

A man who was thrown into
prison has been set free 24 years after he was found innocent.
The Nigerian man identified
as Olaide Olatunji narrated how he was wrongly arrested, falsely accused of
conspiracy to commit murder and thrown in jail after the torture and beatings
by the police.
HOW IT STARTED.
I trained as a photographer
but back in the 80s I didn’t have enough photography work to sustain me so I
worked with my father who traded in cattle. My father was an old man so I joined
him and I used to go to the bush to buy the animals. I was married with two
sons….
That year, as the time for
the Ileya Festival drew closer, we were going to supply some companies with
cattle so I had to go and buy them from Niger state. He listed all the things
that I was going to buy – cows, rams and goats. I left Lagos on the 30th of
May, 1988 to Gwari in Niger state. I had to go inside the bush to select the
animals I wanted so that I would get a trailer to convey them to Lagos.
THE ARREST.
Because of the language
barrier, I needed an interpreter for the negotiations. We were in the bush when
some policemen came and asked me if I was a visitor. I said yes, I was a
visitor that I had been coming to the village for many years. The man said they
were looking for people who ran into the bush.
I said I didn’t know
anything about it that I was selecting rams there. Then they arrested me and
took me to the police station even though the interpreter told them I had been
coming to the village for some time.
The next day, the 1st of
June, they said the case could not be handled at that station and it was
transferred to the State CID at Niger. From there they transferred me to Ilorin
in Kwara state. All the while, I never knew what they were accusing me of.
After a week, some policemen came from Lagos, they said they were from the
Anti-Terrorsist squad and they conveyed me and some people that were arrested
with me to Lagos.
I was with N325,000 cash
which I wanted to use to buy cows at Niger. The money followed me up to Ilorin
but when we got to Lagos, I didn’t hear anything about the money again. The
Police men did not give me or my family members.
PAIN , TORTURE AND TRIAL
They took me to Adeniji
Adele Police Station, Lagos. That was when they started giving me hell. They
hung me, beat and tortured me. That was the day I knew they were accusing me of
murder. They said somebody was killed in Lagos and his car was snatched and
they later found the car around the village where I was in Gwari.
The policemen said the
people fled into the bush that was why they were looking for visitors around
that area. All the while I had no idea why I had been arrested. The
confessional statement in my case file, they wrote it themselves and forced me
to sign. After that they transferred me to Ikoyi Prison and that was where they
resumed another round of torture.
I spent almost 9 months
there before they took me to court with four other men. I didn’t even know
those men. They charged us all for conspiracy to murder. My lawyer told me to
plead ‘Not Guilty’ so I did and from there they took me to Kirikiri Medium
Security Prison.
SENTENCED TO DEATH
Four months later, they
said we had a case to answer at Apapa Court. Osibodu Jaydis Babajide after
reading the charges, they took us back to Ikoyi Prisons.The trial started in
1989 and it ran on for 6 years.
On February 15, 1995,
Justice Da Silva sentenced me to death. I told the judge that day, “You have
condemned me, but God did not condemn me.” My Mum, my Dad, my children and
family members were in the court that day. I was transferred to the Kirikiri
Maximum Security Prison.
LIFE AS A MAN SENTENCED TO
DEATH.
They put me in a condemned
cell. It was hell on earth. They kept 9 of us in a very small room. That was
where we took our bath, ate, slept, defecated and eased ourselves. There were
no beds. Who would give us beds? By law, they don’t let any condemned man come
out. But sometimes, they let us out for about one hour in a day. Life in the
prison was very rough. There, I hardly slept. The prison authorities gave us
food but not good food.
In the condemned prisoners
cell, you wouldn’t know which day they will call you and just execute you. In
1996, I can’t remember the date, we were 9 in the cell. They took 8 of them
out, they never brought them back. When they call your name like that, you know
what will happen. They executed all of them.
Then, when we want to
communicate with our family or our lawyers, we go to the welfare unit and write
a letter. We must wear our blue uniform and they’ll put handcuffs and chains on
our legs. Any time we wanted to come out to welfare, or clinic or for
visitation, they’ll put the handcuffs on us. That was until 2002 when we
protested and they stopped it.
I have been hearing of what
has been happening in Nigeria. I have been hearing of Boko Haram, of Obasanjo,
of Goodluck Jonathan. All the information we have there is carried over
information, you can’t get the exact information. It is what they say to us
that we will believe.
My brothers used to visit
me. My parents died when I was in prison and they told me. I felt bad but I
could not do anything. I just prayed to God not to let me die in prison.
Around the millennium time,
my family members brought a phone to me at the prison but it was not approved.
I had to sneak it in and we hide to use it. If the prison wardens catch anyone
with a phone, they will send the person to prison inside prison. Real torture.
WIFE AND CHILDREN
As a young woman, if my
wife was my sister, I would have even advised her to marry someone else because
no one knew when I was going to come out. I won’t advice my sister to wait for
a man who doesn’t have hope of coming out. She has married again and I don’t
feel bad about it. My children used to come once in a while but they don’t
really know me. Now that I am out, they will know me better.
WHAT KEEP ME GOING.
My biggest encouragement
there were the Christian brothers. They were very good to me. They took care of
us, especially the catholics. They didn’t want to know whether you are an idol
worshipper or whatever, they will just embrace you. I’m very close to the
church now. When God does something for you, you just have to give thanks to
God.
I thank God for Pastor
Ariyo Popoola. He had been coming to prison for a very long time. He used to
come and talk to us, preach to us, tell us that this is not the end of life and
that we could become something in future. At that time, so many lawyers had
duped my family, collected money and just dropped my case.
One day in 2005, he came to
me and said he wanted to take up my case. Then, they used to call me Mr. No
Hope. I didn’t believe him, I said he should go. He came back again after some
months and said he wants to take my case. I said “is it by force, I won’t give
my case to you”. But somebody encouraged me telling me that afterall, he was
not asking me for money or anything like that. He introduced me to Chino
Obiagwu, the Executive Director of LEDAP and Kingsley Ughe,the Chief Lawyer of
JLAA.
When I met them, the first
thing they said to me was “My friend, we am taking up your case and we are
going to win that case. Are you ready to sign for us?” I said I will not sign
with biro, I will use thumbprint. Then they said “I will give you a warning.
Don’t call us, don’t send anybody to us. Are you going to have patience?” I
said, “Is it me that you are talking to about patience?”
THE FINAL APPEAL
I didn’t even have faith at
all. Sometimes, when Pastor Popoola came to prison, I would hide from him. The
prisoners don’t go to the Court of Appeal, it is only the lawyers that were
representing us. He didn’t even tell me anything and I didn’t bother to ask.
Sometimes they were communicating with my family but I didn’t believe anything
will happen.
THE CALL TO CHANGE AND GO
HOME.
On the 5th of June 2012,
they called me to come to the Welfare Unit to get the progress of my case. I
said I wasn’t not going there. Some people that were sitting with me said I
should go but I said I wasn’t going, that they will just be lying to me. Later
I called Pastor Popoola. He said “Egbon” (Big brother), I said “wetin be dat”
(what is it?). He said “o ti sele o” (It has happened). He said the court of
Appeal has let me go. I just started shouting, I didn’t know what to do, how to
thank him. I was very happy.
MY VIEWS ABOUT POLICE AND
THE NIGERIAN JUSTICE SYSTEM.
The police are bad, they
are not doing a good job. They are killing innocent people. Lawyers will
collect your money, they will not do any job. If a person has spent 6 years on
trial and is sentenced to 15 years, they will not count the years spent on
trial, they will just start counting the 15 years from the judgment day.
Justice was not done in my
case. Justice is for only people that are rich and it is not supposed to be so.
Justice is supposed to be for all Nigerians. The man who calls himself a judge
will see the truth and will not even listen. My judge was biased towards me and
I don’t know why.
We still have people
languishing in that prison. People that have spent 28, 30, 33 years. The
government is not doing well. How long will somebody be in prison? Which time
will he spend the rest of his life? Let the justice prevail.
People are changing there.
A lot of people are becoming born again. Imagine, somebody who did not go to
school for his whole life will attend primary school, secondary school and go
to Open University there. Let the government come to the aid of these poor men.
A 14 year-old boy is in prison there charged for robbery case.
LOOKING AHEAD.
I will still go back to my
job. If the Government wants to help me, fine but I believe my family and my
children will take me up. I’m very hopeful. The rest of my life is going to be
a very good life because I am going to take everything so easy. If it comes, I
give thanks to God, if it doesn’t come, I give thanks to God Almighty.

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