Thursday, June 25, 2026 - Former Vice President and presidential candidate of the African Democratic Congress (ADC), Atiku Abubakar, has condemned the refusal of the Federal High Court to review bail conditions imposed on former Kaduna State Governor Mallam Nasir El-Rufai, describing the conditions as practically impossible to satisfy and warning that the development represents a dangerous pattern of weaponising legal processes against political opponents.
Atiku’s Senior Special Assistant on Public Communication,
Phrank Shaibu, stated that the situation raises troubling questions about
constitutional liberties and the administration of justice in Nigeria.
The former vice president argued that while courts possess
discretionary authority to impose bail conditions, such discretion must be
exercised judicially and judiciously, insisting that conditions that are
manifestly excessive, unreasonable, or impossible to fulfil defeat the very
purpose of bail and amount to detention through procedural means.
“The law is settled that an accused person remains innocent
until proven guilty. Bail exists to preserve that constitutional protection. It
was never designed to become a sophisticated instrument for punishment before
conviction,” Atiku said.
He questioned the rationale behind conditions that require a
defendant to produce a serving Grade Level 17 federal civil servant who must
also own verifiable property in Maitama or Asokoro, in addition to a maze of
other requirements. Atiku warned that the implications of such precedents
extend beyond El-Rufai’s case.
“This is not merely about one individual. It is about the
principles that underpin a democratic society governed by the rule of law.
Today it is El-Rufai. Tomorrow it could be any citizen whose liberty depends
not on the law but on whether he can satisfy conditions that few Nigerians can
ever meet,” he said.
“Bail conditions should secure attendance in court, not
guarantee continued incarceration,” he said.
He argued that when a citizen is told he has been granted bail but is simultaneously subjected to conditions that make release virtually impossible, such a situation constitutes a constructive denial of bail that undermines the spirit of the Constitution.
“The question of guilt or innocence is entirely for the courts to determine. What concerns every patriot is whether constitutional safeguards are being faithfully upheld. The right to liberty, the presumption of innocence, and the right to fair hearing are not privileges to be dispensed at convenience. They are constitutional guarantees.
“Nigeria’s democracy is strongest when
justice is blind to politics, immune from pressure, and accessible to all.
Anything less diminishes us as a nation,” he declared.

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