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GUARDIAN
Fawehinmi, others demand release of Dokubo-Asari, Uwazuruike
By Alex Olise
SEVERAL
eminent Nigerians and civil society groups yesterday in Lagos
protested the continued detention of the leaders of the Niger Delta
Peoples Volunteer Force (NDPVF), Alhaji Mujahid Dokubo-Asari, and
Chief Ralph Uwazuruike of the Movement for the Actualisation of the
Sovereign State of Biafra (MASSOB).
The prominent citizens included leading human rights activist, Chief
Gani Fawehinmi (SAN) and the current President of the West African
Bar Association, Mr. Femi Falana.
The protest took place shortly after a world press conference
addressed by the Coalition for the Freedom of Dokubo and Uwazuruike
(COFDU) at the secretariat of the Nigerian Union of Journalists (NUJ),
Alausa, Ikeja.
The three-page speech was delivered before a cross section of both
local and international journalists by the co-ordinator of the group
Mr. Ayodele Akele.
Others present include Mujahilda, wife of Dokubo-Asari, and Ngozi,
wife of Uwazuruike. There were also other leaders of over 30 civil
rights organisations, including the Oodua Peoples Congress, (OPC)
and the Arewa Consultative Forum (ACF).
Addressing the conference, Fawehinmi said: "We are here today to
register our protest over the continuous detention in prison of
Alhaji Dokubo-Asari and Dr. Ralph Uwazuruike. They have spent two
years without trial and we are calling for their immediate and
unconditional release."
According to the activist lawyer, President Umaru Musa Yar'Adua has
only one choice in the matter:
The unconditional release of the two gentlemen from prison.
This, Fawehinmi added, is for the interest of the country.
He urged Yar'Adua to invoke Section 174, sub-section (1) (c) of the
1999 Constitution and drop the charges in the interest of the nation
by way of a nolle prosecui.
"The only thing left for the Federal Government is to release
Dokubo-Asari and Dr. Ralph Uwazuruike if not this government will
become illegitimate and the illegitimacy will be compounded. This
government must not allow these men die in prison," Fawehinmi
warned.
The eminent lawyer also urged the Yar'Adua government to convene a
Sovereign National Conference where all Nigerians would come
together and discuss the problems facing the country and proffer
solutions.
On his part, Falana said that the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) and
other foreign law bodies would soon join in the crusade if the
present government turned deaf ears to the calls for the release of
the two men.
All those present also protested the planned secret trial of the
duo.
The convener of the conference told the gathering that the coalition
was concerned and committed to the restoration of peace in the Niger
Delta region and indeed any part of
Nigeria and felt disturbed about the continued incarceration of the
two activists.
"We therefore resolved to engage all peaceful means not only to
ensure the release of these activists, but for the restoration of
peace in the Niger Delta region. Our objective is to rally support
and carry along all well-meaning people about their (the detainees)
plight and to galvanise the interest of Nigerians, activists,
locally and internationally to see Dokubo-Asari, Ralph Uwazuruike
and others released from detention without further delay," he said.
He also lamented the death of Uwazuruike's 85-year-old mother Madam
Monica Uwazuruike whose only son is the detained Uwazuruike. He said
her body was still lying in the mortuary while the only son was
languishing in prison.
He condemned the Federal Government's plan to try the duo in secret
from tomorrow.
Akele said: "There is also the dimension of a written undertaking
(demanded by President Yar'Adua of Dokubo-Asari) as a condition for
his release and of course the Supreme Court ruling denying him bail,
and the conclusion, judgment before commencement of the trial, that
he is a security risk."
He added: "In spite of violent repression and militarised approach
over the years to resolve the Niger Delta crisis and indeed the
South East MASSOB issue, the crisis has deteriorated to a
frightening level."
He also noted that the improper handling of the crisis had led to
"increased blood-letting, recurrent hostage taking, sporadic blow-up
of oil facilities, loss of oil revenue and panicky withdrawal of
foreign oil firms from the region."
Contributing to the matter, Dokubo-Asari' s wife said that she was
very optimistic that her husband would be freed since he never
committed any offence.
"The Dokubo-Asari, I know can never commit those offences. He was
only trying to liberate his people in the Niger Delta region."
Also the wife of Uwazuruike called on the Federal Government to
release her husband so that he could come back home to take care of
his children.
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