Join Nnamdi Kanu’s case against Nigeria, IPOB American lawyer writes US – Punch Newspapers

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File: Leader of the Indigenous People Of Biafra, Nnamdi Kanu
American lawyer, Bruce Fein, has requested the United States of America to join the ongoing case between the leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra, Nnamdi Kanu, and the Nigerian Government.
He made the request in a letter addressed to the Secretary of State for Foreign, Commonwealth, and Development Affairs, Elizabeth Truss, where he complained about the arbitrary detention of Nnamdi Kanu by the Nigerian Government.
“One option would be to file an amicus curiae brief with the court presiding over Kanu’s pending prosecution. Another would be to protest Nigeria’s violation of the United Kingdom’s rights under Article 36 of the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations,” he wrote.
In the letter, Fein, who is IPOB and Kanu’s international spokesman, sighted a case in which other a foreign country intervened on behalf of their citizen.

One of the cases he sighted was that of a former Minister of Transportation, Umaru Dikko, in which the United Kingdom intervened because he carried a British passport.
The letter read, “Nnamdi Kanu is a citizen of the United Kingdom. We, the undersigned, are Mr Kanu’s international lawyer and spokesman, and wife, respectively.
“Kanu was kidnapped and tortured in Kenya last June and subjected to extraordinary rendition to Abuja, Nigeria, by the Federal Government of Nigeria. There, he has been arbitrarily and indefinitely held in solitary confinement without access to necessary medical care or counsel of his choice and subject to continuing torture in violation of international law and covenants.

“They include, among other things, the Convention Against Torture and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights to which Nigeria is a signatory, and Article 36 of the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations.
“Mr Kanu’s alleged “crimes” consist largely of free speech broadcasts from London on Radio Biafra protected by UK and international law.
“At present, the United Kingdom has refrained from openly interceding with Nigerian authorities to protest the flagrant, ongoing, lawless, maltreatment of one of its citizens.

“That inactivity compares unfavorably with the UK’s reaction in 1984 to the joint Nigerian Israeli kidnapping in London and attempted extraordinary rendition of former Nigerian Minister of Transportation Umaru Dikko. A Nigerian and three Israelis received prison sentences. Diplomatic relations with Nigeria were severed for two years. All over the mistreatment of a notorious Nigerian embezzler of government funds.
“It also seems noteworthy that the United Kingdom’s 2007 Intelligence and Security Committee Report on Renditions and the government responses agree on the illegality of extraordinary rendition and the government’s duty categorically to steer clear of complicity.
“Juxtapose those cases with Nnamdi Kanu’s. He is a UK citizen. His ongoing indefinite illegal detention by the Federal Government of Nigeria rests on Mr Kanu’s legally protected broadcasts from London on Radio Biafra as recognized by five human rights experts of the United Nations Human Rights Council. These distinctions make a much stronger case for the United Kingdom to intercede on his behalf against the FRN’s extraordinary rendition in violation of international law compared with Umaru Dikko.
“We are respectfully requesting an opportunity to meet with your office at your earliest convenience to explore measures that might be undertaken to end Kanu’s transparently unlawful detention, prosecution, and torture by the Federal Government of Nigeria, a British Commonwealth country. One option would be to file an amicus curiae brief with the court presiding over Kanu’s pending prosecution. Another would be to protest Nigeria’s violation of the United Kingdom’s rights under Article 36 of the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations.

“Time is of the essence. Every day of delay means an additional day of Nnamdi Kanu’s pain, suffering, torture, and illegal detention. It also means an additional day of separation from his six-year-old son Nnabuikem Nnamdi Okwu Kanu.
“Thank you in advance for your consideration. We will accommodate our schedules to meet with your office.”
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