A London Court has registered a judgement delivered by a Nigerian court
against the military following the bombardment of the Gbaramatu
communities in Delta State by the Joint Military Task Force operating in
the state in May 2009.
Justice Timothy Holroyde of the Queen’s Bench
Division of the Royal High Court of Justice England and Wales, on
January 18, acceded to the request of the communities to register the
judgement which ordered the federal government to pay them N99 billion
damages over the attack.
He however rejected the request by the
communities to register the judgement against the president of Nigeria
and the attorney general of the federation and minister of justice, who
were the first and second defendants in the suit.
In their request,
the communities had also sought to obtain a worldwide freezing
injunction against the assets of the federal government.
The
Federal High Court, Asaba, Delta State, had ordered the federal
government to pay the communities N99.9 billion damages for gross
violation of their rights by the force then coordinated by Sarkin Yakin
Bello, a retired major general.
Counsel to the communities, Selekeowei Larry, a Senior Advocate of Nigeria, filed the case.
However,
two years after the judgement was delivered, the federal government
neither complied nor appealed against it, forcing the communities to
request the London Court to register it.
Before applying to the
Queen Bench Division High Court of Justice in London, to register the
judgment, the communities wrote twice to the then Attorney General of
the Federation, Mohammed Adoke, asking the government to comply with the
judgment.
On May 5, 2009 the task force invaded Gbaramatu
communities in Warri South West Local Government of Delta State killing
and maiming residents and also destroying properties worth billions of
naira.
They however filed a suit at the Federal High Court in Asaba
on June 22, 2009 against the president, the attorney general of the
federation and Mr. Bello.
In the suit, the communities also asked the
court to declare the bombardment unconstitutional and a gross violation
of their rights.
Delivering the judgement, Justice Ibrahim
Buba said the bombardment of the communities by the military resulting
in the demolition/destruction of houses, household furniture/wares,
boats, canoes, domestic animals and displacement of members of the
communities “is in violation of section 217 (2)(c) of the 1999
constitution and is therefore unconstitutional.”
Mr. Buba added,
“That the sum of N49 billion is awarded in favour of the plaintiffs as
special damages against the defendants jointly severally.
“That the
sum of N50 billion is also awarded as aggravated and punitive damages
against the defendants jointly and severally for the unlawful
bombardment and sacking of the plaintiffs’ communities which resulted in
wanton destruction of their houses, household furniture and other
wares, their domestic animals, canoes, boats, sacred places, artifacts
etc and which resulted in total displacement of members of the
communities for minimum of three months from 15th May 2009, the effect
of which was that members of the communities were living in the swampy
mangrove forests in subhuman conditions while others were in a
concentration camp and suffered loss of income, disease, and mental
torture and the education of their children of school age was
disrupted.”
www.premiumtimesng.com/news/top-news/197117-london-court-registers-n99-billion-judgment-against-nigerian-military.html
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