On 24th March, Boniface Umale, an international student from Nigeria, was arrested by Northumbria Police and taken into custody at Durham Prison. He later died at the prison in unexplained circumstances. Shockingly the prison attempted to cremate his body without informing his family and even before informing the Nigerian High Commission of his death. This report from Nigeria Watch goes into further detail about his case.
Daniel Okpla, a friend of Umale has written an open letter to highlight this case which we publish in full here.
DEATH OF NIGERIAN STUDENT IN UK PRISON
Friends and members of the Idoma community in the UK have been saddened by the mysterious death in prison of Mr. Boniface Umale. Mr Umale graduated in 2008 with an MSc degree in project Management from the Northumbria University, Newcastle and started another M.Sc degree in Pipeline Engineering until his demise in custody.
According to the Her Majesty Prison (HMP) Durham, Boniface died in the early hours of 24th March and the news was broken to the Nigerian High Commission on Monday 25th of March 2013. He was held at HMP Durham and attended several court trials.
As at the time of writing, HMP Durham could not confirm if he was convicted of any crime and have not submitted any autopsy report to the Nigerian High Commission despite several requests by the High Commission and the Idoma community in Diaspora.
Without confirmation from the Nigerian High commission, HMP Durham has indicated her intention to proceed with cremating the body without following due process. Family, friends and the entire Idoma community in Diaspora have made it clear that cremation is culturally unacceptable and arrangement must be made to repatriate the body to the family at Otukpo, Benue State for a befitting burial.
Suffice to say that HMP Durham owes Boniface and all suspects and/prisoners in her custody the duty of care and protection no matter the allegation against them. Any failure in this regard is viewed seriously. It is completely unacceptable that HMP Durham seem to be sweeping this matter under the carpet.
They have failed to provide answers to pertinent question agitating the minds of friends and family members at such a difficult time. Boniface’s family and friends need to know:
- When and why was he arrested including access to legal representation?
- The level of care and support he received while in police custody prior to arriving at the HMP Durham prison.
- Why did the police and the authority of HMP Durham fail to notify any one in UK or Nigeria of his arrest and detention until his death?
- Was his death at HMP Durham prison racially motivated or due to gross negligence?
- Was he particularly in a solitary confinement and without appropriate monitoring and risk assessment?
- How was he treated in custody including any history of hospital attendance?
- Why is the authority of HMP Durham refusing to disclose his post mortem report and insisting on cremation despite strong protest from members of the Idoma community?Â
While we expect the law to take its full course, the authority of HMP Durham must be held to account in keeping her obligation of duty of care and protection to all inmates in her custody. We press for transparency, justice and equity in this matter. We are strongly opposed to cremation which is a cultural taboo and hereby urge the HMP Durham and the UK government to investigate this matter and bring justice to the grieving family.
Many thanks for bringing our plight to your highly esteemed audience.
Yours sincerely,
Daniel OKPLA
Birmingham
UK
6 Comments
[…] By @JustintheLibSoc On 24th March, Boniface Umale, an international student from Nigeria, was arrested by Northumbria Police and taken into custody at Durham Prison. He later died at the prison in … […]
Is there a) any updates on this case b) who should we write to about this?
Pursuing leads at the moment. When we have answer as to your questions we will publish an article so subscribe to keep postes or visit regularly. We aim to get in contact with relevant people next week.
[…] spokesman and friend of Boniface, Daniel Okpla, has issued an open letter setting out concerns and unanswered questions in the […]
Hello,
please what the update on this sad event..as justice must take its place
Hello Patrick, I am doing more research on this and have made contact with the family lawyer, I will publish an update on this case by Friday 10th May.