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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Obasi, R (on the application of) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2007] EWHC 381 (Admin) (16 February 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2007/381.html Cite as: [2007] EWHC 381 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand London WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
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THE QUEEN ON THE APPLICATION OF ANTHONY CHIEDU OBASI | Claimant | |
-v- | ||
THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT | Defendant |
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MISS SUSAN CHAN (instructed by Treasury Solicitor) appeared on behalf of the Defendant
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Crown Copyright ©
"h) Based on the telephone call you received from your relatives, 'they were looking for me all over'. There are no organisations you could turn to and the police are corrupt and 'if they can't get anything from you they won't help you'. They would also tell you to settle it with your people as it is a traditional matter. The St Peter's Church could not help you because 'I haven't had any opportunity to meet them' [references made to the responses in interview].
i) There is no place you knew where you could go and be safe in Nigeria, even in Lagos you would only come out at night. You remained in Lagos for a month and about three or four days. You did not experience any problems there because 'they don't know where I am'. You left Lagos as it was a matter of time before your kinsmen found you. There is 'no part of Nigeria that is safe for me in the circumstances'."
"22. It is noted that you did not make a report to the police as you claim that they are corrupt and that you would be told that as it is a traditional matter you should sort it out with your people (AIR Q36). However, your statement is not supported by the objective evidence above in that the authorities have demonstrated a willingness to intervene in cases involving cults and ritual sacrifices.
23. It is evident that Nigerian police have a willingness to arrest those they suspect of being involved with ritual sacrifices. There is no reason to believe that were you to bring your problems to the attention of the authorities they would refuse to help you."
"Nevertheless, it is accepted that the police are widely seen as being undisciplined, badly trained and poorly led, and unable to deal with the level of violent crime that they have to face. ... Corruption was rampant, usually taking the form of bribes at highway checkpoints, and more than 250 police were arrested during the year and another 300 dismissed from service for corruption. In addition, more than 30 officers around the country were arrested in connection with armed robbery."
"... the general tenor of the background information does not suggest that the government is either unwilling or unable to provide protection ..."
"As reported on the BBC News Website on 13 August 2004, 'Nigerian police say they have found a further 33 bodies in addition to the 50 already uncovered in fetish shrines in south-eastern Anambra state. A traditional cult reputed to carry out ritual killings is thought to have carried out the murders. Some of the corpses had hands, genitals or heads missing. Police have displayed skulls — and five men of the 30 or so people arrested in connection with the murders — to correspondents in the capital, Abuja. 'Police are concerned about how the headless bodies found their way into the shrines,' said deputy police chief Sunday Ehindero. However, a spokesman for those arrested denied any involvement in the killings. 'Since I have been there, for two years, I have not seen anybody killed by these people. Rather, the shrines kill,' said Colin Obi. He said bodies had been brought to the Okija shrines by family members. Mr Ehindero said groups involved in disagreements had gone to the shrines to take part in black magic rituals. 'What we are saying is that we found there is a parallel court,' he said. Police found the shrines are being tipped off by a local villager in Okija who reported the priests had eaten the flesh of some of their victims."
"Nigeria is divided administratively into 36 states and a Federal Capital Territory. In the unlikely event that the police in your local area would not offer you the protection you required, it is considered that you can also seek the assistance of the police from another area. There is no evidence to suggest that police officers of another police station would seek to deny you protection."
"6.08 'If a person relocates within Nigeria, he or she will usually seek to find shelter with a relative or a member of his or her community of origin. This means, however, that the same network which accord protection can become a source of persecution if somebody has run afoul of his or her community. Informal communication networks function very well in Nigeria, and it is not too difficult to find a person one is looking for. This is true also for so-called big cities whose neighbourhoods are structured along village and community lines.'
'The viability of an internal relocation alternative therefore depends on whether anybody would be interested to follow someone to e.g. Lagos. It is very hard to make a general statement for such cases. People might be able to relocate if they have run into trouble with a rival ethnic community or a vigilante group or if they flee violent conflict."
"Leaving their family signifies social and economic exclusion for the large majority of Nigerians and in particular for women.'