,” Shittu said.

Oladele argued that the EFCC’s lawyers had no right of reply because his application was an ex-parte application.
Besides, he said the respondents could not be demanding for cost because Tarfa had not served them with the suit.

But Shittu said that since the filing of the suit was widely reported in the newspapers, it was tantamount to serving the respondents by substituted means.
In a short ruling, Justice Idris struck out the suit and ordered Tarfa to pay a cost of N10,000 to each of the respondents.

0 Comments