Four Boko Haram bombers jailed for life
July 10, 2013 by Ihuoma Chiedozie, Abuja
Four
Boko Haram members – Shuaibu Abubakar, Salisu Ahmed, Umar Babagana-Umar
and Mohammed Ali – were on Tuesday convicted for carrying out multiple
bombings and killings in parts of the Federal Capital Territory and
Suleja, Niger State, between March and July 2011.
An Abuja Federal High Court , presided
by Justice Bilikisu Aliyu, jailed them for life in her judgment in the
suit filed by the Federal Government after their arrest in 2011.
The four and two other suspects-Musa
Adamu and Umar Ibrahim – were prosecuted under the provisions of section
15(2) of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission Act, which
prescribes a life sentence for anyone found guilty of committing or
attempting to commit an act of terrorism.
The convicts were accused of carrying
out bombings at the Independent National Electoral Commission office
and the All Christian Fellowship Church, in Suleja, Niger State, in
April and July 2011, as well as the killing of four policemen at a
check-point at Dakwa-Deidei in Bwari Area Council of the FCT in May
2011.
They were also accused of participating in killings at a political rally in Suleja Secondary School in June 2011.
Furthermore, the Federal Government
alleged that, between June 4 and July 12, 2011, the suspects had, at
various locations in Suleja, Azare in Nasarawa State and the the FCT,
engaged in acts of terrorism “by encouraging through training of
persons now at large, the use of arms and ammunition, and the
preparation, planting and detonation of improvised explosive devices for
the purpose of terrorism.”
But the accused persons, on their arraignment in 2011, pleaded not guilty to the five-count brought against them
However, in the judgment delivered by
Justice Aliyu on Tuesday, four out of the six suspects were convicted
and jailed for life for being members of the Boko Haram sect for
engaging in terrorism.
Another accused person,whose name was
simply given as Ibrahim, was given a 10-year prison term after the
court found that he only assisted the terrorists, even though he was not
a member of the sect.
The other suspect, whose mane was given
as Adamu, was freed after the court discovered that there was no
evidence linking him to the terrorism charges.
The prosecution, led by Thompson
Olatigbe of the Department of Public Prosecutions in the Ministry of
Justice, called a total of 16 witnesses against the accused persons, and
tendered evidence, including the suspects’ statements, materials used
in making improvised explosive devices, as well as a black Honda Civic
with number plate AG94MNG, in which they were travelling when they
were arrested at an army road block at in Kachia, Kaduna State on July
27, 2011.
After the prosecution called its last
witness on January 9, 2013, the suspects, through their lawyers, Kelvin
Okoro and Nureini Suleiman, filed a no-case-submission, arguing that the
evidence presented by the prosecution witnesses did not establish a
prima facie case against them.
But in a ruling on February 11, 2013,
Justice Aliyu dismissed the no-case-submission filed by the accused
persons and declared that the prosecution had indeed established a prima
facie case against them.
Reading a summary of the 87-page
judgment on Tuesday, Aliyu noted that the 2nd accused person, Ahmed, had
initially confessed that a Boko Haram leader, one Bashir Madalla, who
is currently at large, had given them a bag containing improvised
explosive devices to deposit within the premises of INEC.
Justice Aliyu said, “The convicts used explosive devices used for blasting rock and maining their fellow human beings .
“Human life is sacred. They have shown
utmost disregard for human life in a most cruel manner so they deserve
to be removed from the public if only to save more lives.”
Meanwhile, prominent lawyers on Tuesday
hailed the sentencing of the four Boko Haram members to life
imprisonment for their involvement in terrorism.
The lawyers spoke to the News Agency of Nigeria in separate interviews in Lagos.
A renowned lawyer, Prof. Itse Sagay
(SAN), said the judgment would help stem the tide of impunity and wanton
killings in the country.
On his part, Mr Wale Ogunade, President,
Voters Awareness Initiative, a non-governmental organisation, lauded
the quick conclusion of the trial.
“We have always clamoured for quick
dispensation of justice because we believe that justice delayed is
justice denied,” Ogunade said.
source:Punch