Rivers Re-run Election Crisis: Court Declares Police Probe Panel Illegal
The 15-man probe panel constituted by the Inspector General of Police (IG), Ibrahim Idris, to investigate the violence, killings, destruction of property and other criminal activities that took place during and after the December 10, National Assembly rerun election in Rivers State has been declared by a Federal High Court in Abuja on Tuesday as illegal.
Justice Gabriel Kolawole, in a judgment he delivered on the suit filed by Rivers State Government and Governor Nyesom Wike (1st and 2nd plaintiffs) on January 11, 2017, said the “the police panel was unknown to law” because it lacked constitutional backing.
Consequently, the court held that the report of the panel was not valid and of doubtful source.
In view of this, the judge said it remains to be seen whether the Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Abubakar Malami (SAN) would prosecute those indicted by the police probe panel based on a report that is illegal.
The police panel is unknown to Nigerian criminal justice system.
It’s a contraption. The said report is unknown to law and its validity to be used by the Attorney General of the Federation to press a charge is in great doubt, the court said.
According to the court, it was wrong for the IG to constitute a police panel that had the Department of State Services (DSS) as member.
Justice Kolawole noted that under Section 11 of Police Act, the IG requires presidential assent to delegate power to another prosecutorial agency.
“The special multi-agency panel is not a statutory body but a product of ministerial act.”
Though the court agreed that the IG, in line with Section 214 of the 1999 Constitution and Section 4 of the Police Act, that police can conduct an investigation of any crime, however, such duty must be carried out in strict adherence to the law.