Human rights activist approaches court to block Buhari’s $800m loan facility

GABRIEL EWEPU FROM VANGUARD

A human rights activist and Founder of One Love Foundation, OLF, Wednesday, approached a Federal High Court in Asaba, Delta State, to block President Muhammadu Buhari from accessing an $800 million loan facility from the World Bank and the International Development Association, IDA.

The suit is coming on the heels of the Federal Government August 2022 signing of a financing agreement with the World Bank’s subsidiary, the International Development Association, IDA,, which the Minister of Finance, Zainab Ahmed, explained that the $800 million is the first tranche of palliatives to be disbursed through cash transfers to about 50 million Nigerians who are most vulnerable.

The Applicants; 1. The Registered Trustees Of One Love Family Caring [AKA One Love Foundation] 2. Chief Patrick Osagie Eholor, while the respondents are; The World Bank Group; 2. The International Development Association; 3. The President Of The Federal Republic Of Nigeria; 4. The Attorney General of The Federation; 5. The Federal Ministry of Finance & Economic Development; 6. Debt Management Office of Nigeria

One Love Foundation and Dr Patrick Osagie Eholor in the suit are requesting the Court on the following reliefs:

The Applicants pray to this Honourable Court for the following Reliefs:

  1. A DECLARATION that on the fair and true construction of the extant provisions of Article 22 of the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights (Ratification and Enforcement) Act which provides that: “All peoples shall have the right to their economic, social and cultural development with due regard to their freedom and identity and in the equal enjoyment of the common heritage of mankind” – the terms and conditions of the Financing Agreement (worth $800 million dollars and signed on or about the 16th of August, 2022 between the 1st and 2nd Respondents of the one part and the 3rd to 6th Respondents of the other part) will deprive the Applicants of their aforesaid Fundamental Right – to the extent that the loan for financing of palliatives to be disbursed through cash transfers to about 50 million Nigerians by the 2nd Respondent; a specific project which is not of high developmental priority in the light of the needs of the area or areas concerned as prescribed in Article V, Section 1(b) of the Articles of Agreement of the International Development Association.
  2. A DECLARATION that on the fair and true construction of the extant provisions of Section 34(1)(b) of the 1999 Constitution which provides that: “Every individual is entitled to respect for the dignity of his person, and accordingly no person shall be held in slavery or servitude” – the terms and conditions of the Financing Agreement (worth $800 million dollars and signed on or about the 16th of August, 2022 between the 1st and 2nd Respondents of the one part and the 3rd to 6th Respondents of the other part) will deprive the Applicants of their aforesaid Fundamental Right – to the extent that the loan for financing of palliatives to be disbursed through cash transfers to about 50 million Nigerians by the 2nd Respondent…

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