Some Nigerians under the aegis of Concerned Nigerians United for Ekweremadu have protested to the Government of the United Kingdom over continued detention of former Deputy President of the Nigerian Senate, Senator Ike Ekweremadu in the European country.
The group, which bore several placards faulting what they described as “shabby treatment of Ekweremadu”, expressed their displeasure in a protest letter, which they submitted to the UK Government at the UK High Commission in Abuja, Thursday.
Addressing the press at the High Commission after submitting the protest letter entitled “The Travail of Senator Ike Ekweremadu: Protest Against Continued Detention”, the National Coordinator of the group, Mr. Paul Sawa, said the planned one-year detention of the Senator till May 2023, when his real trial was scheduled to start, was injurious to his human right and the principle of assumption of innocence for the accused.
The group wondered if a UK Member of Parliament could be subjected to such protracted detention without trial in Nigeria and therefore called on the UK authorities to grant Ekweremadu bail and be humane while he faces his trial.
Articulating their stand to pressmen, Sawa said: “We are a body of Nigerians, who have keenly followed and are concerned about the travail of Senator Ike Ekweremadu and family, and the continued detention of a Nigerian citizen, a distinguished and serving Senator of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, since 21st June 2022. We just submitted a protest letter to the UK High Commission over Ekweremadu’s continued detention.
“A fair application of the justice system presupposes justice for all the parties involved in any matter, including the accused. It presupposes innocence until proven guilty. These fine principles of the law guarantee the fundamental human rights of every accused.
“We are therefore concerned about the continued detention over a clearly bailaible offence. By their schedule over there, Senator Ekweremadu’s real trial to determine his innocence or otherwise begins will begin in May 2023 by which time he would have spent one year behind bars.
“We are then moved to ask: Where is the humanity in all of this? Where is human right in all of this? Where is the presumption of innocence for the accused? Would Nigerian government subject a UK Member of Parliament to the same shabby treatments and protracted detention on a clearly bailable offence under similar circumstance? More so, if such a UK parliamentarian had written to the Nigeria High Commission to fully disclose the purpose of the organ donor’s trip, including the particular hospital where the case would be handled?
Recall that Ekweremadu and his wife, on July 23, 2022, were being charged with Dr Obinna Obeta, on allegation of wanting to make payment for the procurement of an organ for their daughter, Sonia, from one David Nwamini. Following the allegation, Ekweremadu was detained in a UK prison after the June 23 arrest.
Source: Vanguard