The Socio-Economic Rights and Accountability Project says it has filed a lawsuit against President Muhammadu Buhari’s regime, over its failure to protect Kaduna train attack passengers, and to secure the safe release of those abducted and still held captive by the terrorists.
Terrorists attacked the AK9 Abuja–Kaduna train on March 28, killing at least nine people, injuring many more, and kidnapping an unknown number of passengers. The victims had been held captive by the terrorists for almost a month, despite repeated calls for the authorities to release them.
SERAP claimed its lawyers Kolawole Oluwadare and Opeyemi Owolabi filed the lawsuit after hearing that the Federal Executive Council had neglected to approve funds for surveillance equipment that could have prevented the train attack.
SERAP is seeking “a declaration that the train attack, abductions, and killings of passengers by terrorists amount to a failure by the government to protect Nigerians and prevent these grave human rights violations” in the suit No ECW/CCJ/APP/20/22 filed last week before the ECOWAS Court of Justice in Abuja.
SERAP is also seeking “an order directing the Buhari government to protect, promote, and fulfil the human rights of Nigerians, including travellers across the country, by ensuring adequate security and taking measures to prevent attacks.”
SERAP is seeking “an order directing the Buhari government to urgently find and identify all the passengers, victims and their families, and to pay adequate monetary compensation of N50 million to each of the passengers and victims and their families.”
In the suit filed together with an application for an expedited hearing, SERAP is arguing that “The Buhari government has a legal duty to protect individuals from real and immediate risks to their lives and security caused by actions of third-parties such as terrorists.”
SERAP is also arguing that “A fundamental notion of contemporary human rights law is that victims of violations such as the victims of the Abuja-Kaduna train attack enjoy an independent right to effective remedies. Rights without remedies are ineffectual, rendering illusory the government’s duty to protect such rights.
“The Buhari government has failed to protect the constitutionally and internationally guaranteed rights of the victims of the train attack to life, dignity, and security, and their right to an effective remedy.”
No date has been fixed for the hearing of the application for an expedited hearing, and the substantive suit.