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Suspended CBN Governor, Godwin Emefiele, Arrested, Detained

Suspended CBN Governor, Godwin Emefiele, Arrested, Detained

DSS charges Emefiele to court

 

The Department of Security Services (DSS) has charged the suspended Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to court Godwin Emefiele to Court.

In a statement, DSS spokesman Peter Afunanya said the decision to charge Emefiele was in compliance with the order of the Federal Capital Territory High Court.

Recall that a Federal High Court gave the DSS seven days to file a court complaint against Emefiele or free him from detention.

Through a fundamental rights application submitted on his behalf by his lead attorney, J.B. Daudu SAN, Emefiele requested that he be released from the DSS facility.

He asked the court to rule that the suspended CBN governor’s arrest, which occurred without any charges being brought against him or a court order authorising his arrest, violated his fundamental rights.

In addition, he requested that it be declared that the applicant is entitled to freedom of speech and movement, as well as an order directing Emefiele’s immediate and unconditional release or, in the alternative, granting him bail.

Additionally, he requested a court order prohibiting the defendants from continuing to hold the applicant under suspicion of committing any crime and added that the defendants should be required to pay a N5 billion fine.

Recall that on June 9, President Bola Tinubu removed the CBN governor from office, opening the door to an investigation into his tenure at the top financial institution.

The president then gave the order for Folashodun Adebisi Shonubi, the CBN’s deputy governor for operations, to take over in an acting capacity.

About a day after his suspension, the DSS detained him at the Lagos airport and sent him to its Abuja headquarters.

But prior to that, the AGF and DSS had objected to Emefiele’s applications and affidavit in support of them.

The DSS refuted the claim of a political witch hunt in a counter affidavit written by its attorney, I. Awo, stating that “the applicant was arrested upon reasonable suspicion of committing acts which constitute a criminal breach of trust, incitement to violence, criminal misappropriation of public funds, economic sabotage, economic crimes of national security dimensions, and undermining the security of Nigeria.” He claimed that Emefiele was transported to Abuja on a private jet, not in a commando fashion.