Assault: ECOWAS court orders FG to Pay N10m Damages to Journalist 

The Court of Justice of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) has ordered the Federal Government to pay N10 million in general damages over the physical assault, unlawful arrest, and seizure of property belonging to a journalist, Mr. Jide Oyekunle.

In the landmark decision, the court held that the actions of the Nigerian Police Force (NPF) in detaining the journalist and seizing his mobile phone were excessive, unjustified, and in violation of international law.

The regional court found FG liable for violating the applicant’s rights to freedom of expression, personal liberty, dignity, and to own property, protected under the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights.

According to the court, the actions of the security operatives suppressed Oyekunle’s live coverage, thereby breaching his right to freedom of expression under Article 9 of the African Charter.

It further ruled that his assault and detention violated his rights to personal liberty, human dignity, and freedom from degrading treatment under Articles 6 and 5, while the temporary seizure of his phone violated his right to property under Article 14.

It dismissed as lacking in merit an objection the FG filed to challenge the competence of the suit.

The ECOWAS Court maintained that Nigeria’s justification for manhandling the journalist failed the test of necessity under international law, making the conduct of the security forces excessive and unlawful.

The judgment followed a suit marked ECW/CCJ/APP/29/25, which Avocats Sans Frontières France (Lawyers Without Borders France) filed on behalf of the assaulted journalist.

The group filed the suit on June 22, 2026, under its eRIGHTS project supported by the European Union, which focuses on defending human rights in the digital space.

Oyekunle, who is a staff member of the Daily Independent Newspaper and currently the secretary of the Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ), Federal Capital Territory chapter, was physically assaulted and unlawfully detained while covering a protest.

His camera was damaged, and his mobile phone was seized by armed police officers on the orders of a former Commissioner of Police in the FCT, Benneth Igweh.

Oyekunle had gone to the Eagle Square in Abuja on August 1, 2024, to cover the #EndBadGovernanceInNigeria protests when he was badly manhandled by a police officer.

Source: Vanguard online