We Give All You Want And Need To Read, Giving it raw, We Are Simply The Most Trusted Media House
Friday, 1 August 2014
to die for refusal of N200 bribe to police
BY IKECHUKWU NNOCHIRI
A shaft of pain knifed through his facial contours as
he recounted the grisly experiences he had in
prison for more than 23 years.
Prior to 1989, Calistus Ike had dreamt of becoming
a very successful business man.
Little did he know that he was going to spend seven
years as an awaiting trial inmate and another 16
years on the death row.
As the first son and bread winner of his family at
that time, Ike, had all his dreams quashed after he
was sentenced to death following his refusal to pay
N200 bribe to the policeman that investigated an
allegation against him.
Luck
however shone on him when through the
intervention of a France- based human right group,
Avocats Sans Frontieres, ASFF, also known as
‘Lawyers Without Borders France’, the Edo state
government, pardoned him and approved his
release from prison in 2012.
Reliving the harrowing times he had in jail and
circumstances that led to his conviction with
Saturday Vanguard, this disconsolate erstwhile
death row inmate, insisted that he was innocent of
the allegation that left him at the mercy of the hang-
man, even as he called for a total overhaul of the
criminal justice system in Nigeria.
Describing himself as a “lucky-survivor”, Ike, who
is now in his early fifties, stressed that so many
innocent Nigerians are currently languishing in
various prison facilities across the federation.
“The unfortunate thing is that some of the people I
left in prison did not even have a case-file. Some of
them had stayed as ‘awaiting-trial’ inmates for
more than 10 years”, he lamented.
Narrating the story of his life, Ike said: “It happened
to me in the year 1989. I was resident in Benin, the
Edo state capital. There was a man that lived in the
same compound with me. His wife had stomach
problem and he asked me to lead him to somewhere
to collect a root(herbal medicine) for his wife.
”We went there about 5pm. After escorting him to
the place where he collected the medicine, I
returned to my house.
”The next day, I went to do my business. I did not
know that the same man had engaged police to look
for me and the other man that gave him the root, a
man I didn’t even know. When I heard that police
came to look for me, I inquired about the station
they came from and went there myself. ”I reported
myself and asked why they came to look for me.
They told me that there was an allegation that I
conspired with the man we collected medicine from
his house and broke into my neighbour’s house-
who was the same man I accompanied to get the
roots for his wife- and stole his properties.
”I never knew that they had equally arrested the
man that gave us the root.
Thereafter, the policeman handling the case insisted
that I must write a confessional statement
otherwise he would deal with me. I refused to write
anything. I told him that I would only narrate the
exact thing that happened.
”It was at that juncture that he started beating me
with ‘Koboko’. He flogged me mercilessly that day. I
was tortured until the D.P.O in charge of the station
asked him to stop and just take my statement.
”After I gave them my statement, the same
policeman that flogged me, came back and said that
he could not find any evidence to pin the alleged
crime on me. He said that he had concluded all the
investigations and found nothing against me.
”However, he said I should give him N200 so that
he would drop the case and allow me to go home.
Remember, we are talking about 1989. As at that
time, that amount was big money to me.
So, I told him I had no such money to give out. I
stood my ground that I was innocent of the charge
and even asked them to take me to court if indeed
they thought that I had a case to answer.
”Within two days, the policeman took the matter to
court. We went to court, at the Magistrate court, the
policeman freed the other man I was accused with
and pinned the whole charge on me.
”From the Magistrate court, he took me to the
Military Tribunal where the case changed overnight.
From the original allegation of ‘burglary and theft’, I
was charged with armed robbery.
”Whereas the Policeman and that my compound
man whose properties were allegedly stolen, as well
as his wife, testified before Tribunal, I had no one to
testify for me. I was left with only God and no one
else.
”After a long run of the trial, I was convicted and
sentenced to death for a crime I never committed or
even imagined. I never for once had such dream for
my life, but I was condemned to death.
”Nonetheless, my faith in God never wavered, I kept
asking him to vindicate me. I was in death
sentence cell in Edo state for over 14 years. After
then, I was transferred to Enugu prison.
”One day, I was there, inside the prison with other
inmates when information got to me that there were
some people from France that were helping inmates
in Benin prison. I quickly called my brother and
asked him to take my plight to those people, maybe
they could help me to regain my freedom.
”By the special grace of God, within three months, I
was let loose from the grip of the wicked of this
world and I thank God for it. What I however want
Nigerians to know is that there is great level of
injustice in our judiciary and because of that, many
innocent people have died for crimes they never
committed.
”Some of our lawyers are not helping matters. All
they are interested in is money. Some cases they
know they don’t have the capacity to handle they
will just force themselves into them and their
clients will be condemned and killed.
”Before my very eyes, I witnessed executions that
took the lives of over 48 young and energetic men
and women . It is a painful thing to experience.
”I was released in 2012. After I was arrested in
1989, I stayed as awaiting trial inmate for seven
years, and stayed on death row for 16 years.
”My case did not go up to the Supreme Court. It
was tried by the military tribunal so I didn’t even
have the opportunity to go on appeal.
”My experience in the prison was very traumatic.
That place is hell on earth! Some of the prison
warders are very wicked- even though there are
some good ones too. The bad ones are tormentors.
They torment inmates at will.
”The food inside there is nothing to write home
about. Roofs of some of the cells leak badly when it
rains.
Getting good medication is rather a luxury too big to
imagine, except in critical cases or upon an order of
the court.
In the prison, every inmate is left to his own fate.
Inmates are suffering badly even the awaiting trial
inmates too.
”It hurts me when I see them on TV claiming that
they are reforming the prisons. I am telling you
today that they are doing nothing. Anyone that is so
convinced that our prisons are better now should
volunteer and spend a weekend inside any of our
prisons. The hardship inside there is better
imagined than experienced.
I saw hell!
”If the government gets up now and say they are
reforming prisons, they are doing nothing! I am
saying this because I experienced it for 16 years on
the death row”.
There is no doubt that it is the case of men like Ike
that has continued to sustain the debate for the
abolition of the death penalty in Nigeria, in view of
the seeming legal loopholes that have made the call
justifiable.
In a recent conference it held in conjunction with the
European Union, EU, in Abuja over the swelling
number of inmates facing the capital punishment in
Nigeria, the ASFF, said it had since 2011, launched
a project with the aim of restricting the
pronouncement of capital punishment in the
Nigerian justice system.
The ‘Saving Lives’ project which is being run in
partnership with the National Human Rights
Commission, NHRC, the Nigerian Bar Association,
NBA, and Access to Justice, has offered pro-bono
legal services to over 140 detainees facing capital
punishment.
The project is currently running in seven target
states: Abuja, Benue, Edo, Kaduna, Katsina, Plateau
and Lagos.
The legal manager of the project, Mr. Kola Ogunbiyi,
said the group was able to engage prerogatives of
mercy committee members in the target states.
“One of the cases that was profiled, thanks to our
intervention, is the case of Lasisi Yusuf, a Kogi state
indigene who had been on death row for over 16
years in Kaduna prison and was pardoned by the
Kogi state governor. So far, out of the 19 requests
tendered before the committee, seven have been
granted.
“In recent times, specifically in May 2014, ASFF set
a precedence in the enforcement of the rights of
detainees on death row in the case of Maimuna
Abdulmummi and Thankgod Ebhos.
“Maimuna Abdulmumini was a child bride who was
alleged to have killed her husband at the age of 13.
She was tried and sentenced to death by a Katsina
state high court. ASFF was able to secure judgment
for Maimuna at the ECOWAS community court of
justice which ordered that she be awarded damages
for the violation of her rights as contained in
regional and international legal laws.
“Thankgod Ebhos, who was the fifth inmate of the
inmates of Edo prison, had an order from the same
court for stay of execution granted to him and the
government was also instructed to strike out his
name off the death row list.
“While these cases are far from over, it is important
to note that with our intervention in matters like this,
we expect maximum adherence to due process in
the prosecution of death penalty related cases. In
all, 35 inmates facing death penalty have been
released on court order and 88 cases are still
ongoing before different courts across the target
states.
“We are not saying that someone who committed an
offence should not be punished, our argument is
that the execution of death penalty will never be a
solution or serve as a deterrent. We also know that
some innocent persons have been erroneously tried
and executed.
“90 per cent of cases in criminal matters are based
on confessions. It stands on record that it is usually
the indigents, illiterates or ignorant people that are
mostly executed. Sometimes, they don’t even have
anyone to defend them”, he added.
Investigations by Saturday Vanguard revealed that
statistically, there were about 700 inmates on death
row in Nigeria in 2003. The number almost doubled
within a spate of 10 years, with a total of 1223
inmates condemned to death by 2013. In fact, four
condemned prisoners were executed in 2013 after a
suspension that started in 2006.
More so, from 1970 until 1999, there have been
2600 executions in Nigeria, with an average of 87
executions per year. And since 1999, 26 condemned
inmates have been executed in the country.
Research has further shown that 98 per cent of
condemned prisoners in Nigeria are people accused
of armed robbery and/or culpable homicide
(murder). Legally, such offence ought to be proved
beyond every reasonable doubt in order to secure a
conviction. But how well this burden of proof which
is usually on the state has been effectively
discharged, remains a story for another day.
Remarkably, death penalty has been part of the
Nigerian justice system for centuries, even prior to
the colonial era.
We need not forget that the movement towards the
abolition of capital punishment in the country started
in response to the unprecedented rate of executions
of Nigerian citizens by it own government under the
military regimes that preceded and followed the civil
war.
This unbridled usage of death penalty as legal
punishment reached a climax on November 10,
1995 with the gruesome execution of Ken Saro
Wiwa and some of his companions by the late Sani
Abacha’s military regime.
That particular incident drew flakes for the country
from notable world leaders, including the late
Nelson Mandela, and also culminated to the
banishment of Nigeria from the commonwealth.
In spite of the outrage that trailed the executions,
the Supreme Court in December 1998, in its
judgment in the case of ‘Kalu vs The State’, went
ahead and upheld the constitutionality of the death
penalty.
However, in 2003-2004, former President Olusegun
Obasanjo, appointed the then Attorney General of
the Federation and Minister of Justice, Chief
Akinlolu Olujimi, to set up the National Study Group
on Death Penalty- which eventually conducted a
debate on the maintenance or the abolition of death
penalty in Nigeria.
Even though the consensus backed the abolition of
capital punishment in the country, with the result of
the national debate published in various
newspapers, yet, the status-quo has remained.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment