THE 76 destitute persons,
who were deported by the Lagos State Government and dumped on the Upper
Iweka Bridge, Onitsha, Anambra State on July 24, 2013, have dragged the
Lagos State Government to a Federal High Court sitting in Lagos.
The suit was filed by seven of the
deportees: Nnenna Ogbonna, Joseph Aniebonam, Osondu Mbuto, Osondu Agwu,
Emily Okoroariri, Friday Ndukwe and Onyeka Ugwu as the applicants, on
behalf of the 76 others, while the Attorney-General of Lagos State and
the Commissioner of Police, Lagos State are the respondents.
In the motion filed by their lawyer, Ugo
Ugwunnadi, the applicants asked the court to declare that they, as
Nigerian citizens were entitled to the enjoyment of their fundamental
rights as provided for in Sections 34, 35, 36, 37, 40, 41 and 42 of the
1999 constitution, as amended.
The applicants are also seeking a
perpetual injunction restraining the respondents, their agents, workers
and officers from their further deportation or refusing them free entry
into Lagos and free exit there from, as well as an order mandating the
respondents to tender a written apology to them by publishing the
apology in three national newspapers continuously for 30 days, from the
date of the first publication, for unlawful and gross violation of their
constitutional rights.
The deportees are also seeking a
declaration of the court that their arrest and detention in various
camps within Lagos state for no offence known to law and without trial
and conviction by a court of competent jurisdiction, amounted to a
serious breach of their rights as provided for in the relevant sections
of the constitution.
The suit was brought as a motion on
notice pursuant to Order 11, Rule 1&2 of the Fundamental Rights
(Enforcement Procedure Rules), 2009, Sections 34 (1) (A), 35, 40, 45
(1), 42 (1), 46 (1) and 6 (1) of the 1999 Constitution, as amended;
Articles 5, 6 and 12 of African Charter on Human and Peoples Rights.
They also sought an order of the court
to declare that their deportation from Lagos State to Anambra State on
July 24, amounted to a gross violation of their rights and a breach of
the provisions of the 1999 constitution, as amended, adding that the
court should mandate the first respondent to re-absorb and accommodate
the applicants within Lagos State since they were Nigerian citizens and
were entitled to reside in any part of the country including Lagos
State.
Also, the applicants noted that the
issue for determination is whether the action of the respondents in
arresting, detaining and their subsequent deportation from Lagos to
Onitsha, Anambra state was justified in law, in view of the supreme
provisions of the 1999 constitution of Nigeria.
The hearing, which will be presided over by Justice Anumogobia, is set to begin on January 29, 2014.
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