Nigerian Journalist Returns to Jail After Stringent Bail Terms Are Set
By Michael Ireland, Chief Correspondent for the ASSIST News Service (www.assistnews.net)
KADUNA STATE, NIGERIA (ANS – July 22, 2017) --
Luka Binniyat, a Christian journalist in Nigeria’s Kaduna State, has
been returned to jail following a bail hearing in which a judge set bail
terms so stringent that they have been described as “nearly
impossible.”
According to Christian Solidarity Worldwide (www.csw.org.uk),
on July 12, Justice Bashir Sukola remanded Mr. Binniyat in custody for
writing a story about an attack by armed Fulani herdsmen in southern
Kaduna that later proved incorrect. Mr. Binniyat’s case highlights an
erosion of press freedom and the inequality before the law of different
religious communities in Kaduna State.
During
a second hearing on July 20, Justice Sukola, sitting in High Court 10
in Kaduna, granted bail on condition that two sureties (guarantors) post
bonds of 10 million naira each (approx. US$31,720.00), which they must
be prepared to renew every six months, and that they surrender their
international passports for as long as the case lasts. The case was
adjourned until August 31, and Mr. Binniyat, who is on crutches and
medication following a domestic accident, was returned to Kaduna Convict
Prison pending the posting of bail.
In
a comment to Nigerian press agencies following the hearing, lead
counsel for the defense, Alex Marama, described the bail conditions as
too demanding and stringent for his client. He added that the defense
team would be applying for a downward review in the interests of equity
and justice.
CSW
says there has been widespread condemnation of the bail conditions,
with several observers describing them as “nearly impossible conditions”
which were “not meant to be met,” and which were designed to “cripple”
anyone standing as a surety.
One
source pointed out to Christian Solidarity Worldwide (CSW) that “even
if two sureties can be found, these people would not be able to travel
abroad for the duration of the case, which could be made to continue
indefinitely, making it extremely difficult for them.”
In
a statement to the press after visiting Mr. Binniyat in prison, Comrade
Christopher Isiguzo, vice president of the Nigeria Union of Journalists
(NUJ) South East, expressed “displeasure” at the bail conditions: “We
are talking about a journalist and not a criminal or hoodlum.”
He
also contrasted Mr. Binniyat’s treatment with that of the individuals
behind the June 6 “Kaduna Declaration,” who remain at large despite an
order for their arrest following a press conference in which they
vilified the Igbo tribe and warned its members to leave northern Nigeria
before October 1 or face unspecified consequences, stating that Mr.
Binniyat “is not part of those asking people to vacate any part of the
country” and thus did not merit “such stringent bail conditions.”
The
NUJ National Secretariat has condemned the detention of Mr. Binniyat,
and on July 17, the Committee for the Protection of Journalists (CPJ)
called for his release and for the charges against him to be dropped,
stating that "charging a journalist with 'breach of peace' simply for
informing the public is unacceptable, and arbitrarily throwing him in
prison when he appears for a hearing is outrageous."
CSW’s
Chief Executive Mervyn Thomas said: “These stringent bail conditions
are entirely disproportionate to the nature of the alleged crime, while
the charges do not warrant remand or the imposition of bail conditions.
The excessive conditions would appear to validate speculation that the
case is the latest in a series of malicious prosecutions intended to
repress press freedom, and also to silence those who draw attention to
the situation in southern Kaduna, where over 800 people have been killed
and thousands more displaced in attacks by Fulani militia that have
been ongoing for over a year.
“It
is wholly unacceptable that those behind the Kaduna Declaration remain
at large while Mr. Binniyat is harassed judicially merely for doing his
job. We therefore join in calls for his immediate and unconditional
release, and for the dropping of all charges. We also reiterate our call
to the Kaduna State Government to instead prioritize tracing, disarming
and prosecuting the perpetrators of violence, compensating and caring
for the survivors, and restoring occupied lands to their rightful
owners.”
Christian
Solidarity Worldwide (CSW) is a Christian organization working for
religious freedom through advocacy and human rights, in the pursuit of
justice.
For
further information or to arrange interviews please contact Kiri
Kankhwende, Senior Press Officer at Christian Solidarity Worldwide on
+44 (0)20 8329 0045 / +44 (0) 78 2332 9663, email kiri@csw.org.uk or visit www.csw.org.uk.
(Editor’s Note:
ANS Founder Dan Wooding was born in Nigeria of British missionary
parents, Alfred and Anne Wooding. His mother spent much of her time
ministering to the blind in Kano, Nigeria. Dan, who moved to the UK in
1942, has only been back to Nigeria on one occasion, and it didn’t work
out very well. He had “journalist” in his British passport, and was
arrested at Lagos Airport, put in a cell there with for Africans, and
eventually freed and told never to come back to the land of his birth).
Photo
captions: 1) Nigerian Journalist Luka Binniyat (CSW photo). 2) Dan
Wooding in a Nigerian cell after his arrest. The picture was smuggled
out of the country after Dan was released). 3) Michael Ireland.
About
the Writer: Michael Ireland is a volunteer internet journalist serving
as Chief Correspondent for the ASSIST News Service, as well as an
Ordained Minister, and an award-winning local cable-TV program
host/producer who has served with ASSIST Ministries and written for ANS
since its beginning in 1989. He has reported for ANS from Jamaica,
Mexico, Nicaragua, Israel, Jordan, China, and Russia. Please consider
helping Michael cover his expenses in bringing news of the Persecuted
Church, by logging-on to: https://actintl.givingfuel.com/ireland-michael
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