Peter Tenkwa, the Controller of the Adamawa State Command of the Nigeria Prison Service, has rejected the medical letter used by a Yola High Court in granting bail to convicted ex-Governor of the state, Bala Ngilari, on health ground.
Justice Nathan Musa of Yola High Court on Monday granted bail to Ngilari, currently in the prison for a five-year jail sentence, on health grounds, after he appealed against his conviction.
Tenkwa told newsmen Monday in Yola that he was not aware of the letter and had communicated to the prison headquarters.
He said the headquarters directed him to issue a query to officials involved in the matter, including the Deputy Controller of Yola Prison, Abubakar Abaka, and a Superintendent of Prisons, John Bukar, in charge of health.
Tenkwa said: “Nigeria Prison Service, as I stated, knows nothing about this letter; whoever wrote that letter is on his own.
“I have been directed to query the officers involved.”
Tenkwa said all he knew was that he got a letter dated March 23 from the Adamawa State Ministry of Justice on health facilities in Yola Prison, where Ngilari was remanded, and that after accessing the facilities, he replied to the letter, informing the ministry that the facilities were okay.
He said: “We have enough medical facilities to handle high profile inmates like Ngilari; we even received some supply of drugs on Friday.”
Tenkwa, however, said he had yet to get a release order from the court regarding Ngilari’s bail, adding that whenever he received it, he would contact the service’s legal department before acting on it.
Also commenting on the issue, the Attorney-General and Commissioner for Justice in Adamawa State, Bala Sanga, said the bail granted Ngilari was a disturbing development.
Sanga said: “The chamber of attorney general is very worried and disturbed about this granting of bail pending appeal to our former governor; this is a legal remedy that is very rarely granted.”
Sanga said he was more disturbed that the letter acted on in granting the bail was not exhibited with the appellant application nor attached to the documents.
He said: “Technically what this means is that the letter was not even before the court.
“So the court, in my opinion, has no business relying on a document that was not before it to arrive at a decision.”
Sanga said the purported letter claiming that Ngilari was facing serious health problem was dated March 23, while the letter to the ministry from the prison service, which confirmed that the authorities had the necessary facilities to handle Ngilari, was dated March 24.
Sanga lamented: “This is very scandalous, if indeed the prison says it did not issue the letter.
“We intend not to file a complaint against whoever wrote that letter but to refer the matter to the police for prosecution because the court relied significantly on that letter to grant the bail.”
Sanga said that the disease was not contagious hence the bail was unnecessary.
Justice Musa, on March 6, sentenced Ngilari to five years in prison, without an option of fine, for violating the Public Procurement Act in the award of contract for the procurement of 25 vehicles.
Ngilari was given an option to select a prison of his choice to serve the term.