Daily Trust

Trial of 1,670 B/Haram suspects begins Oct 9

- By John Chuks Azu

The Attorney General of the Federation (AGF) and Minister for Justice, Abubakar Malami (SAN) said the trial of 1,670 Boko Haram suspects in detention will begin on Monday, October 9.

In a statement by his spokesman, Othman Salihu Isah yesterday, the minister identified the 1,670 terrorism suspects being held at the Kainji Detention Facility in Niger State as the first beneficiar­ies of a process to speed up the trials.

He announced the approval of a list of prosecutor­s to handle the cases with a list of defence counsels from the Legal Aid Council of Nigerian (LACON), an agency under the Ministry of Justice. He also disclosed that the Chief Judge of the Federal High Court has appointed four judges to oversee the cases.

He also stated that the special prosecutor­s will attend to the cases of the 651 detainees in Giwa Barracks, Maiduguri until the cases were exhausted.

Of the 33 cases under the Federal High Court, he said 13 have been concluded with nine conviction­s, while 116 charges are still awaiting trial in Kainji, Niger State. He said 220 detainees in the facility were in the category that have been recommende­d for release and de-radicaliza­tion programme due to want of evidence.

He explained that the second category were those, who will be willing to plead guilty for lesser sentences, while the third category are those initially recommende­d for further investigat­ion but have no files so far concerning their cases.

He said the fourth category is for suspects, whose cases were reviewed and a primafacie were found and may be willing to opt for a full trial.

The AGF also stated that the exercise will be carried out alongside the office of the National Security Adviser (NSA) and the Joint Investigat­ion Team set up by the Defence Headquarte­rs.

The AGF explained that the programme was the outcome of an on-the-spot assessment by a team comprising representa­tive of the Office of the National Security Adviser (ONSA), Federal High Court and the Office of the Honourable Attorney-General of the Federation, who were dispatched to Kainji from the 12th to 14th of September, 2017.

The AGF listed some of the challenges in the prosecutio­n of terrorism cases to include: poorly investigat­ed case files due to pressure during the peak of conflict at the theatre, over reliance on confession based evidence, lack of forensic evidence, absence of cooperatio­n between investigat­ors and prosecutor­s at pre-investigat­ion stages, and poor logistical facilities to transport defendants from

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