Olusegun ARIYO
Human rights activist and lawyer, Professor Chidi Odinkalu, has challenged former Governor of Kaduna State, Mallam Nasir El-Rufai, to face the consequences of his actions while in power.
He believes that the former Federal Capital Territory, FCT, minister should have nothing to cry about but should embrace his current predicament with joy.https://urbanexpresslive.com/electoral-act-youre-setting-nigeria-up-for-sudan-style-utomi-on-tinbubu-akpabio/
The Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission, ICPC, on Thursday confirmed that El-Rufai is now in its custody.
The former governor was arrested by operatives of the Department of State Services, DSS, shortly after being released on bail by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, on Wednesday.
He was later handed over to the ICPC.
Odinkalu, a former chairman of Nigeria’s National Human Rights Commission, while on Channels TV, said El-Rufai treated people with extraordinary impunity, recklessness and brutality while in office.
“I’ll start from the principle premise that every citizen deserves due process and every person should be treated equally under the law.
“What that means is that no one should be granted impunity, just for the sake of it, because of who they are, because they are inside of the political divide or national profile, if they have done things that warrant legal accountability, and I think he [El-Rufai] has. Let me be quite clear about that, then he should be subject to legal process, due legal process.
“And having cleared that up, I must say one more thing, which is that what I’ve said is a lot more than Nasir El-Rufai afforded those whom he treated as critics during his time as governor of Kaduna State. He treated people with extraordinary impunity, recklessness and brutality.
“Some of his victims are dead, including the late Dr Rafael Galadima, who was abducted with his wife, ransom paid a day before he was slaughtered in 2019, I believe, that was three months after Dadiyata had disappeared from his home in Kaduna, which has not been found. And then August 2 this year, will make it exactly seven years since Dadiyata disappeared.
“There were communities that he converted at his whim, from kingdoms to Emirates, which meant that people who were not Muslims, in these communities, mostly of Christians, became effectively dispossessed of their communities and dispossessed of the rights to accede to community leadership.
“There were people whose lands he expropriated. His political opponents had their houses demolished or expropriated by the state. I don’t think the one person who can frankly complain about due process is Nasir El-Rufai.
“He was despicable as a governor of Kaduna state, with due respect. And by the way, what is his problem? He was the person, more than any other, who campaigned to bring the current dispensation to power because he and President Tinubu were in the same party.
