However, the court in
delivering it’s ruling on the matter, dismissed the argument of the
government on the basis that the agreement entered into by parties,
secretly, does not negate the requirement for carefulness on the part of
government.
A three-member panel led by Nwoke Chijioke held that the facts before
the court clearly indicated that the death of the deceased was linked to
acts of negligence on the part of the defendants.
“There is a colossal link between the death of the deceased and the
negligence on the part of the defendant. The defendant merely made a
general denial of the act and depended on the consent of the applicant
given to the NDA,” said Mr Chijioke.
The court said documents had duly established the fact that the late
cadet was forced to swim, despite the defendant’s knowledge that he
lacked the ability to do so.
The case against the
federal government and the NDA was instituted by father of the deceased
cadet, who approached the court to demand the invocation of relevant
sections of the African Charter on Human and Peoples Rights on the
grounds of alleged violation of his child’s right to life.
But counsel to the federal government had contended that the family of
the deceased had signed a prior agreement consenting to possible
negative effects of the exercise, wherein they (Mr Kwasu’s family)
agreed to understand any hazards that the program could result in.
Elshadai was a 19-year
old cadet at the Nigerian Defence Academy (NDA), who drowned during the
watermanship training at the academy, on April 30, 2015.
Premium Times reports that the court ordered the government to pay $75,
000 to the family of the deceased for alleged violation of the deceased
right to life.
It also mandated the government to investigate the circumstances that
led to the death of the cadet and take punitive actions against those
responsible.
- The ECOWAS Court of
Justice mandates the federal government to investigate the circumstances
that led to the death of NDA cadet, Elshadai Kwasu
- A three-member panel led by Nwoke Chijioke, rules that the death of
the deceased was linked to acts of negligence on the part of the
defendants
- The court says the late cadet was forced to swim, despite the
defendant’s knowledge that he lacked the ability to do so
The federal government has been ordered by the ECOWAS Court of Justice
to compensate Wing Commander Danladi Angulu Kwasu for the death of his
son, Elshadai Kwasu.
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