Several
Nigerian-related websites and the social media are awash with what has
come to be known as the Charles Okah Prison Letter.The handwritten
letter, about five pages in length, was addressed to His Eminence
Anthony Cardinal Olubunmi Okogie, the Archbishop Emeritus of Lagos. Pope
Benedict XVI and the Catholic Bishop of Abuja Diocese were also copied.
How the letter was smuggled out of the Kuje Prison, is gradually
becoming the stuff of legends.
Smuggling letters out of prison is not
new. From the moment governments and governing authorities began
constructing and imprisoning people, detainees and their sympathisers
have been smuggling letters and other items in and out of those
confinements. Contrary to what the Nigerian government tells the public,
prisons are not the place people go to get rehabilitated. In many
cases, it has nothing to do with justice. In fact, many of the
underclass of our society who are sent there go there to suffer, to get
dehumanised, and or to die (mentally or physically). Often, government
sends individuals to jail without a just cause. And they sometimes do so
using the cover of the judiciary.
And it is certainly the case today with
Mr. Charles Okah (who, along with three, and now two others, have been
languishing in the Kuje Prison). The younger Okah is being detained –
not because the Jonathan government has a strip of trustworthy evidence
against him regarding the 2010 Independence Day bombing or any other
criminal or terroristic activity – but because he is Henry Okah’s
brother. This, really, is a feud based on philosophical and personal
differences. Unfortunately for the Okah Brothers, the President has the
instrument of state at his disposal.
In the last 30 months, hundreds of
people have wondered: What’s going on between President Jonathan and the
Okah Brothers? This is not an easy answer, but let me simplify it. This
case is nothing short of vendetta, nothing short of a personal
campaign, launched by a group of Ijaw, who see the Okah brothers as
hindrances to their covetousness and political calculations. With Henry
and Charles out of their ways, who is left – who is left in the entire
Niger Delta – to put a stop to the few men and women bent on grand theft
and wholesale political iniquities? What was the original Niger Delta
struggle all about anyway?
What was the movement all about, and
where has it been the last two years? Where are the supposed militants?
Where are some of the pseudo-generals? Are they still in the creeks and
with the people? Or, have most become commercial militants — concerned
mainly with their bank accounts and access to Aso Rock? This is the
difference – the difference between the Okah brothers and many of their
former compatriots. What’s more, the brothers refused to play ethnic
politics. Must all Ijaw support another Ijaw for the Presidency?
Now, what does the Charles Okah Prison
Letter say; what does it tell us? It tells us plenty! It tells us that
citizens of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, who have yet to be
convicted of any crime, are being held in solitary confinement for two
traumatic years. And that during the course of its investigation, the
Nigerian government used communist and Nazi-era techniques to coerce
evidence out of suspects. According to Okah, “They bound me in a chair,
took off my trousers and clamped a device to my penis. My legs were then
put inside a basin of water. The device when turned on passed a high
voltage of electricity to my body and I lost consciousness.”
What Okah described, is part of what is
known as Enhanced Interrogation Technique. Other forms of EIT include
waterboarding, stress positions and hypothermia – all of which were used
at the Guantanamo Bay detention camps and at Abu Ghraib on enemy
combatants, detainees and prisoners. Okah also wrote about
thegovernment’s contempt for court orders and double standard at Kuje
Prison. He and his fellow inmates “are not allowed to exercise or get
sunlight outside and are forced to sleep on the floor when bunk beds are
available. Even a court order by Justice Gabriel Kolawole to the prison
for a change in our confinement style was ignored.” What type of a
government ignores a judge’s order?
According to Okah, he and others were
also gassed – an action that reminds one of the barbarism at various
Concentration camps in Europe duringthe Second World War. This action –
this inhumane act – led to the death of Francis Osuwo, in early 2012.
The fumigants also had a devastating effect on Okah’s neurological
system. Another troubling aspect of their detention is the fact that
“While the Boko Haram suspects at Kuje Prison are allowed to worship in
the prison mosque, we have never set foot in the prison chapel. They are
also enjoying privileges such as cable television, radio, liberty to
move within the prison walls, bunk beds to sleep on and phone calls to
their families. We are denied all of the above.”
Not only is the executive arm of
government being accused of double-standard, the judiciary, according to
Okah, is also guilty of same: “While Senator Ali Ndume, accused of
being a financier of Boko Haram was given bail by the same Judge
presiding over our case, we have been denied bail…this senator was
permitted by the same court to travel on his religious obligation to
Mecca for the lesser Hajj while we are refused from attending mass in a
chapel less than 50 metres from our cell block…I have been denied my
application to go on a compulsory medical check-up which in my case is
mandatory for a kidney donor, having donated my left kidney to my mother
30 years ago.” Sad, isn’t it?
Mo one is against the rights and
privileges members of the Boko Haram sect enjoy while in custody.
Detainees and prisoners have rights. But the same rights and privileges
must be accorded Charles Okah and his fellow detainees. What’s more,
they also deserve bail. But more importantly, why is it taking the
Jonathan government this long to have the case prosecuted? Why? Just
why?
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