Police must cough out
N100million damages to the family of a victim who died in custody, Justice
Mohammed Idris of the Federal High Court, Lagos, held on Monday.
The
late Mrs. Patricia Onyeabo died in detention last May 16 after being accused of
involvement in Nigerian Railway Corporation N1billion pension scam.
Onyeabo,
a former NRC Secretary/Legal Adviser died about four weeks after the police
detained her over the alleged fraud in which she was implicated.
Her
daughter, Amaka, filed a fundamental rights enforcement action and sought
damages for her mother’s death.
The
judge held that the police denied the deceased access to medical treatment
while in custody.
He
said had the late Onyeabo been allowed access to her doctor and medications,
she probably would not have died.
“I
hold that the Nigeria Police had failed in its responsibility. The applicant
had a right to life and dignity of human person but was denied them while in
the custody of the police, thereby leading to her life being terminated.
“If
she was allowed access to the hospital, she would not have died. The police
denied her the opportunity to visit the hospital for the treatment of her
ailment,” Justice Idris held.
The
deceased and others were being investigated over the alleged mismanagement of
the NRC workers’ contributory pension scheme.
They
were said to have been initially detained at the Nigerian Railway Police Command
in Ebute-Meta, Lagos, before being transferred to the Federal Criminal
Investigation Department in Abuja.
Onyeabo
reportedly died about five days after she was transferred to Abuja.
Her
daughter, through Chief Anthony Idigbe (SAN), claimed N1billion for general and
aggravated damages over the “unlawful detention, harassment and intimidation of
her deceased mother.”
Idigbe
claimed that the police violated the deceased’s fundamental rights to life,
dignity of human person, personal liberty, freedom of movement and fair hearing
as guaranteed by sections 33, 34, 35, 36 and 46 of the 1999 Constitution.
- The Nation
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