Edmonton Journal

Child bride accused of killing husband to be freed

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LAGOS, NIGERIA — A child forced to marry at just 13 who then poisoned her 35-year-old husband and three friends is set to be freed in Nigeria, lawyers and a judge said Wednesday, amid fears for her safety and future.

Human rights lawyer Hussaina Aliyu Ibrahim said she convinced the prosecutor to drop the case and on Tuesday a High Court judge in Gezawa ordered Wasila Tasi’u to be released from juvenile detention.

Another 13-year-old who killed her 35-year-old husband remains on death row despite a ruling — exactly one year ago from the West African Community Court of Justice — that her sentence is illegal because she was a minor. Forced marriage and child marriage are also against the law here, but widely practised.

Both girls had become second wives in the Muslim northern part of Nigeria where polygamy and child marriage is common. Neither had ever been to school and couldn’t read or write.

Prosecutor­s had tried to convict Tasi’u on the strength of a confession to police written in English — she speaks only Hausa—and signed with her thumbprint.

Human rights activists who crowded the court on Tuesday cheered loudly when the judge announced the state was dropping the case against Tasi’u, who is now 14. But there were also growls of disapprova­l from those who believe she got away with murder.

“Four people died. People are angry. They might react,” said her lawyer Ibrahim, who also feels threatened. She has championed girls’ rights for 27 years and defended Tasi’u pro bono.

The girl’s deeply conservati­ve Muslim family wants her back, but Ibrahim fears that would just consign Tasi’u to another forced marriage. She said the parents barely visited the girl during her detention following the April 5, 2014 killings.

Now, she said, conservati­ve lawyers are trying to counsel Tasi’u’s family to sue for the girl’s return. Girls in rural northern Nigeria are almost exclusivel­y valued for their labour and bride prices that can include cattle, goats, even land.

The lawyer said her Kano chapter of the Internatio­nal Federation of Women’s Lawyers has found a family willing to care for Tasi’u until it is safe for her to return home.

 ?? AMINU ABUBAKAR/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Sani Garba, 55, holds the picture of his 14-year-old daughter-in-law Wasila Tasi’u. A Nigerian court has dropped murder charges against her.
AMINU ABUBAKAR/AFP/GETTY IMAGES Sani Garba, 55, holds the picture of his 14-year-old daughter-in-law Wasila Tasi’u. A Nigerian court has dropped murder charges against her.

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