Tag: Prison

  • Eid-el-Fitr: Ganduje grants amnesty to 500 prisoners

    Kano State Government on Sunday granted pardon to 500 inmates of prisons in the state to mark the Eid-el-Fitr.

    The state Governor, Dr. Abdullahi Ganduje, granted the pardon to the inmates at Central Prison, Kurmawa in the state capital, while addressing a cross-section of the convicts, shortly after the Eid prayer in the state capital.

    The governor, who was accompanied to the prison by the Minister of Interior, Lt. Gen. A.B. Dambazau (retd), explained that a “committee of officials of the state government and the state command of Nigeria Prison Service had been mandated to produce names of deserving inmates, within the next two weeks.”

    He said, “200 of the prisoners, who are to be pardoned would come from the state central prison, while the remaining 300 would come from Goron Dutse prison and other satellite prisons in the state.”

    Even though many of the prisoners have expressed remorse and have changed positively in terms of behaviour, the governor stressed that there were procedures and due processes that would warrant their consideration for pardon.

    On the issue of condemned prisoners, those on life imprisonment and those in prison for many years without conviction, the governor said a committee would be constituted to review their cases and make recommendations to the government, for possible review of their punishments.

    The committee is expected to submit its reports in two weeks, he stated.

    Also, Ganduje on the occasion, declared free 50 inmates, who were earlier granted amnesty, during the state 50th anniversary celebrations in May, assuring them that they would be provided with transport fare to their various destinations.

    In his remarks, the Minister of Interior, Lt. Gen. A.B. Dambazau (retd), commended Kano State Government for providing land to the Nigeria Prison Service to enable it to build a 3, 000-capacity prison in the state.

    On the inmates freed by the Ganduje administration, he charged them to “go back to the society and engage in legitimate activities,” warning that if they revert to crime, chances are that if apprehended, they would not come out of prison again.

    He urged the government to work with the Nigeria Prison Service in the proposed co-location of prisons and courts to ease the problem of conveyance of prisoners to courts and to support the state command towards the success of its ongoing skills acquisition centre project at Kurmawa Prison.

    Earlier in his address, the state Commissioner for Justice, Barrister Haruna M.N. Falali, said that since its inception two years ago, the Ganduje administration had granted amnesty to over 3, 000 prisoners, saying that the government would not relent in pardoning genuinely reformed prisoners.

  • 70 % of prison inmates are awaiting trial – Danbazau

    70 % of prison inmates are awaiting trial – Danbazau

    The Minister of Interior, retired Lt.-Gen. Abdulrahman Dambazau, on Sunday said ‎that more than 70 per cent of inmates in Nigerian prisons were awaiting trial.

    Dambazau disclosed this when he visited Kano central prison alongside the state governor to mark this year’s Eid-el-Fitr celebration.

    The minister said the decision to visit the prison was to show to the inmates that the government was aware of their existence.‎

    ‎“‎”The high number of awaiting trial inmates is worrisome because the prisons are meant for convicts, but you find out at the end of the day that more than 70 percent of the people there are awaiting trial inmates,” he said.

    He said that some of the inmates were supposed to stay for few years but ended up staying for up to 15 years while awaiting trial.‎
    ‎‎‎Dambazau, however, commended the ‎state governor for giving a vast piece of land for the building of 3,000 capacity modern prison in the state.

    ‎Earlier, Gov. Abdullahi Ganduje‎ said he had secured the release of 50 inmates and also approved the release additional 500 inmates in prisons across the state.

    He said that the gesture was part of the activities to celebrate Eid-el Fitr celebration in the state.‎

    Ganduje said the beneficiaries were selected based on gravity of their offence and sign of reformation while in prison.

    He advised them to desist from acts that would warrant bringing them back to prison.

    He also said the state government would assist them with some money to enable them travel back to their communities.‎

  • Land Grabbing: Alleged notorious kingpin fails fo meet bail conditions, remanded in prison

    …as court declares sureties unverifiable

    The Lagos State Special Offences Court sitting in Oshodi has declared the sureties presented by a suspected land grabbing kingpin, Chief Kamorudeen Lamina, alias Sir K Oluwo as unverifiable and thus unable to stand for his bail.

    The State Government, through the Special Task Force on Land Grabbers set up by Governor Akinwunmi Ambode’s administration, had on June 16, 2017 arraigned Lamina and others before the court over alleged forceful dispossession of residents from their legitimate rights to land ownership.

    In his ruling after their arraignment, Magistrate Lateef Owolabi had granted bail to the defendants in the sum of N1 million and two sureties in like sum. One of the sureties must be a land owner in Lagos, while the other must be a civil servant not below grade level 15. The sureties must have three years tax clearance and registration with Lagos State Residents Registration Agency (LASRRA).

    The Magistrate had also ordered the defendants to deposit N150,000 each with the court, while they are to be remanded in Badagry Prison pending when they were able to meet their bail conditions.

    But Lamina and other defendants have failed in their many attempts to meet the stringent conditions of his bail, by presenting persons that the Court has found to be unverifiable to stand as surety.

    According to the matter, Lamina and his gang were said to have been terrorising the people of Ikorodu area of the State for some time before he was arrested on June 15, 2017.

    Others arraigned alongside him included Mr Omotola Ogunsanmi, Mr Samson Shobule (A.K.A Samson Salau), Biliaminu Orega (A.K.A Biliaminu Salau), Alhaji Jimoh Aromasodu, Alhaji Wasiu Orenuga and Alhaji Nurudeen Kasali.

    In counts one and two, Lamina, sometime in February 2017 in Mowo Kekere area of Ikorodu Local Government, allegedly took over one plot of land forcefully which was sold to one Mrs Ebere Okafor by Ifegbuwa family contrary to Section 2 (1) of the Lagos State Properties Protection Law 2016.

    The action was allegedly carried out by Lamina despite the fact that the sale of the land had been ratified with proof of payment.

    In count three, Lamina was accused of forcefully taking over and remaining in possession of 200 plots of land in Mowo Kekere belonging to Planet Properties Ltd contrary to Section 2 (2) of the same law, while in count five, the defendants were said to have fraudulently sold 60 hectares of land which had been previously sold by the rightful owner contrary to Section 8 (1) (b) of the law.

    The fraudulent sale, which was allegedly carried out in January 2017, was perfected by the defendants fraudulently claiming to be the descendants of Ifegbuwa family.

    In count six, the defendants were accused of fraudulent selling 25 hectares of land to third parties without any lawful right to do so, an offence punishable under the law.

    The matter has been adjourned to July 13.

  • Prisoner cries self out of prison in Nassarawa

    Prisoner cries self out of prison in Nassarawa

    Ikechukwu Emmanuel, an inmate of Keffi Medium Security Prisons in Keffi in Nasarawa State, cried himself to freedom on Friday through the help of Prisons Officers Wives Association (PROWA).

    Emmanuel, not originally listed to benefit from the assistance of PROWA’s prison decongestion effort, elicited the sympathy of the President, Hajia Gwamma Ja’afaru, when he cried on seeing 14 other inmates leave.

    The 14 were those that PROWA came to pay their fines to secure their release from prison.

    Emmanuel was not among those but he sat with them when Ja’afaru and her entourage came for their release,

    After the others left, Emmanuel remained behind and began to cry.

    His cry attracted the attention of the PROWA president, who was touched and made inquiries about him.

    When Emmanuel was told that his fine was not in the range of the others, which PROWA paid, he was asked to return to his room and he began to cry more.

    Ja’afaru, who was moved by his tears, consulted with her team and decided to pay his fine of N65,000.

    She, however, warned him to justify the sacrifice made to secure his release.

    In an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), Ja’afaru said, “I was really touched and as a caring mother and a woman, you would want to do anything to secure his release.

    ”His fine was far above those of others but all we really care about in this holy month of Ramadan is to show that we really care.”

    Mr Ekwere Ekanem, the Comptroller of Prisons in Nasarawa State, said the unexpected release of the inmate was an act of God and as such inmates must always pray to God to send a benefactor to come to their aid.

    “One of the things we tell them in our prisons in Nasarawa State is not to give up on God no matter the crime that brought them in here and as you can see, God did his miracle today again.

    ”My hope is that the boy will justify the gesture by living a just life and not returning here again,” Ekanem said.

    Emmanuel told NAN that he had been in the prison for three months for smoking hard drugs and wanted another opportunity to go out and redeem himself .

    He said he decided to sit with the 14 others in the hope that God would use PROWA to give him a second chance.

    “I did not know what to do again.

    ‘’I lost all hope but our prison officers said we should keep praying for forgiveness from God So, I told myself that if God gave me another chance, I would change my ways and be a good person.

    “When I saw some of us going to sit separately, I said maybe if I joined them, mummy would consider but when they didn’t call my name, that was when I started crying.

    ”I am very happy because I never expected them to rescue me. I promise to change my ways of life,” Emmanuel said.

    Soon after, another inmate, Abbas Ubale, rushed forward and pleaded with the PROWA entourage to secure his release by paying his fine of N3,000.

    Again, the PROWA the team paid the fine but warned him to justify the gesture by avoiding criminal tendencies and engage in meaningful ventures.

    In all, the association secured the release of 19 prisoners – 16 from Keffi Medium Security Prison and three from Keffi old Prison.

     

     

  • JUST IN: Court sends ex-FCT Minister, Bala Mohammed to prison

    JUST IN: Court sends ex-FCT Minister, Bala Mohammed to prison

    A former Minister of the Federal Capital Territory, Bala Mohammed, was on Wednesday remanded in the Kuje Maximum Prison over allegations of fraud.

    TheNewsGuru.com reports that Mohammed was minister under former President Goodluck Jonathan’s administration.

    He was arraigned by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC on a six-count charge for alleged abuse of office.

    He was brought before a High Court of the FCT for alleged involvement in the collection of gratification to the tune of N550 million, while in office as minister.

    He is also accused of failing to declare properties belonging to him.

    Mohammed pleaded not guilty to the charge.

    Presiding judge, Abubakar Talba adjourned the matter till May 12 for ruling on the application for bail.

    He ordered that the defendant be remanded in prison custody pending the determination of the bail application.

  • Alleged inciting comments: Ex-Jigawa Governor, Sule Lamido remanded in prison

    Former Governor of Jigawa State, Alhaji Sule Lamido, has been remanded in prison custody by a Chief Magistrate Court sitting in Dutse, the state capital.

    The Chief Magistrate, Usman Lamin, on Tuesday ruled that the ex-governor be remanded in Dutse prison until May 4 when applications for his bail will be decided.

    In his ruling, Lamin held that he needed time to decide on the application for bail and study the police’s First Investigation Report, FIR, brought as evidence in the case.

    Lamido is standing trial at the court on a four-count charge bordering on disturbance.

    According to the court document, the charges against the former governor was contrary to section 114 of the Penal Code, disturbance of public peace and contrary to section 113 of the Penal Code, defamation of character punishable under section 392 of the Penal Code and criminal intimidation punishable under section 397 of the Penal Code.

    TheNewsGuru.com reports that Lamido was on Sunday arrested by the police for allegedly inciting his supporters to violence ahead of the upcoming Local Government Elections.

    Following his arrest, Lamido was taken to neighbouring Kano State, where he was kept in police custody.

    TheNewsGuru.com reports that Lamido on Tuesday, was driven to Dutse for his trial amid heavy security.

    TheNewsGuru.com reports that the former minister of foreign affairs had however stated that he was being persecuted for declaring to run for the 2019 presidential elections.

  • Private prisons slam door on justice

    Private prisons slam door on justice

    By Jesse Jackson

     

    Next week, March 7, will mark the 52nd anniversary of Bloody Sunday, the historic march and shocking police riot in Selma, Alabama, that helped build public support for passage of the Voting Rights Act. Now, a half-century later, an avowed critic of that law — former Alabama Sen. Jefferson Beauregard Sessions III, who was born in Selma — has been confirmed as attorney general of the United States. In one of his first acts in office — reversing Obama’s order to phase out the federal government’s use of private prisons — he has begun to weaken civil rights protections.

    The decision on private prisons reflects Trump’s desire to repeal all things Obama. It expresses the ideological bias of reactionaries like Sessions toward privatizing public functions. It also reveals the pervasive corruption already apparent in the Trump administration. The two largest for-profit prison companies in the United States — GEO Group and CoreCivic (formerly Corrections Corporation of America) — and their associates have, according to Reason Magazine, contributed “more than $10 million to candidates since 1989 and have spent nearly $25 million on lobbying efforts.”

    When Trump stoked public fears of violent crime in our cities, called our prison system a “disaster,” and endorsed “privatizations and private prisons,” the industry ponied up hundreds of thousands of dollars to support his candidacy. Since Trump won the election, share prices of GEO Group and CoreCivic have soared more than 100 percent. In our corrupted politics, Sessions’ act helps consolidate their return on investment.

    Reviving private prisons, however, represents far more than mere anti-Obama venom, ideological preference or even political corruption. It tramples basic civil and human rights. And African Americans and Latinos, who disproportionately populate our prisons, will suffer the most.

    Incarcerating people in for-profit prisons is morally indefensible. Locking people up and turning them over to companies whose primary concerns are profits and return to investors is a recipe for abuse. And the record of private prisons demonstrates repeatedly that abuse is pervasive.In Sessions’ home state of Alabama, for example, whites constitute two-thirds of the total population but only 42 percent of the prison population. African Americans represent only one-fourth of the total population, but over half (54 percent) of the incarcerated.

    This is the cause of repeated upheaval and scandal. Private prisons suffer more violence. Underpaid guards too often punish prisoners without accountability. Private prisons, Obama’s Justice Department found, aren’t as safe for prisoners or for guards as public prisons. They lack the services that might revive hope rather than crush it, such as educational programs and job training. Despite their companies’ claims, private prisons don’t save government much money either.

    Worse, the thirst for profit overrides the needs of the incarcerated. Private prisons are notorious for skimping on food, facilities and health care. They gouge prisoners even for using the telephone to stay in contact with loved ones. Worse, the private companies generally demand that the government guarantee that their cells will be full, even if actual crime rates are falling or if harsh sentencing is rolled back. Nearly two-thirds of private prison contracts mandate that state and local governments sustain an occupancy rate — usually 90 percent — or taxpayers pay for the empty beds. At the federal level, the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) budget is mandated by the Congress to maintain detention beds for at least 34,000 immigrants daily.

    Sessions’ order impacts some 14,000 federal prisoners, a number that has been trending down in recent years. Most of the 2 million prisoners in America are sentenced and held at the state and local level. To them, Sessions is sending a strong signal. The federal government will be ramping up detentions, particularly of immigrants. It signals to states and localities — many of which have been souring on private prisons —that the federal government is all in for privatization.

    Trump has promised a new day for what he calls America’s “inner cities.” But what we’ve seen so far is a return to the failed policies of the past — law and order rhetoric combined with calls for tougher police tactics, harsher sentences, and now a corrupt and indefensible embrace of privatized prisons. With Sessions in the DOJ, Trump’s divisive racial rhetoric is about to turn into policy.

  • 73% of Nigeria’s prison population in 2015 were un-sentenced – NBS

    73% of Nigeria’s prison population in 2015 were un-sentenced – NBS

    The National Bureau of Statistics has said that about 73 percent of Nigeria’s prison population were un-sentenced detainees in 2015.

    According to its recent report, “Overall, 72.53 percent of the prison population during the period under reference were un-sentenced.”

    Lagos State has the highest number of un-sentenced detainees. The state recorded 5,603 un-sentenced detainees out of a prison population of 6,522, followed by Rivers and Edo states with 3,625 and 2,434 un-sentenced detainees respectively.

    Yobe and Borno states had the least numbers of un-sentenced detainees of 163 and 216 of a prison population of 562 and 603 respectively.

  • Teenager remanded in prison for allegedly defiling 4-year-old girl

    A Kano Upper Sharia Court, sitting at Kofar Kudu on Tuesday remanded a 15-year-old boy in children remand home for allegedly defiling a 4-year-old girl.

    The boy of Salanta Quarters Kano was charged with rape, contrary to Section 283 of the Penal Code.

    The judge, Qadi Atiku Bello ordered the remand of the accused in prison custody and adjourned the case till Jan. 25.

    Earlier, the prosecutor, Insp. Auwal Muhammad told the court that the case was transferred from a juvenile court sitting at Audu Bako Secretariat Kano.

    He said that one Muddasir Ado of Sharada Quarters Kano reported the case at Sharada Police Division, Kano, on Oct. 26, 2016.

    The prosecutor said that on the same date at about 1 p.m. the accused deceived and lured the complainant’s 4-year-old daughter on her way back from school.

    The prosecutor said that the accused took the girl into an uncompleted building situated at Sharada Quarters and forcefully had sexual intercourse with her.

    The victim was rushed to Murtala Muhammad Specialist Hospital Kano for treatment.

    The accused, however, pleaded not guilty to the one count charge levelled against him.

  • Ikpeazu pardons 20 prisoners

    Governor Okezie Ikpeazu of Abia has granted state pardon to 20 prisoners convicted for offences ranging from stealing, armed robbery, conspiracy, intent to commit felony, advanced fee fraud and assault.

    The state’s Attorney-General and Commissioner for Justice, Chief Umeh Kalu made this known in a statement in Umuahia on Tuesday.

    Kalu said that the prisoners held in Aba, Arochukwu, Port Harcourt and Enugu prisons were granted pardon on the advice and recommendation of the Abia State Advisory Council on Prerogative of Mercy.

    He said that three among the 20 prisoners were on death row and had their sentences commuted to life imprisonment while the others sentenced to various prison terms were released.

    Kalu explained that the governor’s exercise of clemency to the prisoners was in commemoration of the Christmas and New Year celebrations.

    “Government expects the pardoned prisoners to be law abiding and contribute to the drive to provide a better future for the state and the country at large,’’ he said.