A
Nigerian, Henry Okah,24, jailed in Johannesburg for a series of
terror attacks in his homeland on Wednesday appealed his conviction,
challenging South Africa’s right to try him, his lawyer said.
Okah is serving 24 years behind bars for masterminding a series of terror attacks, including twin bombings which killed 12 people in the Nigerian capital Abuja during independence day celebrations in 2010.
Okah is serving 24 years behind bars for masterminding a series of terror attacks, including twin bombings which killed 12 people in the Nigerian capital Abuja during independence day celebrations in 2010.
The
bombs exploded outside a venue where the 50th anniversary was being
marked, with several foreign heads of state attending.
He
was put on trial in South Africa, where he has permanent residence,
on charges of orchestrating the bombings from his home in
Johannesburg and was convicted in early 2013 on 13 terror charges.
He
has denied any involvement in the blasts and said the charges against
him were politically motivated. His appeal hinges on whether his host
country had the jurisdiction to try him.
“Judgement
has been reserved and we don’t know when it will be handed down,”
his lawyer Idemudia Uriesi told AFP.
Okah’s
appeal was first heard by the Supreme Court of Appeals in November
2014, but was adjourned indefinitely after his legal team decided to
launch a constitutional challenge to his original conviction.
Okah,
who was also convicted over two other explosions in 2010 in the
southern Nigerian city of Warri, a major hub of the oil-rich Delta
region, was the presumed leader of the Nigerian militant group
Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND).
MEND
claimed responsibility for the bombings. The group has since 2006
been demanding reparations and a fair share of oil revenue for
residents of the Niger Delta.
The
group has now seen spin-offs by radicals who want independence for
the region.
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