Counsel to the Yoruba Nation activist Sunday Adeyemo (popularly known as Sunday Igboho), Olusegun Falola, has explained why Igboho’s detention was extended.
He revealed that the law in the Benin Republic says anyone standing trial over criminal matters should not stay longer than six months in custody unless the incarceration is extended by another six months.
Falola explained that the practice is to allow investigating authorities the necessary time to do their job properly before the case is decided.
However, he clarified that there was no criminal charge against Igboho and no extradition request from Nigeria so far.
He said preventive detention like that of Igboho is meant to keep accused persons in custody before trial on the assumption that releasing them would not be in the society’s best interest – since there is the likelihood that the accused would likely commit more crimes if released in the course of the trial.
The lawyer, who said his team has done everything within the ambits of the law to get a reprieve for the embattled Yoruba Nation agitator, concluded that there is more to Igboho’s trial than meets the eye. It is a political trial, he said yesterday.
His words: “We have done everything so that he can be released but the government has not granted our request. There’s no criminal charge or offence or any evidence of any crime against him. They just want to keep him in custody. May God help us. We have done everything under our laws, but they are still holding on to him.”