Tag: Justice Binta Nyako

  • BREAKING: My lord, I have no confidence in this court anymore- Nnamdi Kanu forces Justice Binta Nyako to hands off case

    BREAKING: My lord, I have no confidence in this court anymore- Nnamdi Kanu forces Justice Binta Nyako to hands off case

    It was drama in court on Tuesday when the leader of the proscribed Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), Nnamdi Kanu, forced, literally, Justice Binta Nyako of the Federal High Court in Abuja to recuse herself from his trial.

    Kanu spoke from the dock at the resumed proceeding in the seven-count terrorism charge the Federal Government preferred against him.

    While his lawyer, Mr. Alloy Ejimakor, was trying to persuade the court to suspend the trial on the basis that his client was denied the opportunity to prepare his defence, Kanu, sprang up from his seat and ordered him to sit down.

    “Sit down! I say you should sit down!” Kanu bellowed from the dock.

    Continuing, he said: “My lord, I have no confidence in this court anymore and I ask you to recuse yourself because you did not abide by the decision of the Supreme Court.

    “I can understand it if the DSS refuses to obey a court order, but for this court to refuse to obey an order of the Supreme Court is regrettable.

    “I am asking you to recuse yourself from this case,” Kanu stated.

    At this juncture, the prosecution counsel, Mr. Adegboyega Awomolo, SAN, urged the court to ignore Kanu’s position, insisting that the Supreme Court directed that he should be tried on the pending seven-count charge.

    “The Justices ordered this court to proceed with the hearing of the charge against the defendant. My lord, you should not recuse yourself on the basis of this mere observation which does not have anything to do with the Supreme Court. It is an incompetent observation. We urge this court to proceed with the hearing,” FG’s lawyer submitted.

    Not done, Kanu, rose again from the dock, waving a copy of what he described as the subsisting judgement of the Supreme Court.

    He read a portion where the apex court held that actions of the trial court in the matter “rendered the impartiality of the judge suspect.”

    “But my lord, you know that I love you. It is just that this court is allowing the defence to railroad me into a trial that is at variance with every provision of the Constitution,” Kanu added.

    After she had expressed her dissatisfaction with the development, Justice Nyako said she was not willing to continue with the case.

    “I hereby recuse myself and remit the case file back to the Chief Judge,” she held.

    The court had earlier okayed FG’s request to shield the identities of witnesses billed to testify in the matter.

    Recall that Kanu was first arrested in Lagos on October 14, 2015, upon his return to the country from the United Kingdom, UK.

    Justice Nyako had on April 25, 2017, granted him bail on health grounds, after he had spent about 18 months in detention.

    Upon the perfection of the bail conditions, he was on April 28, 2017, released from the Kuje prison.

    However, midway into the trial, the IPOB leader escaped from the country after soldiers invaded his country home at Afara Ukwu Ibeku in Umuahia, Abia State, an operation that led to the death of some of his followers.

    Kanu was later re-arrested in Kenya on June 19, 2021 and extraordinarily renditioned back to the country by security agents on June 27, 2021.

    Following the development, the trial court, on June 29, 2021, remanded him in custody of DSS, where he remained till date.

    On April 8, 2022, the court struck out eight out of the 15-count charges that FG preferred against him on the premise that they lacked substance.

    Likewise, the Abuja Division of the Court of Appeal, on October 13, 2022, ordered Kanu’s immediate release from detention even as it quashed the charge against him.

    Dissatisfied with the decision, FG took the matter before the Supreme Court, even as it persuaded the appellate court to suspend the execution of the judgement, pending the determination of its appeal.

    While deciding the appeal, the Supreme Court, on December 15, 2023, vacated the judgement of the appellate court and gave FG the nod to try the IPOB leader on the subsisting seven-count charge.

  • Justice Binta Nyako withdraws from Nnamdi Kanu’s trial

    Justice Binta Nyako withdraws from Nnamdi Kanu’s trial

    Justice Binta Nyako of a Federal High Court in Abuja, on Tuesday, recused herself from the trial of Nnamdi Kanu, the detained leader of the proscribed Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB)

    Justice Nyako withdrew from the case following oral applications by Kanu and his lawyer, Aloy Ejimakor, upon resumed hearing in the seven-count terrorism charge filed by the Federal Government.

    At the resumed hearing, the Federal Government’s lawyer, Adegboyega Awomolo, SAN, said the matter was got continuation of trial and he was ready to proceed.

    But Kanu’s lawyer, Alloy Ejimakor, asked the court to adjourn the trial due to two pending appeals challenging the court’s jurisdiction.

    Awomolo argued that a criminal trial cannot be stalled because of a pending appeal and that the defence should file for a stay of proceedings at the appellate court.

    The judge stated that the parties should not delay the matter, having ruled that the court would not attend to any applications until the end of the trial.

    Ejimakor insisted it was inappropriate to continue with the trial when he had not adequately prepared his client.

    He asserted that all court orders directing that his client should be allowed to prepare for his defence had allegedly been disobeyed.

    Justice Nyako then directed that a prosecution witness be called.

    While Ejimakor was addressing the court, Kanu stood up from his seat in the dock and ordered him (Ejimakor) to sit down in anger.

    “Sit down! I say you should sit down!” Kanu screamed from the dock.

    He insisted that the Supreme Court had ruled that his fundamental rights should not be violated by the detaining authority, especially regarding access to his lawyers.

    Turning to Justice Nyako, the IPOB leader said: “My lord, I have no confidence in this court any more and I ask you to recuse yourself because you did not abide by the decision of the Supreme Court.

    “I can understand it if the DSS refuse to obey a court order, but for this court to refuse to obey an order of the Supreme Court is regrettable.

    “I am asking you to recuse yourself from this case,” Kanu stated.

    But Awomolo countered the argument on the Supreme Court’s judgment delivered in 2023.

    He argued that the apex court mandated the lower court to proceed with the hearing and determination of Kanu’s trial.

    He stated that Kanu’s claims did not align with the Supreme Court’s verdict.

    “This is clearly an incompetent and audacious observation,” Awomolo said.

    The judge responded that, as far as she was concerned, there was nothing in the Supreme Court’s lead judgment that supported Kanu’s assertion.

    She expressed surprise that Kanu would stand up and yell at his counsel.

    “I hereby recuse myself from this case and remit the file to the Chief Judge for further necessary action,” Nyako stated.

    The judge said she could not proceed with a trial where a defendant lacked confidence in the court.

    Awomolo expressed his appreciation to the judge, lamenting that it was a very unfortunate day.

  • Nnamdi Kanu: Court strikes out Federal Government’s amended charges

    Nnamdi Kanu: Court strikes out Federal Government’s amended charges

    Justice Binta Nyako in a Federal High Court sitting in Abuja has struck out the six-count amended treasonable felony charges by the federal government against Nnamdi Kanu, the leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB).

    The charges were struck out after a withdrawal by the Prosecution counsel, Mr. K. E. Kaswe.

    Kaswe, who is from the Federal Ministry of Justice, withdrew the charge after Kanu’s team of lawyers led by Chief Mike Ozekhome, SAN, accused FG of deliberately frustrating the speedy determination of the case.

    Ozekhome noted that the amended charge was served on him barely 48 hours to the court proceeding.

    He maintained that FG introduced fresh issues in the amended charge, including additional documents and proof of evidence that was not originally attached to the case.

    “My lord, in one of the attachments, pictures of lawyers waiting to have a meeting with the defendant at the DSS facility, were snapped with secret camera and displayed.

    “Names of his lawyers- Ifeanyi Ejiofor and Maxwell Opara- were also mentioned. They have brought new issues and even changed the wordings of the charge. The fact that the court sustained only seven counts in the previous charge and they have now reduced it to six counts, means that the charge has already been altered”, Ozekhome submitted.

    He, therefore, said it was wrong for the Prosecution to insist on proceeding with trial, without firstly rearraigning the defendant.

    Owing to Ozekhome’s contention, FG’s lawyer, Kaswe, applied to withdraw the amended charge to enable the matter to proceed on trial.

    Kaswe told the court that his first witness was available and ready to testify.

    Consequently, Justice Nyako struck out the charge.

    Meanwhile, the authorities of the Federal High Court in Abuja seem to have soft-pedaled on the stringent conditions imposed on Kanu’s trial.

    Against their last month’s decision, the court authorities have stopped the movement of the trial to the Code of Conduct Tribunal (CCT), at Jabi District of Abuja.

    Also, the authorities of the Court have permitted the media to witness the trial.

    At today’s trial, journalists, lawyers, litigants, as well as workers were allowed into the court premises unhindered after formal introduction and presentation of identity cards.

    The court had last month issued a Practice Direction which moved the trial to CCT believed to be large and spacious enough to accommodate the crowd that usually surged to witness the trial.

    The Practice direction endorsed by the Chief Judge of the Court, Justice John Tsoho, had also prohibited media coverage except where expressly permitted.

    Those stringent conditions seem to have been jettisoned.

    Although reasons for deviating from the Practice Direction have not been made known, it was gathered that Jabi Code of Conduct Tribunal was considered too porous for such a sensitive trial, especially from security point of view.

    Apart from unhindered access granted to lawyers and media practitioners, roads leading to the court were not blocked unlike what used to be the practice before now, while food vendors also had did their businesses without molestation.

    However, adequate security measures were taken to prevent security breaches.

  • Nnamdi Kanu’s American Lawyer drags Malami, Justice Nyako to ICC

    Nnamdi Kanu’s American Lawyer drags Malami, Justice Nyako to ICC

    The Attorney General of the Federation (AGF) and Minister of Justice, Abubakar Malami, has been dragged before the International Criminal Court, ICC, by Bruce Fein, the United States counsel of Nnamdi Kanu, pro-Biafra agitator, over a criminal complaint.

     

    Fein also filed a criminal complaint against Justice Binta Nyako of an Abuja Federal High Court.

     

    He charged Malami and Nyako with conspiring with President Muhammadu Buhari and Kenyan President, Uhuru Kenyatta, “to commit crimes against humanity”.

     

    In a tweet on Thursday, Fein wrote:

     

    “Today, I filed a criminal complaint with the International Court of Justice against Nigerian Attorney General Malami and Federal High Court Justice Nyako charging them with conspiring with Nigerian President Buhari and Kenyan President Kenyatta to commit crimes against humanity.”

  • Nnamdi Kanu’s lawyer, Ejimakor says IPOB leader will be released on May 18

    Nnamdi Kanu’s lawyer, Ejimakor says IPOB leader will be released on May 18

    Aloy Ejimakor, Special Counsel to Nnamdi Kanu, leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra, IPOB, has said that his client would be granted bail on May 18, 2022.

     

    In a tweet, Ejimakor, wrote: “Congratulations to my colleagues who were on ground yesterday to receive the 8-count strike out.

     

    “It’s great that the Umuahia judgment was brought to bear on the bail application moved by SAN Ozekhome. I’m confident that #MNK will make bail on 18th May. Team work pays. #Igwebuike.”

     

    Ejimakor was reacting to yesterday’s ruling by an Abuja Federal High Court, that struck out eight out of the 15-count charges against Kanu.

     

    Justice Binta Nyako struck out the eight count charges on the grounds that the proof of evidence did not link Kanu to the charges.

     

    The judge delivered a ruling on a preliminary objection the Biafran leader raised against all the charges.

     

    “I have read the counts and counts 6,7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12 and 14 have not disclosed any offense against the defendent.

     

    “‘Counts 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 8 and 15 shows some allegations. The court shall proceed to try the defendant on those count,” the Judge ruled.

     

    Following the ruling, the judge had slated hearing for Kanu’s bail application for May 18, 2022.

     

     

     

  • Court dismisses 8 out of 15 counts charge against Nnamdi Kanu

    Court dismisses 8 out of 15 counts charge against Nnamdi Kanu

    Justice Binta Nyako of the Federal High Court in Abuja has struck out eight of the 15 counts against the leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), Nnamdi Kanu.

     

    The 15 charges which bordered on terrorism were filed against Kanu by the Federal Government.

     

    When the case resumed on Friday at the court in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Justice Nyako struck out eight of the charges while delivering a ruling on the validity of the charges.

     

    She held that in the instant preliminary objection application, counts six, seven, eight, nine, 10, 11, 12, and 14 have not disclosed any offence by the defendant.

     

    The judge, however, acknowledged that counts one, two, three, four, five, 13, and 15 showed some allegations against the IPOB leader, saying the trial of the defendant would proceed on those counts.

     

    According to her, rendition for the purpose of criminal investigation is allowed and in the instant case, there is a bench warrant on the defendant, suffice to say he is a fugitive before the court.

     

    On the issue of the proscription of IPOB, the judge held that the case was pending before the appeal court and as such, the order proscribing the organisation was subsisting until it was vacated.

     

    Details soon…