Chief James Onanefe Ibori’s winning streak in London courts continued Monday, May 22, 2017
as he won an important legal victory against the British Secretary of State for the Home Department. Thecosts the Home Department will have to pay to him, as ordered by the court, will be determined later.
Tony Eluemunor, Ibori’s Media Assistant said that the victory came when Mrs. Justice Bobbie Cheema-
Grubb DBE of Royal Courts of Justice, Strand, London, agreed with the submissions of Ibori’s counsel Mr.
Ian Macdonald QC and Mr. Ivan Krolick that though Ibori was due for release, he was still maliciously
detained on the 20th and 21st December 2016.
On that 21st December 2016 Ibori’s application for urgent consideration against the detention was
heard before a High Court Judge who ordered Ibori’s immediate release.
That day, the Judge also granted Ibori permission to file claims against the Secretary of State of British
Home Department, who was required to file detailed grounds of resistance to the claim and ordered
that a substantive hearing should be listed by 31st January 2017 unless the defendant issued directions
for the claimant’s removal by 4pm on 6th January 2017.
Ibori was eventually released in the evening of 21st December 2016, after a day and some eighteen
hours of immigration detention (albeit held in prison).
On 30th December Ibori’s solicitors wrote to the Home Department seeking her acquiescence to his
voluntary departure to Nigeria, a request that was not granted. They wrote again on 5th January 2017.
The day after receipt of this latest letter, the Home Department made an application to the Courtrequesting a further seven days in which to make a decision on Ibori’s request for voluntary departure.
On 13th January 2017 the defendant decided to allow Ibori to depart the United Kingdom voluntarily.
For the benefit of the news outfits that mis-informed their readers that Ibori was deported from Britain,
Eluemunor added this direct quotation from the Monday court judgment; “The SSHD (Secretary State
for the Home Department) agreed that Mr Ibori could leave the jurisdiction and he did so on 3rd
February 2017 under his own steam”. From this, it is crystal clear that Ibori was not deported from
Britain but returned voluntarily, Eluemunor said.
He added that what remains now is the determination of the amount of money the Home Department
has to pay Ibori as compensation to him for detaining him maliciously for over almost two days between
Ibori’s counsel and the Home Department. On this, Justice Cheema-Grubb ordered: “If costs cannot be
agreed between the parties I will make a determination on written representations (of no more than 3
sides in length) provided within 21 days of this judgment”.
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