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Nigeria: Six Nigerian Drug Offenders Pardoned in Thailand Finally Freed in Nigeria

Nigeria: Six Nigerian Drug Offenders Pardoned in Thailand Finally Freed in Nigeria
allafrica.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from allafrica.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Nigerian Prisons Service failed to reease 65 soldiers granted presidential pardon in April

Nigerian Prisons Service failed to release 65 soldiers granted presidential pardon in April - Lawyer A senior lawyer and human rights activist, Femi Falana, has accused the Nigerian Correctional Service (NCS) of failing to release 65 convicted soldiers who were granted a presidential pardon by President Muhammadu Buhari. Buhari had in April 2020 approved an amnesty for 2,600 inmates in different custodial centres, including the army officers. Femi Falana (SAN) He said, For instance, 65 convicted soldiers who have met the conditions outlined in the Presidential Amnesty granted to certain categories of prison inmates in April 2020 are still languishing in prison custody. There were 66 of them but one of has been released from prison custody. No reason has been adduced by the prison authorities for not releasing the others.”

Breaking News | Six Nigerian drug offenders pardoned in Thailand finally freed in Nigeria

Views: Visits 19 Six Nigerian inmates pardoned in Thailand but still held in Kirikiri Maximum Prison, Lagos, have been set free. PREMIUM TIMES reported that eight inmates repatriated from Thailand to complete their prison terms at home are being held in the facility, over a year beyond their release dates. The inmates include: Wasiu Amusan, Napoleon Mba, Obi Titus, Gloria Ogbonna, Henry Azukaeme, Okpala Chukwubike, Kennedy Tanya and Yakubu Yauza. Documents obtained showed that not less than six of them, who were imprisoned for drug-related offences, were granted royal pardon and their sentences commuted by the Thai monarch, Maha Vajiralongkorn, to one-sixth of their original sentence.

We ll go Ahead with Protest Unless Paid, Amnesty Trainers Insist

The group of trainers enlisted by the Presidential Amnesty Programme protesting the non-payment of salaries have while insisting that unless their concerns were attended to, they would still go ahead with the 30-day protest but flayed being classed as ex-militants as they were professional engineers. However, they acknowledged that the office had reached out to and were currently engaging them towards addressing and resolving their complaint which they insisted were genuine. They explained in a statement that it was a mistake to refer to them as ex-militants simply because they worked under the programme, pointing out that they were chosen, trained to help train the ex- militants, a reason they were issued with employment letters for the job

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