Justice Ibrahim Buba of a Federal High Court sitting in Lagos yesterday
fixed November 18, 2015 to rule on the fundamental human rights case
filed by Mr. Buruji Kashamu against the National Drug Law Enforcement
Agency, NDLEA and the Attorney General of the Federation.
Kashamu is praying for an order of perpetual injunction restraining
the NDLEA and the AGF from taking over his property, including a 24-flat
housing estate at Egbe and several hectares of land on Lekki Peninsula,
Lagos, worth over N20 billion. Justice Buba adjourned the matter for ruling after hearing the arguments of the parties.
The AGF, in its preliminary objection, said that Kashamu’s suit is
premature, incompetent and an abuse of court processes and asked the
court to dismiss it. A counsel from the office of the AGF, Mr. Oyin Koleoso, submitted
that Kashamu failed to substantiate his claim that the AGF had or was
about to take possession of his property. Koleoso said: “There is nothing to show that the applicant has been
prevented from owning property or is about to be divested of the ones he
owns. “It is in view of this that Your Lordship should dismiss the applicant’s suit with substantive cost.” Meanwhile, Kashamu’s lawyer, Mr. Ajibola Oluyede, said Kashamu was in
court to protect his fundamental right to own property as enshrined
under sections 43 and 44 of the 1999 Constitution. “That is the reason we have come to the court this time around to protect the right of the applicant to own property.
“This action is not pursuing a right in property, the action is
pursuing a right to own property. The right in property and the right to
own property are two different things. “It is on the basis of these facts and on the basis of this law that
we urge Your Lordship to discountenance this argument,” Oluyede said. Counsel to the NDLEA, Mr. Oigoga Ichakpa, said the agency was also
opposing Kashamu’s suit and that it had filed a counter-affidavit.
-Vanguard-
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