News
ECOWAS Court Slams N10m Damages on Nigerian Govt Over Assault of Journalist, Oyekunle
The ECOWAS Community Court of Justice has awarded N10 million in general damages against the Federal Republic of Nigeria over the physical assault, unlawful arrest, and seizure of property belonging to Jide Oyekunle, a journalist with Independent Newspaper.
The landmark ruling in Suit No. ECW/CCJ/APP/29/25 was secured by Avocats Sans Frontières France (Lawyers Without Borders France) on June 22, 2026, under its eRIGHTS project, supported by the European Union, which focuses on defending human rights in the digital space.
Oyekunle, the secretary of the Nigeria Union of Journalists, NUJ, Federal Capital Territory, was physically assaulted and unlawfully detained. His camera was damaged, and his mobile phone was seized by armed police officers on the order of the former FCT Commissioner of Police, Benneth Igweh, at Eagle Square, Abuja, on August 1, 2024, while he was covering the #EndBadGovernanceInNigeria protests.
The Court agreed with Counsel to the applicant, Collins I. Maidoh-Anene, Esq., that the Nigerian police’s detention of the journalist and seizure of his mobile phone were excessive, unjustified, and in violation of international law.
The ECOWAS Court subsequently found the Federal Republic of Nigeria liable for violating the applicant’s rights to freedom of expression, personal liberty, dignity, and property under the African Charter.
The Court therefore ordered the Nigerian government to pay Mr Oyekunle the sum of N10 million in general damages.
The court found that Nigeria’s actions suppressed his live coverage, thereby breaching his right to freedom of expression under Article 9 of the African Charter.
It also ruled that the assault and detention violated his rights to personal liberty, human dignity, and freedom from degrading treatment under Articles 6 and 5, while the temporary seizure of his phone violated his right to property under Article 14.
The Court further held that Nigeria’s justification failed the test of necessity under international law, making the conduct of the security forces excessive and unlawful.
In a statement signed by the country director of Avocats Sans Frontières France, Angela Uwandu Uzoma-Iwuchukwu, on Tuesday, said the judgment sends a clear message that a journalist’s digital tools are extensions of the modern press and newsroom and that their arbitrary confiscation by security forces constitutes a direct assault on the public’s right to know.
According to Angela, “The court’s pronouncement adds to the growing jurisprudence from the regional court protecting journalists and human rights defenders who document protests and public interest events.
“ASF France will continue to monitor compliance with the judgment and provide legal aid to journalists facing similar violations.
“For Avocats Sans Frontières France and the eRIGHTS project partners, this ruling strengthens legal protections for journalism in the digital age. It shields reporters from tech-based censorship and intimidation, puts security agencies on notice that targeting media practitioners during protests will attract accountability, and reaffirms the ECOWAS Court as a vital shield for civic space in the region.”
Jide Oyekunle, while reacting to the landmark judgment, described it as a significant affirmation that journalists have the right to carry out their constitutional duties without intimidation, harassment, or attack.
He stated that democracy cannot thrive where journalists are attacked for documenting events or where citizens are punished for exercising their lawful rights.
He said, “The decision of the ECOWAS Court is not only about me; it is about every journalist, media worker, and Nigerian citizen who believes in the right to freedom of expression, access to information, and peaceful civic participation.
“This judgment sends a clear message that security agencies and government institutions must be held accountable when they violate fundamental rights.
“Because if democracy is all about good governance, accountability, and transparency, then press freedom should not be curtailed, denied, or restricted.”
Oyekunle appreciated everyone who stood by him throughout the journey, including the Nigeria Union of Journalists FCT Council, Avocats Sans Frontières France, colleagues and rights advocates, and all Nigerians who continue to defend press freedom and democratic values.
Here’s the tightened rewrite + print headline options with letter counts:
Rewritten paragraphs
*Para 1*
The ECOWAS Community Court of Justice has ordered Nigeria to pay N10 million damages to journalist Jide Oyekunle for unlawful arrest, assault and seizure of his property during the #EndBadGovernanceInNigeria protests. The ruling in Suit No. ECW/CCJ/APP/29/25 was delivered June 22, 2026 by Avocats Sans Frontières France under its EU-backed eRIGHTS project.
*Para 2*
Oyekunle, NUJ FCT Secretary, was beaten and detained by armed police at Eagle Square, Abuja on Aug 1, 2024 on orders of former FCT CP Benneth Igweh. His camera was damaged and mobile phone seized while covering the protests. The court ruled the detention and phone seizure excessive, unjustified and in breach of international law.
*Para 3*
The court held Nigeria liable for violating Oyekunle’s rights to freedom of expression, personal liberty, dignity and property under the African Charter. It said the assault and detention breached Articles 5 and 6, while the phone seizure violated Article 14, and Nigeria’s justification failed the test of necessity.
*Para 4*
ASF France said the judgment affirms that journalists’ digital tools are “extensions of the modern press” and their confiscation attacks the public’s right to know. Oyekunle described it as affirmation that journalists can work without intimidation, adding that democracy cannot thrive where reporters are attacked for documenting events.
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Here’s the tightened rewrite + print headline options with letter counts:
Rewritten paragraph
*Para 1*
The ECOWAS Community Court of Justice has slammed N10 million damages on the Nigerian government over the assault, unlawful arrest and seizure of property belonging to journalist Jide Oyekunle. The ruling in Suit No. ECW/CCJ/APP/29/25 was delivered June 22, 2026, after police beat and detained Oyekunle and damaged his camera at Eagle Square, Abuja during the #EndBadGovernanceInNigeria protests on Aug 1, 2024.
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Print headlines with letter count
Count includes spaces + punctuation. Title case.
1. *ECOWAS Court Slams N10m Damages on Nigerian Govt over Assault of Journalist, Oyekunle* — 86 chars
2. *ECOWAS Court Awards N10m to Journalist Jide Oyekunle vs Nigeria* — 62 chars
3. *Nigeria Ordered to Pay N10m Damages for Assaulting NUJ Official* — 61 chars
4. *ECOWAS Court: Police Violated Journalist’s Rights, Pays N10m* — 59 chars
5. *N10m Damages: ECOWAS Court Faults Nigeria Over Protest Attack* — 60 chars
6. ** — 54 chars
Tightest banner: *ECOWAS Court Slams N10m Damages on Nigeria* — 43 chars
Want a deck like “Court says phone seizure breached press freedom, orders govt to pay NUJ FCT Secretary” to run under option 1?
