The Abuja Division of the Federal High Court, yesterday, slated June
21 to determine whether the federal government has adduced sufficient
evidence to warrant the prosecution of the alleged mastermind of the
Christmas day bomb blast that killed about 44 persons and wounded 75
others at St. Theresa’s Catholic Church at Madalla, Niger State, in
2011.
Justice Adeniyi Ademola fixed the date after the accused person and the federal government adopted written addresses yesterday.
The accused person, Kabiru Umar, a.k.a Kabiru Sokoto, had through his
team of lawyers led by Mr. Hassan Lukman, maintained before the high
court that he has no case to answer, insisting that the federal
government failed to establish a prima-facie criminal case capable of
warranting his conviction.
While praying the court to discharge and accquit him from the 2-count
terrorism charge that was preferred against him by the government,
contended that none of the six witnesses that testified against him, was
able to establish a nexus linking him to the commission of the alleged
offence.
Arguing through his lawyers, Sokoto, in his no-case-submission,
further queried the propriety of allowing him to pass through the
rigours of trial “in view of the fact that the prosecution has failed to
tender any evidence connecting the accused to the alleged offence.”
In such criminal trial, a no case submission is made when an accused
person believes that the prosecution failed to prove the ingredients of
the offence for which he is charged or that the evidence adduced in
court was such that a judge cannot rely upon to pass a sentence.
Sokoto was said to be a kingpin of the Boko Haram Islamic sect was initially docked before the high court on May 20.
Aside allegation that he trained over 500 men on how to manufacture
and detonate Improvised Explosive Devices, IEDs, the federal government,
alleged that he had prior knowledge that the sect planned to bomb the
church on Christmas day but failed to disclose it to law enforcement
officer as soon as reasonable practicable.
He was said to have between 2007 and 2012, at Mabira Sokoto, Sokoto
state, facilitated the commission of terrorist act including planting
bombs at the Police headquarters and some government organizations in
the state.
FG told the court that the accused person instituted his terrorist training camp at Abaji, a suburb town in Abuja.
Though he was previously arrested by the Police in Abuja on January 14, 2012, he was however declared missing two days later.
His mysterious escape from custody had culminated to the sack of the
erstwhile Inspector General of Police, Mr. Hafiz Ringim and former
Commission of Police in-charge of the Federal Capital Territory, Mallam
Zakari Biu who was out rightly dismissed from the Force.
He was subsequently re-arrested on February 10, 2012.
It will be recalled that the last prosecution witness informed the
court that Sokoto had confessed that one of the recognized leader of the
sect, Abubakar Shekau, told him that only members of the sect that have
been initiated into the “Shurah” cadre, are allowed to know the
ideology behind the current insurgency in the Northern part of the
country.
The witness told the court that Sokoto had disclosed that whereas
members of the “Shurah” which he belongs to, plan and mastermind
attacks, other lay members are recruited to execute terrorist agenda of
the sect.
However, Sokoto, through his lawyer, faulted the testimony of the
masked witness, maintaining that he used the Hausa word “Anche” in his
statement, a word he said means “they said.”
He told the court that he was only referring to what he was told by those affiliated to the sect.
One of the witnesses had earlier narrated before the court how a donation of N40million divided the sect.
According to the witness, Sokoto had in a statement he made on
January 14, 2012, confessed that out of the said N40million which he
said was received from another terrorist group in Algeria, he got the
sum of N500, 000, being the recognized Governor of Sokoto State in the
hierarchy of the group.
He told the court that the accused person admitted that he used his
share of the money and bought Quran and other Islamic religious books,
even as he allegedly volunteered the names of two members of the sect
that bombed Catholic church at Madalla, Niger State, on Christmas day.
The witness further told the court that Sokoto gave the names of the
two perpetrators as Bashir Mohammed and Muhktar Kafanchan, saying the
federal government is currently on the trail of the said culprits.
Besides, the witness who was simply identified as “Mr ABC” testified
that the accused person confessed that it was not suicide bombers that
attacked the church, but that the bombs were detonated from a car that
was parked near the church.
Likewise, another witness, “Mr DEF”, narrated how Sokoto hid behind a
wardrobe on February 10, 2012, a day he was re-arrested at Sabongida in
Taraba state, few days after he escaped from police custody in Abuja.
The witness who is an operative of the Department of State Service,
DSS, told the court that upon his arrest, Sokoto was found with a Nokia
phone and six different Sim cards.
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