Convener of the #RevolutionNow movement, Omoyele Sowore, has dragged the
Federal Government and the Department of State Services (DSS) before a
Federal High Court sitting in Abuja, Igbere TV reports.
Igbere TV
reports that the activist, on Friday, applied to the Federal High Court
to set aside its previous order permitting the DSS to detain him for 45
days.
Sowore, publisher of SaharaReporters, through his lawyer,
Femi Falana (SAN), contended, among others in the 19-ground application
sighted by Igbere TV, that the order issued by the court breached his
constitutionally guaranteed fundamental rights.
The former
presidential candidate insisted that the order amounted to “legalising
the illegality” of his detention for about four days prior to the
issuance of the court order on Thursday.
Filed along with his
application was an affidavit of urgency seeking an urgent hearing of the
suit on the grounds that it “is one of fundamental importance that
affects salient fundamental rights of the applicant herein.”
Igbere
TV recalls that operatives of the DSS, on August 3, arrested Sowore
over his call for revolution ahead of the #RevolutionNow protests which
held in some parts of the country on Monday.
Ruling on an ex
parte application by the security agency to detain Sowore for 90 days to
investigate him for treason-related allegations, the judge, Justice
Taiwo Taiwo, on Thursday granted the agency permission to hold the
activist for 45 days.
According to the judge, the 45-day period,
starting from Thursday, lapses on September 21, the date he also fixed
for the next hearing of the case.
He, however, added that the
order of detention for 45 days was subject to renewal for further days
upon an application by the security agency, in the event that its
investigation could not be concluded within the first 45 days.
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