It
was a moment of joy recently for the mother of a prison inmate that had
been awaiting trial since 2005. Mrs. Maria Emmanuel danced and shouted
with joy on the court premises of the Lagos High Court, sitting in
Igbosere when Justice Deborah Oluwayemi released her son, Paul Samuel.
Five other awaiting trial inmates were
also released by the court. They included Fatai Amidu, Adebayo Owuade,
Gabriel Samuel, Mike Ofoje and Lawal Karimu. Speaking with Daily Sun,
Mrs. Samuel, a police corporal at Egbe Idimu Local Government Area (and
whose husband is a retired soldier), said she had tried all efforts to
cause her son to be released from prison – all to no avail. She noted
that her son was not arraigned since he was arrested at Maryland, Lagos,
in 2005 and had been awaiting advice from Director of Public
Prosecution (DPP) since then.
According to her, she pleaded
with her colleagues at the State Criminal Investigation Department
(SCID), Panti, Yaba where her son was first taken but regretted that
nobody, including her senior colleagues, was able to help her. “When I
went to Alagbon Police Station, no one could help me. They said it is
because he was an armed robbery suspect. I did not go to any senior
police officer to help me. “These past eight years have been terrible
for me. I was fat before but if you now look at me today, you will see
that I am thin. I could not eat or sleep; I was worried, thinking and
crying even in the office. I was running around for my son’s release.
“This was compounded by the retirement of my husband from the Nigerian
Army due to his legs, which were affected during the January 2002 bomb
blast at Ikeja Cantonment in Lagos.
He can’t work anymore and
he has gone to stay in Bayelsa where we hail from. I am the only one
struggling for everything,” she said. She stated that all her efforts to
get her son out of prison were futile until she met a lawyer, Ahmed
Kazeem-Adetola from a non-governmental organisation, Prisoners Right
Advocacy Initiative. Unable to contain her happiness over the new
developments on the court premises, she enthused: “I am so happy. I have
not started to dance. I want to praise my God. This is the eighth year
that I have been fighting for my son’s freedom. I will call my husband
to tell him the good news.” Her son, who was 17 years old when he was
arrested was to be arraigned over a charge for armed robbery in the name
of another suspect, who also bears Paul Samuel but who had been
arrested in 2010.
Fortunately, his lawyer was present in
court. His lawyer was able to clarify issues to the court. The court
released him on the ground that he had been in prison without trial over
the alleged offence of armed robbery for eight years. Reliving the
incidents that led to his imprisonment, Paul vowed to be careful about
his choice of friends. According to him, all he did was to greet a
friend and he ended up in prison. He noted that the ‘friend’ bailed
himself out without looking back to see how he fared. “On a Sunday
morning, I was on my way to Maryland when I saw a friend and we greeted.
I shook his hands and suddenly, the police came to raid the place and
they arrested everyone they saw. They took everyone to Panti.
“I could not contact my family to come and bail me out and I didn’t have
money. Many of those people I was detained with bailed themselves out
with money. But those of us that didn’t have money were left and they
charged us before a magistrate court for robbery. “They dumped us at
Kirikiri Prison and later I was transferred to Ikoyi Prisons where I was
taken to Maximum Prisons. “It is saddening to know that I was in prison
for eight years over a charge of robbery without any trial or anybody
showing up as complainant in the case. One of the things I have learnt
now is that I will be careful of who I choose to be my friend,” he said.
However, Paul is hopeful that life after imprisonment would be better
because he learnt how to make shoes and sandals in prison.
He
says he wants to make use of that knowledge and to also organise
seminars for people to know how to make shoes. “At least, I learnt how
to make leather shoes, slippers and sandals during those eight years. I
want to be making shoes and I will be lecturing people on how to make
them. “When I was there, as a devout Catholic, I attached myself to the
church. That was where I was able to get good food and clothes. Prison
food is horrible. It isn’t easy to be in that place for eight years
without freedom, good food, clothes and even sex!” Reacting to the
development, Paul’s lawyer, Kazeem-Adetola, noted that the problem of
prison congestion stemmed from the Federal Government, Ministry of
Justice and the Nigerian police.
He said his organisation had
been working hard in the past two years for the release of inmates, who
had been awaiting trial for many years without trial. “We have filed
fundamental human rights applications, press releases, letters to the
Inspector-General of Police and the Ministry of Justice but these are
not enough. We could try Habeas Corpus but the government, the police
and the justice ministry need to sit up and do the right things. “For
instance, in this particular case, Paul Samuel’s file was mistaken for
another’s with the same name. If they had done a thorough job, they
would have seen that this Paul was arrested in 2005 while the other one
was in 2010. “Filing applications takes time and the court may award
paltry sums as compensation so we filed an application for 106 inmates
and we can safely say today that 90 people have been released.
“Filing fundamental rights application may be misconstrued as an avenue
to get money, so we have decided not to file such now,” he said.
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