The ECOWAS Court of Justice has ordered the Government of the Federal Republic of Nigeria and its agents “to refrain from imposing sanction on any media house or harassing, intimidating, arresting and prosecuting the Applicants, concerned Nigerians for the use of twitter and other social media platforms,” pending the determination of the substantive suit filed by a Non- governmental Organisation challenging the ban.
In the ruling in Abuja on Tuesday, June 22, 2021 in an application for interim measures filed by the Registered Trustees of the Social-Economic Rights and Accountability Project (SERAP) and delivered by the Judge Rapporteur, Justice Keikura Bangura, the Court held that it “recognizes that access to twitter provides a platform for the exercise of freedom of expression and any interference of with the access will be viewed as an interference with the right to freedom of expression”.
“By extension such interference will amount to a violation of a fundamental human right which falls within the competence of this Court pursuant to Article 9 (4) of the Supplementary Protocol (A/SP.1/01/05) Amending Protocol (A/P1/7/91) relating to the Community Court of Justice,” it added.
The application for interim measures was based on Article 79 of the Rules of Procedure of the Court.
The Court, however, declined to order the Respondent and its agents to lift the suspension on the use of twitter pending the determination of the substantive suit.
In delivering the ruling, the Court rejected the two grounds of the preliminary objection of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, which were: that the subject matter of the suit was not for the enforcement of any human rights recognized by the Court and that the “Court lacks the jurisdiction to determine the criminalization of an act under Nigerian domestic laws.”
The Court ordered the government to ‘take steps to immediately implement the orders set above herein.”
In the suit filed by SERAP, the NGO asked for among other things, a declaration that the act of suspending Twitter or any other social media and microblogging application without an order of a competent court of jurisdiction is unlawful, inconsistent and incompatible with the country’s human rights obligations.
It also asked for a declaration that the act of the government in mandating its agents to commence and continue to regulate the social media in the country amounts to restriction and censorship which constitutes a violation of Nigeria’s obligation under the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights and Article 19 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.
SERAP was represented by Femi Falana, while the Federal Republic of Nigeria was represented by Maimuna Shiru.
However, hearing in the suit was adjourned for July 6, 2021.
The panel for the suit were Honorable Justices Gberi-be Ouattara (presiding) and Januaria T. Silva Moreira COSTA
GIK/APA