The Federal High Court sitting in Calabar has ordered the Nigerian Navy
to pay N75 million to a 39-year-old bricklayer, Mr. Etim Asuquo Akpan, as
damages for illega
l shooting and torture.
Akpan, an indigene of Akwa Ibom State, had taken the Nigerian Navy and
others to court in 2013 for shooting him in both legs, torturing him and
holding him hostage by chaining him to the hospital bed of the University of
Calabar Teaching Hospital (UCTH) for seven months.
The appellant said the incident happened in 2012 in Calabar when he was
on his way to work and ran into men of the Navy attached to the then Quick
Intervention Squad of the Cross River State Government.
He said without provocation, he was just shot in both legs by the men of
the Navy and left in his own pool of blood.
However, Akpan said it was members of a nearby church that rescued him
and took him to the UCTH for treatment and when the naval personnel realised he
was in the hospital, they went to the hospital and chained him to his bed and
even tortured him for seven months but when was discharged, the naval men
disappeared, hence the legal action.
Justice Inyang Ekwo, in his judgment yesterday, said men who are armed by
law to protect the citizenry should not turn around and brutalise or take the
lives outside the law of those they are supposed to protect, noting that if
such trend is encouraged, every citizen would be a potential victim of such
brutality.
Ekwo, who dismissed the arguments that the naval personnel was attached
to the Quick Intervention Squad of the state and therefore not a liability of
the Nigerian Navy, said such an act could not go without remedy, as Asuquo has
a family and other people to support all his life, now he has been permanently
incapacitated by the treatment meted to him by the naval personnel.
Counsel to the Navy, Mr. Tanbe Mark, said: “The court has given judgment
and we have to follow the judgment of the court. For now, my clients have not
given us instructions to say anything. We are taking it the way the court has given
it. On appeal, we have got no instructions from our clients to that effect.”
Akpan’s lawyer, Mr. Albert Ben, said they were approached in 2013 and
they had to take up the case because it is the right of every citizen to be
protected no matter their status.
0 Comments