By Ugochukwu
Ejinkeonye
Recently, I was jolted by a report
I stumbled upon about the brutal abduction, terrorisation and illegal detention
of a hapless young man in Enugu
by the bodyguards of the then Gov Sullivan Chime. The crime of 30-year-old Mr.
Anthony Okeke which earned him such dehumanising treatment, according to TheGuardian of April 1, 2015, was that while on his way home after
dropping off a friend about midnight on February 22, he overtook an “unmarked”
convoy of Chime.
*Chime
Obviously, this was a very
grievous crime in the territory of “His Excellency” and the security agents
attached to him wasted no time in meting out “appropriate” punishment. They ran
after the “offender” with every zeal they could muster, fired some shots at his
car to demobilize his tyres and captured him.
And after giving him “the beating
of his life,” they dumped him in prison for six days, after which he was taken
to a magistrate court and charged with attempting to kidnap the governor. The
charge sheet (number MES/03c/2015) reportedly read that Mr. Okeke, “suspected
to be armed with dangerous weapon/weapons, did attempt to kidnap” Gov Chime
“along Ogui Road by Fire Service office, GRA, Enugu…”
The magistrate court soon,
reportedly, claimed that it lacked jurisdiction over the case but ordered that
Mr. Okeke “be remanded in prison custody, where he had been since then.”
The Guardian quotes a human rights group,
Civil Rights Realisation and Advancement Network (CRRAN), which took up the
case as saying that the then Enugu
governor was “driving around that Sunday at about 11 p.m. in an unmarked
vehicle followed by about four unmarked vehicles, without the normal siren or
fanfare that normally heralds his movement.”
Now, I do not have an update on
this case. This incident took place in February and it is very sad that by
April when the report was published in The Guardian, the young man was
still in detention for daring to overtake the convoy of “His Excellency.” And
it is possible that he may still be there as I write now for committing no
offence known to our laws.
*Ugwuanyi
One cannot also rule out the possibility
that before Chime handed over power to the new governor, Ifeanyi Ugwuanyi, in
Enugu on May 29, 2015, it may not have occurred to him to do the right thing
which is to not only order the unconditional release of the young man, but also
duly apologise to him and his family for the trauma he made them go through and
equally take appropriate steps to compensate them for such grievous abuse of
their rights as free citizens of the country.
Now, even in a Nollywood movie, it
is virtually impossible to imagine how a man driving alone at such an hour
could have hoped to kidnap a governor guarded by a band of heavily-armed
security men. How Chime and his spin doctors expected any sane human being to
buy such a weird story is what I find difficult to comprehend.
Now, as it stands today, Chime has
become an ex-governor, and it is not unimaginable that a “king who does not
know Joseph” might become Enugu
governor tomorrow and subject him to the same brutal treatment (or even worse)
that he has meted out to somebody that he knows full well committed no crime,
just to massage his fragile ego. While I consider it egregious that he would
relish being crowned a veteran of unlawful detentions, I seriously think Chime,
whom I learnt is a lawyer, should have been wary of setting a precedent that
might turn around tomorrow to haunt him or his loved ones. Indeed, this was
lawlessness and meanness stretched beyond every bound of decency and civilised
behaviour.
The current Enugu governor, Mr. Ugwuanyi, should urgently
investigate this matter to determine if that young man is still in detention.
And if that is the case, he should order his conditional release without delay
and compensate him for the harrowing ordeal he was made to pass through by the
former governor. That is the way to usher in a new beginning.
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