Wednesday 17 July 2013

BABA SUWE DRAGS NDLEA COCAINE CASE TO SUPREME COURT

The latest on the cocaine trafficking saga of comic Nollywood actor Babatunde Omidina aka
Baba Suwe is that the actor has officially filed an appeal at the Supreme Court against the
decision of the Court of Appeal to quash the N25 million awarded as damages to him against
the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency, NDLEA.
Baba Suwe’s counsel, Bamidele Aturu filed the appeal at the Supreme Court on Friday.
Aturu is seeking an order from the Supreme Court setting aside the decision of the Court of
Appeal and affirming the decision of the lower court.
The High Court of Lagos had ordered the NDLEA to pay Baba Suwe N25 million as damages
after he was incarcerated for many days for alleged possession of hard drugs, but the Appeal
Court set aside the High Court’s judgment in the matter.
In the appeal filed, Baba Suwe contended that the Court of Appeal ought to have affirmed the
High Court judgement since the NDLEA has no power under the Constitution or under any law
to keep a person in detention without bringing him to court within the period provided for in
section 35 of the Constitution.
He argued that the fact that the respondent claimed to be investigating the allegation of
commission of crime against the Appellant is not a warrant for breaching the unambiguous
provision of section 35 of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999, as
amended, saying that the evidence that another person who was arrested three days after the
arrest of the Appellant excreted on the second and third day 60 wraps of drugs.
“That the Appellant did not excrete any banned substance ought to have led the Court of
Appeal to conclude that the detention of the Appellant for 19 days was unreasonable.
“There was no legally admissible basis to justify the detention of the Applicant beyond the
period stipulated in section 35 of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999, as
amended. The safeguard provided by law against a suspect absconding is bail and not
indefinite detention without trial as suggested by the Court of Appeal,” he stated.

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