Nnamdi Kanu Gets Court bail
Justice
Binta Nyako of the Federal High Court setting in Abuja on today (Tuesday)
granted bail to the leader of Indigenous People of Biafra, Nnamdi Kanu, on
health grounds.
The judge
also gave a stern warning to the defendant not to participate in any rally or
be found in a crowd of more than 10 persons in the course of the bail
A list of
conditions given by Justice Nyako that Kanu must fulfill in order to enjoy
freedom are
1.)
Kanu must not hold
rallies.
2.)
He must not grant interviews.
3.)
Must not be in a crowd of more than 10 people.
4.)
The IPOB leader must provide three sureties in
the sum of N100 million each.
5.)
One of the sureties must be a senior highly
placed person of Igbo extraction such as a senator.
6.)
The second surety must be a highly respected
Jewish leader since Mr. Kanu said his religion is Judaism
7.)
The third surety must be a highly respected
person who owns landed property and is resident in Abuja
8.)
The IPOB leader must deposit his Nigerian
passport
9.)
He must also deposit his British passport with
the court
10.) He must provide the
court with reports on the progress of his health and treatment on a monthly
basis.
11.) The order for him
to deposit his Nigerian and British passports also mean he cannot travel out of
the country.
She however
refused the separate bail applications filed by the the IPOB leader’s co-defendants.
The accused persons charged along with Kanu and who were denied bail by the judge were the National Coordinator of IPOB, Mr. Chidiebere Onwudiwe; an IPOB member, Benjamin Madubugwu, and a former Field Maintenance Engineer seconded to the MTN, David Nwawuisi.
The court
also in a separate ruling rejected the application by Kanu and two of the
co-defendants seeking the setting aside of the court’s earlier order granting
protection to prosecution witnesses to enable them to testify behind a screen
or in mask as well as using pseudonyms to refer to them during proceedings.
Kanu who had
been in detention since 2015 was granted bail on Tuesday following the
application filed by his lawyer after part of the charges filed against them
were struck out by the court.
Justice
Nyako noted that she had observed that Kanu was always having to sit down in
the dock whenever he appeared in court, a development which she said could be
an indication that he could be suffering from an ailment that could not be
treated in prison.
She
therefore granted bail in the sum of N100m with three sureties in like sum.
The judge
ordered that one of the sureties to be provided by the defendant must be a
highly placed person such as a senator.
She directed
that the other must be a highly recognised leader in the religion being
practised by Kanu.
When asked
by the judge in the course of reading the ruling, Kanu said he was practising
Judaism.
The third
surety, according to the judge, must be a resident of Abuja and who must have a
landed property in the Federal Capital Territory.
The court
fixed July 11 and 12 for commencement of trial.
Meanwhile, Governor
Ayodele Fayose of Ekiti State was at the Federal High Court in Abuja
to solidarise with Kanu on Tuesday.
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