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Friday, 7 June 2013
Irish Authorities Murdered Our Son
According to the Sun, right now, a thick mixture of agony and anger pervades the atmosphere in
Anam, a community in Anambra West Local Government Area of Anambra State.
Residents of the community are sad and angry, alleging that their promising
son, Godswill Udechukwu, was unjustly persecuted and killed by the Irish
authorities in an Irish jail.
And Godswill's family insists that the Irish government must be forced to
bring the killers of the young man to book. Godswill Udechukwu, a 32-year-old
Nigerian, had left the shores of his fatherland and relocated to Europe in
search of the proverbial greener pastures.
He settled in Dublin, Ireland. There he met, fell in love with and got
married to Natasha Gray, a 25-year-old Jamaican. And their marriage was blessed
with a male child. Although Natasha was said to have had a child for one Guy
Mboze, that did not matter, as the new couple had an understanding about the
older child.
But like a mountain of quicksand, the family's peace and love crashed.
Godswill was, at a point, given a suspended sentence for allegedly assaulting a
Garda (Irish policeman). He later decided, along with his wife, to relocate from
Dublin to London, to avoid more encounters with the law.
He went ahead to London, while the wife was to join him later. Then a
mysterious incident happened. Natasha was on February 18, 2003 found dead in
their apartment at Royal Canal View, Royal Canal Bank, Philsboro, Dublin,
according a police report.
And Godswill was accused of being responsible. In August 2005, Godswill was
extradited from London to face trial. He was accused of using a hammer to
bludgeon his wife to death.
He was tried, convicted and given a life jail by Mr. Justice Kevin O'Higgins
of the Central Criminal Court in Dublin. He has since died in prison. He told
the court during his trial that he was not in Ireland as at the time of the
incident.
"Check the border post and the surveillance cameras," he had requested. But
the prosecution went on. And as he was convicted, he told the court: "I did not
kill my wife. You would have seen my wedding video. I am innocent. I am jailed
tonight because I am an African and I am a black." But all that did not change
the verdict. Hon. Kennedy Mmoya, who spoke for the family, said from that
moment, Godswill was tortured, harassed like an ordinary animal.
"In fact, he was treated like a convict as soon as he was in the custody of
Ireland. His grandmother died of shock and his own mother lost her sight when
they heard of his imprisonment.
Now he is dead too," he lamented. Udechukwu's family alleges that a lawyer,
who was supposed to defend him, never discussed with Godswill, ignored phone
calls and did not take time to study the book of evidence prepared against
Godswill, even though he had been adequately advised to do so by the presiding
judge. Both lawyer and client only met in court, according to the family. The
family also said that Godswill was not allowed to contact the Nigerian embassy
in Ireland.
Also, they faulted the composition of an all-white jury in a trial, involving
a black man. They said none of the family members was allowed access to Godswill
throughout that period, stating that one of them that landed in Ireland after a
rigorous process of procuring travel documents was detained and sent back to
Nigeria.
The family insists that Godswill was kept in a deplorable underground cell
and denied access to recommended drugs and meal until his health failed and he
was taken to one 'hostile' hospital. According to Godwill's family, many members
of the hospital staff were Natasha's friends and that the hospital staff and
management contributed towards Natasha's funeral.
Many of the doctors and other staff of the hospital, they noted, were not
happy with Godswill, believing that he murdered their friend. The family
believes that all those involved with the couple in one way or another should
have been investigated, even as they insist that the police should have
investigated the incident more, including using CCTV footages, DNA and forensic
examination of all the materials found at the couple's apartment.
The family has also expressed shock at a section of the Irish press that did
not care to report objective stories, saying the reports misled the public and
might have influenced the jury's final verdict. The family says even the prison
officials also manipulated Godwill's drugs and meals.
"Even when he took ill, they refused to take him to the hospital until the
other inmates in the prison raised an overwhelming commotion. Sometimes, he was
made to sign withdrawals from his prison account without justification. He was
attacked and stabbed twice in prison, an act we suspect might have been
engineered by those who killed his wife and also bent on getting him out of the
way." For these reasons, the family says the Irish authorities have a case to
answer.
"They gave Godswill a very unfair trial and conviction, and they manhandled
him," they insist. The family's demands include, among others, the
re-composition of the jury, which must consist of blacks, and the re-trial of
the murder case "even if on post-mortem with an attorney of our choice," and an
independent autopsy to find out the circumstances, surrounding his death.
They also insist that the CCTV footage of Udechukwu's attack in prison must
be produced by the prison officials to identify the attackers with a view to
finding out their sponsors. The family wants a representative of Mr. Godswill
Udechukwu's family in Nigeria to be allowed to visit Mount Joy Prison and the
hospital where he died.
They are also demanding that, while in Dublin, the family of Udechukwu must
be given unrestricted access to his son, Jaydeen Godswill Junior.
And finally, the family are demanding that the Irish Government should pay
the full cost of atonement as well as bear the expenses of conveying the remains
of the deceased to Nigeria.
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Sad if the story above is true. The British government has to be held accountable.
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