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#EndSARS: Lagos judicial panel illegal and a waste of time, says Keyamo

Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN) and Minister of State for Labour and Employment, Festus Keyamo has reacted after the Lagos State judicial panel report confirmed that there was massacre by soldiers at the Lekki Tollgate on October 20, 2020.

Armed soldiers stormed the Lekki Tollgate where thousands of young Nigerians had gathered to protest police brutality in the country, and shot at peaceful #EndSARS protesters.

A panel of inquiry was set up by the Lagos State governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu, and after one year, their report, indicting the army, was released and made public.

Speaking on Sunday during an interview on Channels Television, Keyamo said the Lagos state government, which set up the judicial panel, lacks the power to probe the conduct of police and military officers.

“I will not answer this question as a sitting minister, I will answer this question as a senior advocate of Nigeria — a member of the inner bar — and so I’m entitled to my opinion. This is not the federal government opinion,” he said.

“For me, that panel was an illegal panel. It is totally illegal. All lawyers who are listening to me should go back and read to the Tribunal of Inquiry Act of Lagos state.

“It says that the governor will have the power to inquire into the conduct of any person and chieftaincy matters and any matter that would promote the good of the public.

“However, any person there was defined in section 21 to mean public officers of the state. It is defined to mean somebody within the public service of the Lagos state or the local government as the case may be.

“However, if you look at section 21 again of the tribunal of inquiry law, it says that it has to be within the legislative competence of Lagos state.

“In other words, it is only a person over which whom the Lagos state has a control that they can inquire into their conduct. If you don’t have control over me, you can’t inquire into my conduct.

“The policemen, the armed forces, the military are not officers of Lagos state. They are officers of the federal government.

“By virtue of the constitution, it is only the federal government that can control the conduct of policemen and the military. Lagos state cannot be in control, cannot legislate too regarding police matters and military matters.

“To inquire into the conduct of policemen and military, no state government can’t do that.”

Asked if the time spent on the judicial panels across the country was an exercise in futility, he responded in the affirmative.

In October 2020, the National Economic Council (NEC), under the leadership of Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo, established judicial panels in states, including the federal capital territory (FCT), to investigate cases of police brutality.

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