A Federal High Court in Abuja on Wednesday dismissed
an application by a former Minister of Aviation, Stella Oduah, asking
for an order stopping the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission and
the police from arresting her with respect to ongoing investigation into
corruption allegation against her.
Oduah had filed the
fundamental rights enforcement suit, asking the court to prohibit the
Attorney-General of the Federation’s office, the EFCC, and the police
from “inviting, arresting, investigating or prosecuting” her over the
purchase of two armoured BMW vehicles at a cost of N255m by the Nigerian
Civil Aviation Authority under her watch as the Aviation Minister in
2013.
A similar fundamental human rights enforcement suit filed
by the former minister, who is now a
Senator representing Anambra North,
was earlier struck out by Justice Okon Abang, then sitting in the Lagos
Division, on February 17, 2016, for want of territorial jurisdiction.
Justice
Abdu Kafarati in his judgment on Wednesday, upheld the objection raised
by the respondents, to the effect that the court lacked the requisite
jurisdiction to hear the case because the prayer sought in it was
outside the ambit Chapter 4 of the Constitution which captured
enforceable rights of persons.
He held that that no court had the power to stop security agencies from carrying out their duty of investigation.
He also said such prayer could not constitute a fundamental rights action.
He
said it was in the interest of a person suspected of crimes to be
invited by the investigating agency so that the suspect could give his
or her own side of the story.
He added that the suit did not disclose any reasonable cause of action.
He
said, “It is not grantable by this court because the court cannot stop
security agencies from carrying out their duties. There is no way a
person can be investigated without being invited by (the) body charged
with the responsibility of investigation.
“In most cases, the
invitation is even in the interest of the invitee because he or she will
have the opportunity of giving his or her side of the story.
“I
therefore hold that the application seeking to stop security agencies
from inviting, investigating, arresting and/or prosecuting any person
suspected to have committed an offence does not constitute a fundamental
right action.”
Oduah had argued that the criminal allegations
leveled against her as minister had been investigated by the EFCC and
the House of Representatives’ Committee on Aviation, which both absolved
her of any wrong doing.
She had maintained that the investigation was going to be used as tool for political persecution against her.
Source: Punch
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