Thursday, 3 April 2014

Rivers Govt Rejects NJC’s Suspension of Agumagu

As the crisis rocking the Rivers State judiciary worsens, the state government has said it rejects the suspension of the state Chief Judge, Justice Peter Agumagu, by the National Judicial Council (NJC).
It described the suspension as illegal and unconstitutional, insisting that Agumagu remains the substantive Chief Judge of the state.
The NJC had last week suspended Agumagu as a judicial officer and gave him four days to give reason why he should not be removed.
Addressing journalists in Government House, Port Harcourt  yesterday on the position of the state government, the state Attorney General and Commissioner for Justice, Mr. Worgu Boms, accused the NJC of constituting itself into a court.
According to Boms, “The position of NJC which is very unfortunate, gives equally unfortunate and misleading impression to public that the appointment of the Justice Agumagu as Chief Judge of Rivers State, occurred in nibubus (ie from the skies) and with no contribution of the NJC to it or that there is no history behind it.  NJC wants the world to believe that Justice Agumagu just woke up, walked to the State House and got appointed and sworn in as the Chief Judge. This impression is misleading, self-serving and diversionary.
“It is important to state from the outset that the NJC has always preferred the doctrine of the Most Senior Judge of the High Court, in the appointment of the Chief Judge of the State and in particular, the Justice D.W. Okocha, as its candidate for the position. In its single-minded pursuit of the actualisation of this doctrine and preference, it enunciated further the doctrine that only a judge of the state High Court is qualified for consideration for the office and that the Justice Agumagu, then, President of the state Customary Court of Appeal, could not be allowed to cross over to become the state Chief Judge.”
Explaining the issues involved in the impasse, Boms said: “For the records, Justice Agumagu is senior at the Bar and on the Bench to Justice Okocha. Following the advice from the state Judicial Service Commission  (JSC) to the NJC listing Justice Agumagu as N0 1 and Justice Okocha N0 2 as persons for possible consideration for recommendation for the appointment, to the substantive position of Chief Judge, the NJC wrote to His Excellency, the governor of the state, that of the two candidates, recommended to it by the state JSC that even though Justice Agumagu is first on the list, he was being rejected because His Lordship was not the most senior judge of the High Court and could not cross over from the Customary Court of Appeal to become the Chief Judge.
“Only Justice D.W. Okocha could thus be qualified for appointment based on the NJC’s twin doctrine of seniority and non-crossing over. Needless to say, these twin qualifications of most senior judge and non-crossing over are creations, not of the constitution that prescribes only 10 years’ post call as qualification for the office of the Chief Judge, but of the NJC, which sadly, has now transmogrified from being a recommending body to a law making body.”
He noted that the issues involved in filling the vacancy of the chief judge were not peculiar to the State as some states had passed or were passing through the same process.
The commissioner however, wondered why the NJC did not write to judges in those states “to intimidate them on the matter and to fetter their conscience."
“If the appointment of Chief Judge of the state were to begin and end with the NJC, then perhaps, there would be no problems with its preferred candidate. Unfortunately, the constitution provides that four institutions – the state JSC, the NJC, the governor and the state House of Assembly - must all participate for a candidate to become the Chief Judge. In the NJC’s view, however, its contribution to the process must be the only valid and final one, otherwise, a Judge must lose his appointment as not even a court pronouncement on the matter will it respect. This is the heart of the seemingly intractable succession crises to the office of the Chief Judge, not only in Rivers State, but also in other states where the issue is yet to be resolved.”

Boms insisted that there was no law that vests the NJC with the power to declare acts unconstitutional and that what the council did to Agumagu was a usurpation of judicial powers and functions.
“The NJC or indeed, any council for that matter, has no powers under any law to declare the action of the state governor, in this case, the action of the governor of Rivers State in the appointment of the chief judge of the state, unconstitutional. Only a court vested with the requisite jurisdiction can validly do so and the NJC, no matter how eminent its members are, is not a court of any cadre in Nigeria. It is like any of the several commissions established under the same Section of the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria,” Boms stated.
He insisted: “The NJC does not have the power to appoint or dismiss a judge. It cannot even suspend a judge under the colour of discipline. It can only recommend such to either the governor in the case of state judges, or to the president, in the case of federal judges.
“This is the law and the NJC has also interpreted its disciplinary action of suspension along the line of recommendation to the appropriate authorities when, for example, it found it necessary to discipline the then President of the Court of Appeal, it was by way of recommendation to the president who approved the recommendation and thus that justice was suspended. When, subsequently it saw the need to recall the suspended justice, it did not do so directly, it similarly recommended to the President to effect the recall.
“There are other examples including the recommendation for the he said the NJC was setting a dangerous precedent as “it means that any judge of any court can, without being heard, for any reason, just stop functioning as a Judge in the name of suspension by the NJC.”
Boms stated that the Rivers State Government wrote NJC to inform the council that its twin doctrines for rejecting Agumagu were unknown to the law in the appointment of chief judge under the Constitution.  He said the state also told the NJC of its rejection of the recommendation of Okocha.

He disclosed that when NJC stuck to its gun on the recommendation of Okocha, the Rivers State Government and the state Judicial Commission had to file a suit before the Federal High Court sitting in Port Harcourt. The NJC (1st defendant) entered appearance and Justice Okocha applied to join and was joined as the 2nd defendant.
He recalled that in its ruling of March 19, the Federal High Court agreed with the state government and the state Judicial Commission and ruled in their favour.

He said the court ruled in favour of the state government and the state Judicial Service Commission and said Agumagu remained the candidate to be recommended to the state governor for appointment as chief judge.
He said based on the judgment, the NJC had no further role to play in the matter in the face of the restraining order and the holding that Agumagu is the most qualified candidate and who ought to be recommended by the NJC.

“Based on this premise, Governor Rotimi Amaechi of Rivers State, appointed Agumagu and the state House of Assembly screened him and he was successfully sworn in as the seventh Chief Judge of the state,” he said.

According to Boms, “By wielding the big stick against an innocent judge and purporting to use administrative measures to truncate the outcome and fruit of a judicial process to which it submitted and participated actively in and without appealing thereafter, the NJC is using its power inappropriately and is unwittingly contributing, in an eloquent form, to the ridiculing of the court system which it should be promoting and respecting.”

“The Rivers State Government rejects the NJC’s unconstitutional and contemptuous stance on this matter and states categorically that only a court of competent jurisdiction can declare its actions and activities unconstitutional and certainly not a council, a committee, a commission etc, howsoever described when such bodies, no matter their nomenclature and the eminence of their membership, are subject to the law of the land and the court.”

FG Sued over Legality of Same Sex Prohibition Act

... los gay mas influyentes de la republica dominicana pero con el
Mr. Teriah Joseph Ebah  has dragged the federal government before a Federal High Court in Abuja challenging the legality of the Same Sex Marriage (Prohibition) Act, 2013.
In a suit filed on his behalf by Mr. Mike Enahoro Ebah, the plaintiff is asking the court to stop the federal government from implementing the  Act.
Justice Abdul Kafarati has fixed April 28 for hearing of the suit.
The plaintiff is asking  the court for a declaration that the provisions of the Same Sex Marriage (Prohibition) Act, 2013 particularly sections 1(1) (a) & (b), (2), 2(1) &(2) and 3 contravene the fundamental rights of citizens  as enshrined  in Section 42 (1)(a) & (b) of the 1999 Constitution and Articles 2,3 (1) and (2), 19 and 29 of the African Charter on Human and Peoples' Right (Ratification and Enforcement) Act, Cap A9, Laws of the Federation of Nigeria, 2004, and is accordingly unconstitutional, null and void.
The plaintiff also wants the court to declare that the provisions of the Act violate  Sections 37 and 40  of the Constitution.
He also wants a declaration that the Act violates Section 37 and 38 of the Constitution and hence it is null and void.
He therefore seeks an order of perpetual injunction restraining the federal government from enforcing the provisions of Same Sex Marriage (Prohibition) Act, 2013 particularly sections 1,2,3,4 and 5 of the said Act.
The plaintiff had asked the court to determine whether the provisions of the Act do not violate citizens rights as provided for by the Constitution.
He further asked the court to determine whether the Act is not impediment and constituting disabilities to citizens fundamental human right.
Ebah also wants the court to determine whether the Act is not inconsistent with citizens fundamental human rights as protected by the constitution.
Also, the plaintiff asked the court to determine whether the Act is not inconsistent with the Constitution and the African Charter on Human and Peoples Rights.

B’Haram: Witness declines as court rejects ‘secret’ trial

Boko Haram Say They Will Begin To Kidnap Women & Children
A prosecution witness on Thursday refused to testify against suspected members of the Boko Haram sect after an Abuja Federal High Court rejected an application brought by the Federal Government to restrict members of the public from the courtroom during the trial.
The witness was slated to testify in the trial of a university don, Dr. Nazeef Yunus, and other alleged members of a Boko Haram cell in Kogi State – Alhaji Salami Abdullahi and Umar Musa.
Witnesses involved in recent prosecutions of members of the terrorist sect testify with masks, and their identities are not disclosed, in line with a Federal Government initiated witness-protection programme.
Also, members of the public, apart from accredited journalists, are barred from courtrooms during proceedings in terrorism trials.
However, following the arraignment of the suspected members of the Kogi Boko Haram sect, their lawyers opposed an application in which the Federal Government sought to have their trial conducted in ‘secret’.
Shortly before the witness was called to testify, the presiding judge, Justice Gabriel Kolawole delivered a ruling in which he upheld the argument of the defence lawyers and ordered that “the trial of the accused persons should be conducted publicly,” although he also held that the “identities and names of the witnesses to be called by the prosecution shall be kept secret.”
Justice Kolawole noted that by the ruling, the court was protecting the interest of the state, the witnesses and the accused persons.
“I am mindful to shield the identity of the witnesses in a sensitive case like this which borders on alleged terrorism.
“The general public can only hear the voices of the witnesses but will not see their faces,” he said.
In order to shield the witness, a cubicle, which was intended to shield him from people in the courtroom while he gave evidence, was mounted at the witness stand.
But the witness, who was afraid that the device would not effectively shield him from members of the public in the courtroom, requested to come out with a mask, a move which was opposed by the lawyers of the suspected Boko Haram members, who argued that the ruling given by the court did not state that witnesses should be masked.
As a result of the development, the witness refused to testify.
Prosecution counsel, Mrs. C. I. Nebo, informed the court that the witness, who was ready to testify earlier, has refused to appear without a mask.
The judge thereafter advised the prosecutor to either appeal against the ruling, or apply for its alteration to enable the court address the issue of masks for the witnesses.
The case was subsequently adjourned to May 6.
It would be recalled that the Federal Government had in an application brought pursuant to sections 36 (4) (a) and (b) of the 1999 Constitution, and section 203 of the Criminal Procedure Act and sections 33 and 34 of Terrorism Prevention (Amendment) Act, 2013, asked the court to order that persons other than immediate family members and legal representatives of the accused persons, with the exception of accredited members of the press, should be barred from witnessing the trial.
The Federal Government in the application also asked the court to order that the real names, addresses, and identity of prosecution witnesses should not be disclosed during the trial to forestall possible reprisal attacks on them by the supporters and loyalists of the accused persons.
But in opposing the bid for a ‘secret’ trial, the lawyers of the alleged Boko Haram members noted that the Federal Government, in the application, implied that the accused persons’ supporters and loyalists are members of the Boko Haram sect.
Family members, friends and associates of the accused persons always turn out in large numbers whenever the suspects appear in court, and the defence lawyer frowned at the prosecution’s suggestion that those who come to court to show solidarity with the accused persons are terrorists.
The lecturer, Yunus, who was alleged to be the spiritual leader and coordinator of the Boko Haram sect in Kogi State, was arrested along with the others in October 2013.
The Department of State Services had accused the suspects of planning to carry out an attack in parts of Kogi State before they were arrested at a mosque in Zuba, a town near Abuja, while on their way to Zambisa in Maiduguri, Borno State, for training. 
The security agency said the suspects planned to install Sharia in Kogi State.  
The accused persons have denied the charge.

Court orders FG, police to pay Sanusi N50m

Mallam Lamido Sanusi
A Federal High Court, Lagos has ordered the Federal Government, the State Security Service and the police to immediately release the passport unlawfully seized from the suspended Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria.
The court, in a judgment delivered on Thursday, ordered the respondents, including the police, to pay N50m to Sanusi as exemplary damages for the unlawful detention and seizure of his passport.
Justice Ibrahim Buba delivered the judgment in the fundamental enforcement suit instituted by Sanusi following his arrest, detention, and seizure of his passports on February 20.
The judge, who earlier in his judgment, dismissed the respondents’ preliminary objection to the suit, held that the respondents, acting through the SSS “do not have power to forcefully withdraw and seize the applicant’s passport for any reason.”
He ordered the respondents to issue a public apology to the applicant for his “unlawful arrest, harassment, intimidation, withdrawal and seizure of his passport”.
Officers of the SSS had on February 20 arrested Sanusi and seized his passport at the Murtala Mohammed International Airport.
The police, through its counsel, Mr. David Abuo, had said they had no case against Sanusi and was not aware of any allegations against him.
Sanusi, who was on his way back from Niger Republic where he had attended a meeting of central bank governors of ECOWAS states, was suspended as CBN governor shortly before his passport was seized.
The court held that his detention “without any allegation of commission of crime or charge” amounted to restriction of his personal liberty and unlawful violation of his rights to personal liberty.
The court dismissed the allegation of terrorism financing levelled against Sanusi, describing it as an afterthought.
It agreed with Sanusi’s counsel, Mr. Kola Awodein (SAN), that the respondents gave conflicting reasons for the arrest of the applicant and for the seizure of his passport.
“The first (the Attorney-General of the Federation) and the third (the SSS) are not on the same page,” the court held.
It added, “The court observes that surely, there is no doubt that either there is no synergy between the respondents or the respondents are only singing discordant tunes as afterthought,” the judge held.
The court held that the respondents failed to put any material before the court to back the allegation.
It also held that the respondents had “nothing to offer” against Sanusi’s denial of financing terror

Drug dealer bags 35-year jail term

NDLEA-Logo.jpg
The Kaduna State Command of National Drug Law Enforcement Agency on Thursday said it had secured the conviction of a drug dealer for a 35-year jail term.
The command, which said a Federal High Court in Kaduna gave the verdict also said 21 others, including a 68-year-old drug dealer were also convicted in March this year.
The Head of the Kaduna State command of the agency, Mr. Mohammed Jibrin, told the News Agency of Nigeria in Kaduna that Ojebou, had eluded arrest for many years.
“We got a landmark judgment on one notorious drug dealer, Davidson Ojebou, who was caught with 640kg of cannabis sativa. He was jailed for 35 years by the Federal High Court, Kaduna.
“It is a landmark judgment because the highest we expect you can get for life imprisonment is 25 years. But because of the antecedent of the suspect, he was given 35 years imprisonment.’’
Similarly, Jibrin said another notorious drug dealer in Samaru Zaria, Muntari Hassan, 68, was sentenced to 10 years imprisonment.
He said Hassan had been caught several times and had served jail terms three times before his recent arrest and conviction.
“A notorious drug dealer in Zaria, Muntari Hassan, 68 years old, who has been to jail three times in the past for drug trafficking was re-arrested by us, for still dealing in cannabis in spite of the jail terms he had served in the past.
“As such we prosecuted him again and the judges took note of his unrepentant nature and sentenced him to 10 years imprisonment.’’
He also said that the agency had successfully prosecuted 20 other cases in Kaduna State.
He told NAN that the state government had inaugurated a joint task force, comprising all heads of security agencies under his chairmanship to complement the role of the NDLEA in the fight against drug abuse.
“The task force is to carry out operations to reduce the menace of hard drug abuse and trafficking in the state.
“As such it will carry out operations with the aim of arresting drug dealers, dismantling drug joints and seizing illicit drugs that are being rampantly abused and trafficked in the state. The task force was set up to complement the efforts of NDLEA.’’
According to him, no fewer than 50 people have been arrested in some black spots in the state while over 200 kg of cannabis and 73 kg of psychotropic substances were seized in March.
Jibrin further said that the agency, through the combined efforts of all security agencies, had arrested seven major cocaine dealers within the Kaduna metropolis.
He said the cocaine dealers, who were armed, were overpowered by the joint task force.
The NDLEA chief reiterated the commitment of the agency to combat the menace of drug addicts and dealers as part of the efforts to reduce crime rate in the state.

Akingbola: Court to decide on jurisdiction May 2

Akingbola: Court to decide on jurisdiction May 2
justice Lateef Lawal-Akapo of a Lagos High Court sitting in Ikeja has fixed May 2 to rule on the application filed by the former Managing Director of the defunct Intercontinental Bank Plc, Dr. Erastus Akingbola, challenging the jurisdiction of the court to hear the N47.1billion theft charge preferred against him.
Akingbola, through his counsel, Chief Wole Olanipekun (SAN), in two preliminary notices of objection, challenged the jurisdiction of the Lagos High Court to entertain the theft charge brought against him by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC).
The anti-graft establishment charged the former bank chief and his associate, Bayo Dada, with allegedly stealing money belonging to the bank.
Dada also filed a similar application before the court.
At the resumed hearing yesterday, Olanipekun, moving the application, argued that the subject matter of the alleged offences related to banking operations and operations of capital issues, which fell under the exclusive jurisdiction of the Federal High Court.
He based his submission on a judgment delivered by the Lagos Division of the Court of Appeal, on November 21 last year.
The appellate court in the judgment struck out a theft charge preferred against a former Managing Director of the defunct Finbank Plc, Mr. Okey Nwosu and others.
The Court of Appeal held in Nwosu’s case that the Lagos High Court lacked jurisdiction to entertain the charge because it emanated from capital market transactions.
It also held that a case associated with the capital market should be handled by a Federal High Court.
Olanipekun urged the court to be guided by the Court of Appeal’s decision in Nwosu matter and grant the application.
He submitted that the issue of jurisdiction is fundamental.
Olanipekun also cited another High Court of Lagos judge, Justice Adeniyi Onigbanjo, whose court adjourned another matter involving Atuche on the same grounds indefinitely.
He said the state High Court should not be made mere undertakers of matters, which the Federal High Courts have exclusive jurisdiction over.
Counsel to EFCC, Chief Godwin Obla (SAN), said contrary to the submissions of Olanipekun, the constitution did not vex exclusive jurisdiction on the Federal High Court on criminal matters.
He said Federal High Court and state High Court could hear criminal matters.
On Nwosu’s case cited by Olanipekun, the EFCC lawyer argued that the Court of Appeal based its judgment on a decision, which had been upturned by the Supreme Court.
He urged the court not to follow a decision, which had been overtaken by events and rendered obsolete, having been upturned by a superior court.
Obla enjoined the court to dismiss the applications of the defendants.
Justice Lawal-Akapo adjourned the matter till May 2 for ruling.

Anambra Poll Tribunal rejects video evidence

Anambra Poll Tribunal rejects video evidence
The Anambra State Election Petition Tribunal sitting in Awka yesterday rejected the video evidence presented by African Independent Television (AIT) during the hearing of the petition filed by Senator Chris Ngige against INEC, Governor Willie Obiano and the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA).
 The AIT was summoned by the Tribunal via a subpoena dated March 6 to give evidence in the case.
But following the objection by Gboyega Awomolo (SAN) representing INEC, that the document could not be admitted in evidence because it had not satisfied Section 84 of the Evidence Act which deals with tendering of electronic evidence, it was not admitted by the Tribunal.
Mr Rotimi Akeredolu (SAN) for Ngige noted that the letter of authority from AIT together with the witness deposition contained in his evidence in chief had satisfied the provision of Section 84,  of the Evidence Act on materials produced with the aid of computers and yet has not contravened Section 258, Subsection 1A of the 2011 Evidence Act.
The Tribunal ruled to reject the video evidence and the AIT reporter, Mr. Vin Martin Ilo, registered as PW19 was discharged.
Another witness Bona Oraekwe identified 939 ‘Forms EC 17’ obtained from INEC  as having been used in the conduct of the elections. 86 Forms EC25A and 90 Forms EC25B,which were promptly admitted. Form EC 17 is the form documenting the oath taken by all INEC staff and adhoc staff involved in the elections, provided by law to be sworn to before engaging in any role in the elections. Form EC25A is the form documenting the receipt of electoral material in the state and local government areas, while ‘Forms EC 25B’ documents the receipt of materials by INEC staff in by INEC Presiding Officers in the Polling Units.
Ngige and his party, the All Progressives Congress (APC) are contending in the petition that most of the forms were either written and sworn to on a date after the elections or back-dated, while others contain irregularities. The sitting continues today.
The Enugu Division of the Court of Appeal will today hear arguments in an interlocutory appeal brought before it by Senator Chris Ngige and the All Progressive Congress (APC), asking the appellate court to hold that the Anambra State Election petitions Tribunal sitting in Awka erred in law by failing to uphold the provision of Paragraph 12 Sub Paragraph 5 of the First Schedule of the Electoral Act in its ruling of February 18, 2014.
This is one of the three appeals to be argued today.
The others are seeking an order of the Appeal Court to restore the paragraphs of the petitioners election petition which were struck out by the Tribunal on February 28 as well as  the striking out, by the Tribunal, of some paragraphs of the petitioners reply to the Respondents answer on 5th March 2014.
The Election Tribunal had on February 19 refused in part, an application filed by Ngige and APC requesting that all preliminary objections in the petition should be documented and reserved till the final address. Rather the Tribunal accepted the application with respect to applications seeking to strike out the entire petition for lack of competence, but refused it for application seeking to strike out some paragraphs.
As at the ruling of February 19, there was no application seeking to strike out the entire petition of Ngige and APC,but there were applications  seeking to strike out some paragraphs.
Ngige is querying what he and APC interpreted as discrimination by the Tribunal between full striking out and partial striking out.
The appellants have requested the court to save and restore the paragraphs and order that hearing should be conducted by an impartial panel.
The paragraphs struck out on February 28 and March 5 border on Chief Wille Obiano’s double registration allegations against a notary public who was appointed by INEC to administer oath of neutrality on ad-hoc staff long after the elections, allegations against INEC which pertain to the voter register given on October 16 2013 and November 13, 2014, which the successful application at the Tribunal claimed were pre-election matters.

N20m fraud: Court dismisses ex-banker’s no-case submission


An Ikeja High Court on Thursday dismissed a no-case submission filed by a former banker, Olutola Ojo, charged with N20 million fraud.
Ruling on the application filed by Ojo’s counsel, Mr N.O. Olagunju, Justice Adeniyi Onigbanjo held that the defendant had a case to answer.
He said the exhibits tendered by the prosecution and the testimonies of its six witnesses had adduced sufficient evidence to warrant the defendant to open his defence.
The judge consequently ordered Ojo to open the defence of his case on June 23.
The News Agency of Nigeria reports that Ojo was charged alongside his company — Forox Standard Concepts, by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC).
He was facing a seven-count charge bordering on obtaining money by false pretences, issuance of a dishonoured cheque, forgery and uttering.
The EFCC’s counsel, Mr Ben Ubi, alleged that Ojo had committed the offences between January and June 2009, while he was a staff of the defunct Oceanic Bank Plc.
Ubi said he had obtained N20 million from one of the bank’s customers, Chief Samuel Anibata.
He said the money was obtained by the defendant under the pretext of helping Anibata to purchase Low Pour Fuel Oil for supply to Dangote Cement Factory in Obajana, Kogi State.
Ojo was also accused of forging various documents which he used to facilitate the fraud.
According to Ubi, the defendant also issued several banks’ cheques in various sums in favour of Anibata which were dishonoured by the banks due to insufficient funds in his account.
Ubi said the offences contravened sections 467 and 468 of the Criminal Code Laws of Lagos State, 2003.
He said it also contravened section 2(b) of the Advance Fee Fraud and Other Related Offences Act 2006 and section 1 (1) of the Dishonoured Cheques (Offences) Act.

I had sex with 10 men daily, teenager tells court I had sex with 10 men daily, teenager tells court


A 19-year-old girl (names withheld) Thursday narrated before a Federal High Court in Lagos how she was lured into prostitution in Burkina Faso.
She was working as a sales girl in Victoria Island before two middle-aged men told her they could help her find a better job abroad.
The men, Christian Awanebi and Ariwayo Olowede, who pleaded not guilty, allegedly took her to Burkina Faso sometime in 2011.
Led in evidence by Mrs Anthonia Mgbemeje of the National Agency for Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons (NAPTIP), the girl said the men promised to help her get a job in a super store as a sales girl.
When she got to Burkina Faso, she was allegedly made to have sex with men so she could repay N200, 000, the men claimed to have spent on her travel expenses.
According to her, she had sex with over 10 men daily, charging an equivalent of N5,000 per person.
She said the men allegedly made her take a blood covenant, swearing not to tell anyone about her ordeal.
Mgbemeje said the accused persons committed the alleged offence sometime in November 2012 at Ilasan estate, Lekki, Lagos.
She said that the offence contravened section 15 (a) of NAPTIP Act 2003.
The accused persons used were arraigned March 27, last year.
Their lawyer, Mr Mac Johnson asked the court to adjourn the case for cross-examination of the girl.
Justice Saliu Saidu adjourned till April 10 for continuation of trial.