Your Excellency,
His Excellency,
President Muhammadu Buhari
President, Commander-in-Chief
Federal Republic of Nigeria
Dear President Buhari,
I
 hope this letter reaches you in good health. My name is Tarila Okah, 
daughter of Mr. Charles Okah, who is currently remanded at Kuje Prison 
and standing trial before Hon. Justice Gabriel Kolawole at the Federal 
High Court in Abuja over the 2010 Independence Day bomb incident.
Mr.
 President, I am writing this letter principally to draw your attention,
 the entire people of Nigeria, and members of the international 
community to what I perceive as injustice being wilfully and maliciously
 meted to my father by the Nigerian state. Within the last 10 months, 
disturbing media reports about his attempt to commit suicide at the 
Federal High Court in Abuja on October 6, 2015 and his failing health 
are sad reminders of the harsh reality of my father’s frustration with 
the judicial system in Nigeria, which is notorious for elastic trials 
that can drag on for years on end and wear out all parties. It is rather
 unfortunate that several court dates in the course of my father’s trial
 have been cancelled either because the presiding Trial Judge had a 
conference to attend or for other reasons that brings disrepute to the 
Nigerian justice system. For instance, the Prosecutor Dr. Alex Izinyon, a
 Senior Advocate of Nigeria failed to attend one of the trials on a date
 that had been agreed upon beforehand, instead choosing to attend his 
child’s graduation ceremony abroad.
With
 all due respect, Mr. President, no democratic Government anywhere in 
the world, including Canada where I currently reside, would treat a 
prisoner’s attempt at suicide as well as the prisoner’s failing health, 
with disdain. Such a peculiar prisoner’s case ought to be concluded 
speedily by the Judiciary. Alternatively, such a Prisoner of Conscience 
as my father, should be granted bail. However, from all indications, the
 Nigerian Government is clearly insensitive to his plight.
Your
 Excellency, I have consulted with several Nigerian lawyers who have 
sufficiently educated me that, pursuant to Section 162 of the new 
Criminal Justice Administration Law in the country, my father is 
entitled to bail; having spent more than 3 years in prison custody. 
Nevertheless, Hon. Justice Gabriel Kolawole has on two previous 
occasions overruled my father’s applications for bail. However, the pace
 of the trial has still not been picked up.  Meanwhile, Justice Kolawole
 in 2011 easily granted bail to Senator Ali Ndume who was standing trial
 for terrorism as an alleged sponsor of Boko Haram. Today, after being 
re-elected on the platform of your party, the All Progressives Congress 
(APC), Senator Ndume is the Majority Leader of Nigeria’s upper 
legislative chamber, the Senate, while my father (who is equally as 
important to society) is still languishing in prison as an inmate 
awaiting trial; almost 6 years after he was first arrested on October 
16, 2010 on suspicion of being “JOMO GBOMO,” the spokesman for the 
Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND). Interestingly, 
Nigerian media perception about my father’s culpability in the 
Independence Day bomb incident keeps changing. At first, he was accused 
of being the spokesperson of MEND. Later, he was described as an 
accomplice to the alleged crime; after the media and the Nigerian 
Government realised that ‘Jomo Gbomo’ was still releasing statements on 
behalf of MEND, even as my father was firmly held in custody! Now he is 
accused of being the mastermind.
Thus
 far, the prosecution has relied heavily on ‘witnesses’, all of whom 
have contradicted their statements under cross examination. In a recent 
court sitting, a witness from the Department of State Security (DSS) who
 introduced himself as a ‘Crime Scene Investigator’ admitted that, “no 
evidence was collected at the crime scene”. While another witness who 
supposedly ‘sold’ a Mazda car to the 2nd Defendant, admitted under 
cross-examination that, the very first time he set his eyes on the said 
Mazda car (Exhibit 2) was “at the premises of the DSS Abuja 
Headquarters.”
Without
 prejudice to his ongoing trial before Hon. Justice Gabriel Kolawole, I 
honestly believe that my father is innocent of the crimes alleged 
against him. Over the 6 year period of his incarceration and trial, his 
businesses which employed many Nigerians have collapsed; his family is 
in disarray. Years apart, especially under such circumstances, often 
dissolves the emotional bonds between a husband and his wife, and for my
 much younger siblings who have now spent more time without their 
father, there are virtually no emotional bonds to be dissolved.
On
 a more personal note, I will be getting married in a few weeks; albeit 
without the privilege of having my beloved father walk me down the aisle
 – the dream of every daughter. I feel an admixture of joy and pain as 
this day approaches knowing that my father is alive but held somewhere 
unjustly. Clearly, my siblings and I are being punished vicariously by 
the Nigerian state over crimes allegedly committed by our father which 
have not been proven beyond reasonable doubt by a court of competent 
jurisdiction. Unfortunately, in Nigeria, the mere act of filing even 
trumped-up charges carries along with it a strong presumption of guilt, 
which has led to my father’s conviction in the court of public opinion 
and has also led to the abuse of his fundamental human rights. I know 
that some Nigerians, on reading this open letter, will attack me for 
daring to appeal for my father’s freedom. But my message to those 
compatriots is simple: it is high time we focused on finding the real 
perpetrators.
Finally,
 Mr. President, in your determined quest to fight corruption in Nigeria,
 I believe that the concept of corruption should be expanded beyond 
financial crimes. We must also fight corruption in the system, and in 
this case, the judicial system. We have witnessed the speedy handling of
 cases involving high profile politicians, but a very sluggish process 
for others. The joy of my upcoming marriage plus the pain of a missing 
father (who is alive) equates to the simple plea: 
#PLEASEFREECHARLESOKAH!


 
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