Questions And Answers On The Purported Proscription Of IPOB

On September 20, 2017, Justice Kafarati of the Federal High Court, Abuja issued an Order purporting to proscribe the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) on a companion ruling that IPOB is a ‘terrorist organization’. The Order was issued pursuant to an ex parte application brought by the Attorney-General of the Federation.
In the midst of this sudden twist of events, especially as it emerged on the heels of Nigerian Army’s retraction of its ultra vires declaration, a lot of people, especially those affected (directly and indirectly) have been asking questions. This piece is therefore an attempt to answer some of those questions, specifically from the legal standpoint. In as much simple parlance as possible, the analysis and answers are as follows:
The statutory authority for the court order is found at Section 2(1)(c), Terrorism Prevention Act, 2011 (TPA) which provides in pertinent part that:

“(1). Where two or more persons associate for the purpose of or where an organization engages in— (a) Participating or collaborating in an act of terrorism; (b) promoting, encouraging or exhorting others to commit an act of terrorism; or (c) setting up or pursuing acts of terrorism, the judge in Chambers may on an application made by the Attorney General, National Security Adviser or Inspector General of Police on the approval of the President; declare any entity to be a proscribed organization and the notice should be published in official gazette”.

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As can be gleaned from above, it is the part of the provision stating that the application to declare an entity a proscribed organization can be decided by a judge in Chambers that formed the basis upon which the entire proceeding was instituted and decided ex parte. This process has troubled people who have become all too accustomed to the famed fundamental right to “fair hearing” guaranteed to everybody by Section 36 of the Constitution.

Presumably, this patently unconstitutional provision passed legislative muster for three reasons: (a) – the law was passed in 2011 which was when the Boko Haram terrorist attacks reached intolerable heights. So, the National Assembly (and the nation) might have felt that collective security is more fundamental than the individual right to fair hearing; (b) – the provision was specifically targeted at Boko Haram or entities that share similar terrorist characteristics, such as ISIS; and (c) – the provision borrowed from an identical provision contained in the famed American terrorism legislation known as ‘Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act’ (AEDPA) enacted by the US Congress in the wake and sheer magnitude of the September 2001 al-Qaeda terrorist attacks in the US.

But as contrasted with the Nigerian genre, the analogous American legislation contained four key provisions or limitations that comport with basic constitutional safeguards. They are: (a) – AEDPA was directed against Foreign Terrorist Organizations (or FTOs); (b) – the US Secretary of State (not a Judge) is the one that possessed the authority to make such designation and proscription; (c) – the designation/proscription can be reviewed/reversed by a named federal court – the United States District Court for the District of Columbia; and (d) – as implemented, the American counterpart to the Nigerian provisions has never been targeted at domestic or American political groups that share identical characteristics like IPOB, such as the Republic of Texas or the Republic of California agitators, which are undoubtedly more vocal than IPOB.

However, the Nigerian legislation has some unique safeguards – some arguable, some not. The arguable part is contained in the phrase: “the judge in Chambers may on an application made by …”. This connotes that the application ‘may be heard and granted ex parte’. So, it’s arguable that the word “may” does not absolutely require the Judge to hear and grant the application without notice; and even when heard and granted ex parte, it should not – in accordance with pertinent rules of procedure – be a final Order.

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Conversely, the non-arguable safeguards on fair hearing and other constitutional protections are contained in the following provisions of the Act, which states at Section 2(3)(ii) that ‘for the avoidance of doubts … nobody should be treated as such (i.e as a terrorist) because of his or her political belief’. To be sure, this phrase is to be understood as a ‘saving’ clause for Sections 35 (freedom of thought), 39 (freedom to hold opinion) and 40 (freedom of association) of the Constitution. Thus, it can reasonably be concluded that this very provision is geared to protecting organizations such as IPOB that may expectedly manifest a political opinion likely to be considered dissident or inconvenient by the government of the day.

Further, Section 2(5) of the same Act provides that “the Attorney General upon the approval of the President may withdraw the order if satisfied that such proscribed organization has ceased to engage in an act of terrorism – (a) the proscribed organization or person affected by the order made an application on notice”. The most important point to be gleaned from this subsection is that ‘the proscribed organization or person affected by the order can make an application on notice’ It is to be understood – in context – that ‘application on notice’ is made to High Courts, not the Attorney General (that has no judicial powers), even as it is acknowledged that the wordings of this subsection appear nonspecific as to whom the said application should be made. Suffice it to say that it is clear enough that an affected organization (IPOB) or an affected person (any member of IPOB) is legally free to make an application on notice to the Federal High Court to reverse or vacate the order.

Alternatively, the order can be overcome in a full-blown fress suit, using originating summons and relying on Section 251 (federal high court jurisdiction) of the Constitution. Let it be clear that, apart from that of Boko Haram, IPOB is the next test case where the Federal government is on record to have taken a judicial step at proscription. But in the case of Boko Haram, there was no post-declaration judicial challenge (no appeal, no originating actions). It is reasonably presumable that Boko Haram played dead for two reasons: (a) – before then, the United States had already declared Boko Haram a terrorist organization and Boko Haram itself admitted that it was; and (b) – the group itself had owned-up to a series of open and notorious terrorist acts affecting both Nigerians and the international community.

So, for an IPOB that is not burdened by the same characteristics, an originating action can be brought – without qualms – to particularly challenge the constitutionality of Section 2(1)(c) of TPA, especially as it bears directly on Chapter IV (fundamental rights) of the Constitution. Reliance can be placed on a prior ruling by the same federal high court – per Justice Binta Nyako – that IPOB is not a terrorist organization.

It is also possible – in the interim – to jump the Federal High Court and simply proceed with an appeal of the order under other extant laws, including particularly Sections 240 and 241 of the Constitution. To be sure, the order is an actionable ‘decision’ of a federal high court and thus falls within the category of appeals that are ‘as of right’, and not under Section 242, which listed the categories where appeals are not allowed, or the companion provisions where Appeals must be with the leave of the federal high court. In pursuing such appeal, the major points to keep in view are as follows:

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(a) The designation/proscription affects many of the fundamental rights guaranteed under Chapter IV of the Constitution, of which their infringement can trigger appeal ‘as of right’.

(b) TPA did not – in its express provisions – preclude the right to appeal the designation/proscription. This is very glaring and thus should be understood for it is – that right of appeal lies without limitation.

(c) The appeal can be filed with a companion application for stay of execution, pending the disposition of the appeal. This very application is critical for two reasons – (i) it could be granted – in which case IPOB will have a temporary reprieve. (ii) if it’s not granted, it theoretically triggers the right of interlocutory appeal to the Supreme Court, which gets to have a higher judicious overview that might work to toll the proscription.

(d) Grounds of Appeal should centre on Section 1(2) of TPA which clearly defined ‘acts of terrorism’. The basic narrative is that IPOB’s activities – regardless of rhetoric and puffery – are not acts of terrorism as defined in the TPA.

(e) Suit No.FHC/ABJ/CS/368/2013 shall have an impact. This is the suit – and the first of its kind – by which the Federal government had taken similar action against Boko Haram in 2013. Particularly, it is to be noted that in this very application, there was quantum evidence of deadly terrorist acts that can easily be distinguished from the universal nonviolence that is the hallmark of IPOB.

(f) In the appeal, a lot of hay can be made that IPOB is registered and operating in more than two dozen countries. This, plus the universal definitions of terrorism (or terrorism as we know it) should ultimately count for IPOB.

 

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