A Federal High Court in Abuja has dismissed 
an application for the extradition of Senator Buruji Kashamu, to the 
United States of America to face illicit drugs related offence trial.
The immediate past Attorney-General and 
Minister of Justice, Mr. Mohammed Adoke, had filed the application on 
May 28, 2015 upon an alleged United State government’s request asking 
the Nigerian government to submit Kashamu for extradition.
Justice Gabriel Kolawole in his ruling held 
that he lacked jurisdiction to entertain the suit in the face of the 
subsisting orders and judgments of the Federal High Court, Lagos in Suit
 Nos. FHC/L/CS/49/2010 and FHC/L/CS/508/2015 restraining the National 
Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) and the Attorney-General of the 
Federation (AGF) from entertaining any extradition request from the 
United States of America against Kashamu on the basis of the same 
allegations from Kashamu had been exonerated by two British court 
judgments.
Justice Kolawole noted that the various 
judgments and orders of the British and Nigerian courts had not been 
appealed or set aside by an appellate court.
Justice Okon Abang of the Lagos Division of 
the Federal High Court had on June 8, 2015 nullified the extradition 
proceedings which he said were initiated on in contravention of an 
earlier order of the court.
Abang’s orders nullifying steps taken by the
 NDLEA and AGF were affirmed by Justice Ibrahim Buba in a ruling on June
 23, 2015 who said subsisting orders and judgements of the court must be
 obeyed until set aside by a superior court.
Though Justice Kolawole expressed 
reservations on the Lagos judgments, which he described as “wide and 
perhaps wild,” he held that it was the exclusive duty of the Court of 
Appeal to determine whether they were valid or not.
Kashamu’s counsel, Mr. Ajibola Oluyede had 
on June 25, 2015, when the case came up for the first time, urged the 
court to strike out the extradition application in the light of the 
previous subsisting judgments.
However, Justice Kolawole, who cited several
 authorities to the effect that the court is enjoined to take judicial 
notice of developments related to a case, noted that he had sometime in 
2013 ruled in another application seeking to register the two British 
court judgments that even without registering same, the judgments were 
enough shield for Kashamu against any fresh extradition proceedings.
The judge then dismissed the suit, describing same as an abuse of court process.
While the Kashamu’s legal team comprised of 
Dr. Alex Iziyon (SAN), Mr. Ahmed Raji (SAN) and Prince Ajibola Oluyede, 
the AGF’s team was led by a Deputy Director in the Office of the 
Attorney-General of the Federation, Mr. M. I. Hassan.

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