Court Orders Police To Pay Charly Boy N50m Damages
A Federal
High Court sitting in Abuja has ordered the Nigeria Police Force, IGP and the
FCT Commissioner of Police to pay N50m to Charles Oputa, a.k.a Charly Boy, the
convener of ‘OurMumuDonDo’ movement.
The News
Agency of Nigeria reports that Justice John Tsoho awarded the amount on
Monday while delivering judgment in a fundamental rights suit brought against
the Police by Charly Boy.
He said the
sum was a compensation for the violation of his rights to dignity of the human
person, freedom of expression, peaceful assembly and association.
Tsoho added
that the Police should publish an apology to Charly Boy in two national
newspapers.
NAN recalls
that in a suit filed on March 29, Charly Boy had accused the Police and their
officers of harassing him and members of the OurMumuDonDo campaign during the
#ResumeOrResign protests.
Charly Boy,
through his lawyer, Mr. Inibehe Effiong, argued that the Police attacked the
group during a peaceful demonstration at the Unity Fountain in Abuja.
He asked the
court to determine whether the “use of water cannons, teargas canisters and
wild Police dogs to harass him and members of his group during the said
peaceful protest on August 8, 2017 was constitutional.”
He argued
that the act was an infringement on his fundamental rights, freedom of
expression, peaceful assembly and association as enshrined in sections 34, 39,
and 40 of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999 (as
amended).
Charly Boy,
therefore, prayed the court to make a compelling order on the FCT Police and
their commissioner to publish a public apology to him in five national newspapers.
He also
demanded that payment of the sum of N100 million as general damages be awarded
to the applicant as well as direct that N400 million be paid as exemplary
damages by the Police.
Delivering
judgment on the case marked as Suit No. FHC/ABJ/CS/343/2018, Justice Tsoho held
that there was no evidence that miscreants invaded or stormed the premises of
the protest as alleged by the police.
On whether
the Applicant was entitled to stage the protest, the court held that protest is
a constitutionally-guaranteed right, provided it is done peacefully.
“The
Respondents (the Police) need not exercise an uncommon aggression and mayhem to
ward off alleged miscreants.
“The law is
that the court has the right to grant redress to anyone whose right is violated
and the applicant is entitled to a remedy.
“Relief four
is granted and the respondents are ordered to publish an apology to the
applicant in two national newspapers for violating his fundamental rights.
“The sum of
N50m is awarded against the respondents as general and exemplary damages,’’
Tsoho ruled.
Reacting to
the judgment, Charly Boy’s counsel, Effiong, described it as “a resounding
victory for democracy, freedom of expression and peaceful assembly in the
country.”
“This
judgment sends unequivocal message to the Nigerian Police that they have no
power to stop or disrupt peaceful protests by Nigerians.
“The Police,
by this judgment, cannot invent flimsy excuses to stop citizens from exercising
their fundamental rights to freedom of expression and peaceful assembly.
“I am highly
elated by this victory for democracy,’’ Effiong said.
FROM NANng.Com
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