The State Security
Service, SSS, has finally secured a warrant of arrest for the Deputy
National Secretary of the All Progressives Congress, APC, Nasir
El-Rufai, and has now launched a manhunt for him, the spokesperson for
the agency has said.
This is even as armed operatives of the Service again stormed a
second house in Abuja believed to belong to the former minister in their
desperate bid to arrest him.
They had earlier in the afternoon invaded his first house in the
Maitama District of the nation’s capital, but could not find him as he
had reportedly gone to pick his children from school. They were said to
have tried to force their way in to arrest the former minister. Continue...
In the latest siege on another property, also in the Maitama
District, the operatives were said to have beaten up some private guards
for refusing them entry.
The spokesperson of the SSS, Marylyn Ogar, confirmed that the
operatives visited Mr. El-Rufai’s second house to arrest him, but denied
that anyone was beaten.
“I hate cheap blackmail,” Ms. Ogar told Premium Times on telephone.
“We went to the first place, nobody was beaten up. How will we go to the
second place and beat people up?”
She explained that the SSS got an arrest warrant demanded by Mr.
El-Rufai, but could not find him to personally serve him the document.
“We extended a friendly invitation to him,” the SSS spokesperson
said. “He was invited honourably to come and make some explanations
about the comments attributed to him.
“He said he wanted an arrest warrant. We have now obtained that from a competent court and we are wondering why he is running.
“We want to serve it on him. Or is there any Nigerian that is above the law?
“The president has said his ambition is not worth any Nigerian’s
blood. So why will anyone else be making provocative statements?”
The manhunt for the former minister followed his refusal to honour an invitation from the SSS on Thursday.
He cited his pending suit against the Service over his detention in a
hotel in Awka during the Anambra State Governorship last November 16 as
the reason for refusing to honour the invitation.
Mr. El-Rufai also insisted on seeing a warrant of arrest before he could go to the SSS office.
The invitation of the APC chief was in connection with his remarks at
a conference in Abuja on Wednesday that there might be violence if the
2015 general elections were not credible.
Meanwhile, Mr. El-Rufai, in statement by his media advisor, Muyiwa
Adekeye, on Friday, confirmed that armed SSS officials stormed his home
in Abuja following his rejection of the attempt by the organization to
compel him to report at their office without a valid warrant.
The statement said the former minister had on Thursday firmly told
the Director General of SSS that he would be exercising his right not to
go to the SSS offices except a warrant mandates him and offered to meet
the SSS officials in his home or office.
“The armed invasion of his house is a clear indication that the SSS
imagines itself as an agency immune from respecting fundamental rights,
behaviour akin to a gathering of toughs before whom every citizen must
quake,” the statement said.
“The SSS agents did not produce any warrant to back their invasion of his premises.
“The assault on El-Rufai’s house continues a sorry tradition of
serial violation of his rights by the SSS which has arrested him at
airports and hotels.
“The most recent was the action of the SSS in violating his right to
freedom of movement in Awka during the Anambra elections. Without any
just cause or formal charge, the Directorate of State Security Services
(SSS) had unlawfully detained El Rufai, the Deputy National Secretary of
the All Progressives Congress (APC) at the premises of Finotel Hotel,
Akwa, Anambra State, from the 15th day of November, 2013 to the 16th day
of November, 2013.”
The statement said during the period, Mr. El-Rufai was not only
restricted to the hotel, he was denied access to his congregational
prayer as a devout Muslim, and kept incommunicado without access to
anyone and or the press.
It stated that in order to remedy the flagrant violation of his
fundamental rights as enshrined in sections 35, 39, 40 and 41 of the
Constitution, the former minister sued the SSS, seeking eight reliefs,
including an injunction to restrain the SSS from further infringing on
his fundamental rights.
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