Daily Trust

Chibok girls’ abductor gets 15-year jail term

-

Egege asked the court to discharge Yahaya, pleading that his testimony is pathetic.

He argued that as a conscript he could have been killed if he had refused the sect’s orders.

But the judge said he could not use his physical condition to win sympathy, adding that he had a choice not to participat­e in the Boko Haram activities even though he was forced.

He was charged under the Terrorism Prevention Act, 2011.

The court ruled that Haruna Yahaya will serve the term in any prison facility, to be determined by the Comptrolle­r General of the Nigerian Prisons Service.

The other 19 convicts were sentenced to between three and five years from date of their arrest.

The verdicts were given at the resumed fast track trial of Boko Haram suspects being detained in the location. Over 700 detainees will appear before the court during the trial.

Last year, over 50 Boko Haram members were convicted by the court, while over 400 were released for lack of evidence.

Convicted member of the Boko Haram sect, Haruna Yayaya yesterday gave an account of how he participat­ed in the abduction of over 200 girls in Chibok, Borno State.

Yahaya admitted to have killed a number of citizens in Gabsuri and Chibok towns in Damboa Local Government Area of Borno State, after he claimed the sect members forcefully conscripte­d him.

He claimed that during the operation at the secondary school in Chibok in April 2014, he was forced to carry an AK47 rifle. He said he usually tied the weapon to his functional arm with index fingers at the trigger.

He said on the day of the operation, while the insurgents ransacked the school and abducted the boarding students, who were preparing for WAEC examinatio­ns, one of them, whom he later had a love affair with, pleaded with him for mercy.

“I told the girl that I am not in a position to help because I too was forcefully conscripte­d into the operation,” he said.

He further told the court that he sent for wrapper to be bought for the girl while in their camp, when he realised she had no wrapper. He added that he at one time contemplat­ed escaping with the girl.

He said he was eventually arrested by members of the Civilian Joint Taskforce (CJTF) during an operation.

Meanwhile, the court had discharged another suspect, Malam Umar, who was fingered as a Boko Haram provisions supplier by sect members arrested by the CJTF.

The court accepted his explanatio­n that he did not know he supplied food items to a Boko Haram middle man who paid him N300, 000 and 100 Euro for the supplies.

In a statement yesterday signed by Othman Salihu Isah, the Special Assistant to the Attorney General of the Federation (AGF)and Minister for Justice, Abubakar Malami (SAN),said there are about 1, 669 suspects held at the facility, while 468 were discharged for lack of evidence. They will undergo a programme of deradicali­sation at the office of the National Security Adviser (NSA).

The statement said 82 persons entered plea of guilty to secure lesser sentence.

In a brief ceremony, a lead judge of the Federal High Court said about 700 Boko Haram suspects have been processed for the current exercise, and solicited for the cooperatio­n of the representa­tives of the Nigerian Bar Associatio­n (NBA), the Legal Aid Council, the National Human Rights Commission, staff of the Ministry of Justice and the media, who were part of the exercise.

In his remarks, the Director, legal services at the Defence Headquarte­rs, Abuja, Air Vice Marshal Ibrahim Shafi’i said the programme is a very important process for Nigeria in its effort to tackle the challenges of insurgency.

He stressed that the Nigerian military will continue to respect the human rights of citizens in its bid to secure the country.

“This judicial process has never been done anywhere in the world,” he said.

Hearing continues today.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria