COAS, Tukur Buratai
The Chief of Army Staff, Lt.-Gen. Tukur Buratai, on Thursday,
prayed the Federal High Court in Abuja to dismiss a suit seeking to
compel him to produce the ‘missing’ leader of the proscribed Indigenous
People of Biafra, IPOB, Nnamdi Kanu, Vanguard reports.A team of lawyers representing the embattled IPOB leader had in the
suit, prayed the court to order Buratai to produce their client either
dead or alive.
The lawyers who were led by Mr Ifeanyi Ejiofor, told the court that
they have not seen or heard from their client since September 14 when
the Nigerian Army invaded his house “on a murderous raid, where life
and mortar bullets were fired on unarmed and defenceless populace,
leaving 28 persons dead and abducting many”.
Pursuant to section 40 of the Federal High Court Act, F12, LFN 2005
and section 6(6) (1) (4) of the 1999 constitution, as amended, Kanu’s
lawyers applied for “an order of Habeas Corpus ad subjiciendum, commanding the Respondent (Buratai), to produce the Applicant in Court”.
However, in a counter-affidavit he filed in opposition to the suit,
Buratai told the court that Kanu was never in custody of the Nigeria
Army.
He maintained that contrary to claims in the suit, soldiers who
were deployed to the South-East for ‘Operation Python Dance II, did not
have any contact whatsoever with Kanu on September 12 or 14, or anytime
thereafter as alleged.
The Chief of Army Staff told the court that the Nigerian Army did
not at any time arrest or take Kanu into custody within the period the
military operation lasted, even as he denied allegation that soldiers
invaded the IPOB leader’s house in Afara-Ukwu Ibeku, Umuahia, Abia
State.
A colonel attached to the Chief of Army’s office in the Army
Headquarters, Abuja, Col. A.A Yusuf, who deposed to the
counter-affidavit on behalf of Buratai, said the alleged invasion of
Kanu’s house was totally false.
However, the Army boss told the court that his men only chased a
truck he said was laden with arms and explosives of different kinds,
into a compound he said was later discovered to belong to Kanu and his
father.
The counter-affidavit read in part, “That the applicant (Kanu)
is not and has never been in his custody or in the custody of any
person, officer or institution receiving instruction directly or
indirectly from him.
“That the applicant was not at any time whatsoever arrested,
taken into custody or detained by the Officers and men of the Nigerian
Army.
“That the officers and men of the Nigerian Army did not have
any contact whatsoever or confrontation or any operational engagement
with the applicant on September 12 or 14, 20l7 or any other date
thereafter, contrary to the allegations in the affidavit in support of
the application.
“That the allegation of invasion of the South-Eastern part of
Nigeria by officers and men of the Nigerian Army, especially the
applicant’s home and or residence is totally false.”
He told the court that during “a peaceful movement” that
formed part of Operation Python Dance II, soldiers, on September 14,
pursued a truck loaded with arms and ammunition into a compound which
was identified in the suit as jointly owned by Kanu and his father.
He alleged that the fleeing truck and its occupants ran over Army
barricade and defied soldiers’ order stopping them to be searched.
Buratai insisted that soldiers that chased the truck into Kanu’s
house did not fire any shot, saying it was the occupants of the fleeing
truck that deliberately ignited the ammunition they were carrying.
“That while on a peaceful movement on the said September 14,
2017, the soldiers randomly conducted stop-and-search operations as are
necessary and it was during one of such exercises in Umuahia, Abia
State, that it flagged down a truck, which as it turned out later, was
loaded with arms and ammunitions of varying degrees and descriptions.
“Rather than comply with the stop order, the driver and other
occupants of the truck recklessly ran over the barricade mounted on the
road by the soldiers and sped off, whereupon the soldiers at the point
gave a hot chase and called for reinforcement to enable them pursue and
arrest the fleeing vehicle. The soldiers did not fire any shot at the
fleeing truck in order to prevent the loss of lives.
“That the truck loaded with the arms and ammunition was pursued
into a compound which has now been described in this application as
belonging to and under the control of the applicant (Kanu) and his
father.
“That it was the legitimate attempt by the officers and men of
the Nigerian Army to arrest the fleeing occupants of the truck and
impound the truck that precipitated the deliberate igniting of the
ammunition in the truck by persons now believed to be IPOB members.
“That the act of the IPOB members resulted in sporadic explosions within the said applicant’s compound”, the affidavit further stated.
Buratai said his men that participated in the operation, complied
with Rules of Engagement and Code of Conduct that prohibit any form of
human right abuses, denying that they killed scores of IPOB members
during the military exercise in the South East.
He said: “Throughout the duration of the Operation Python Dance
II, officers and men of the Nigerian Army obeyed the Rules of
Engagement and Code of Conduct to the letter as there was no reported
case of indiscriminate shooting, unlawful arrest, detention or torture,
contrary to the wild, bland, untrue, incorrect, bogus and insipid
allegations contained in or oozed out in the affidavit of Prince Mandela
Umegborogu Esq.
“The allegations of firing of live bullets on the applicant’s
relatives, killing of scores of persons, wounding and arrest of many,
attack and invasion of applicant’s home, barricade at Isialangwa, arrest
and torture of civilians by officers and me of the Nigerian Army, as
stated by the deponent, are a figment of his imagination as same are not
true.”
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