Court refuses Eze Ndigbo bail over alleged terrorism
Nwajagu was arrested by operatives of the State Security Services over an alleged threat to invite members of the Indigenous People of Biafra to Lagos to secure the property of Igbo people in the state.
A Lagos High Court sitting at Tafawa Balewa Square on Friday refused to grant bail to Eze Ndigbo of Ajao Estate, Lagos State, and Frederick Nwajagu, charged with terrorism.
According to Justice Yetunde Adesanya, the court is constrained to refuse Nwajagu’s bail application based on the seriousness of the alleged offence and the severity of its punishment.
Nwajagu is standing trial on a nine-count charge bordering on attempted terrorism, financing terrorism, participating in terrorism, and meeting to support a proscribed entity.
Supreme News reports that the defendant had, on July 25, applied for bail, citing his medical reports.
He said that he was not a flight risk.
On Friday, thejudge denied the defendant bail and ordered an accelerated hearing of the case.
Adesanya held: “Based on the seriousness of the offence, the severity of the punishment, and the proof of evidence before the court, the court is constrained to refuse the bail application.
“The application for an accelerated hearing is hereby granted.”
The judge, however, directed correctional centre officials to make arrangements for the defendant to visit a public hospital for treatment.
At the last adjourned date, counsel to the defendant, Mr. E. C. Obiagu (SAN), prayed the court to grant bail to the defendant on medical grounds.
He also told the court that the defendant was a widower and had six children and, therefore, would not jump bail.
Obiagu claimed that the defendant did not possess an international passport and would not be a flight risk.
The senior advocate of Nigeria also said that the defendant was granted bail by a lower court but was not able to perfect the bail due to its stringent conditions.
Responding,prosecution counsel, Mr. Jonathan Ogunsanya, urged the court to refuse the bail application.
Ogunsanya, who is the Lagos State Deputy Director of Public Prosecutions, however, urged the court to grant an accelerated hearing of the case.
He said, among other things, that the circumstances under which the defendant was granted bail at the lower court were different from the information filed against him at the high court.
He argued that the charges brought against the defendant by the police at the lower court were materially different from the charges brought against him by the state attorney general.
The Lagos State Government had, in a suit marked LD/21505C/2023, said that the alleged offences contravened the provisions of Section 403(2) of the Criminal Law of Lagos State, 2015.
The state added that the offences contravened Sections 12(a)(c), 18, 21, and 29 of the Terrorism (Prevention and Prohibition) Act, 2022.
Supreme News reports that Nwajagu was arrested by operatives of the State Security Servicesover an alleged threat to invite members of the Indigenous People of Biafra to Lagos to secure the property of Igbo people in the state.