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Nigerian Magistrates’ Court Remands Journalist NonsoNkwa In Imo Prison Over Cyberstalking, Incitement Allegations

Nigerian Police Arrest Journalist Nonso Nkwa Over Cyberstalking, Incitement Allegations In Imo
October 23, 2024

The five counts include conspiracy, treason and arson.

The Magistrates’ Court in Owerri, the Imo state capital, on Wednesday, denied a popular broadcast journalist, Chinonso Uba, popularly known as NonsoNkwa, bail and remanded him at the Owerri Correctional Centre.

Uba was arraigned before the Chief Magistrate, His Worship Adikaibe, on five counts preferred against him by N.S. Onwochie, Legal Prosecution Officer, Owerri, Imo State on behalf of the state police commissioner.

The five counts include conspiracy, treason and arson.

 

At Uba’s arraignment, the prosecuting counsel appeared for the Commissioner of Police/Imo State government while C.K. Mgbekonye Esq., E.T. Okolie Esq., F. N. Obisike Esq., O. F. Olegeme, Esq. and E.N. Nwaibari, Esq. appeared for the Defendant.

 

However, when the charges were read to the Defendant, the court did not allow him to take a plea on the ground that the court lacks jurisdiction to entertain the charges.

 

The Defendant’s lead counsel, Mgbekonye, applied for Uba’s bail and urged the court to admit the Defendant to bail.

 

The lawyer told the court that his prayer for the bail relied on Section 36(5) of the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria (as amended).

 

Mgbekonye further told the court that the offences the Defendant is being accused of fall under the ones the court can exercise its discretion on regarding the granting of bail.

 

But the prosecution counsel who opposed the Defence counsel’s oral bail application cited section 93(1) of the Imo State Administration of Criminal Justice Law, which according to him, gave only the High Court the power to grant bail upon application.

 

The prosecution counsel therefore asked the court to refuse the oral bail application on the ground that the court lacks jurisdiction to grant bail or hear the charges.

 

In its decision, the Court declined jurisdiction to grant the Defendant bail and ordered that he should be remanded at the Owerri Correctional Center.

The Court then asked the defence counsel to apply for the Defendant’s bail at the High Court.

 

The court thereafter adjourned the case to November 11, 2024 for Directorate of Public Prosecution report and transmission of the case file to the High Court.

 

He was apprehended on October 20 near Teachers House, Owerri-Port Harcourt Road, following a petition regarding viral videos allegedly containing inflammatory statements.

 

The videos were said to relate to the burning of the National Open University (NOUN) Study Center in Nsu, Ehime Mbano LGA, on September 30, 2024.

Topics
Human Rights