Child bride, 14, who killed husband with rat poison freed

A child
bride accused of murdering her husband with rat poison has had the
charges against her dropped, Nigerian prosecutors confirmed.
Prosecutor
Lamido Abba Soron-Dinki asked the High Court in Gezawa, Kano state, to
'terminate the case of culpable homicide against Wasila Tasi'u, who was
14 when she married Umar Sani, according to Dailymail.
'With a heavy heart, I apply that the accused be discharged,' he said.
Legal sources in Kano said the country had been under pressure to drop the case which angered human rights groups.
Police
previously said Wasila had 'admitted' murdering her 35-year-old husband
by signing a confession she could not read - with her thumbprint.
Prosecutors
had been seeking the death penalty for the teenager, whose farmer
husband was found dead just days after marrying her in April last year.
If
she had been found guilty, the teenager - who is from a poor and deeply
conservative Muslim family and cannot write - could have become the
first child in Nigeria to be executed in 18 years.
Human rights campaigners continually expressed outrage over her treatment, saying she should be seen as a victim of abuse.
But
the case prompted mixed reactions in her impoverished home state of
Kano, where Sharia (Islamic) law is in place alongside the laws of the
government.
That, claim some followers, allows child marriage - and 14 is a normal age for a bride.
Homicide
investigator Abdullahi Adamu revealed in court he translated Wasila's
statement from her native language, Hausa, into English, which she did
not speak.
Despite being unable to read the document she then signed it, he previously told the court.

Outrage: Human rights activists are angry
at the treatment of the 14-year old, who is pictured with one of her
lawyers outside the court. If she is executed, it will be Nigeria's
first reported execution of a child since 1997
She could not write her name so 'she had to use a thumbprint,' he added.
One
of the prosecution witnesses was the farmer's second wife Ramatu, who
told how her 'co-wife' prepared him dinner before being due to go to bed
with him.
The
court had heard the murder victim had married Ramatu previously in the
village of Unguwar Yansoro, which sits in a region where polygamy is
widespread.
Ramatu said she got along well with the 14-year-old and the two had prepared food together on April 5, 2014 the day Sani died.
Because it was Wasila's turn to share a bed with her new husband, she was also entitled to serve him his meal.
'After
putting the food in the dish I didn't see anybody put anything in it,'
Ramatu said - but later she saw her husband foaming at the mouth and
unable to walk.
Previously a seven-year-old girl who Wasila allegedly sent to buy rat poison was called to give evidence.
Identified
only as Hamziyya, the young girl - believed to be Ramatu's sister - was
living in the same house as the 14-year-old and her new husband at the
time of his death.
'She said rats were disturbing her in her room,' Hamziyya told the court.
Shopkeeper
Abuwa Yusuf confirmed selling poison to the girl, and neighbour
Abdulrahim Ibrahim said: 'When [Sani] brought the food I noticed some
sandy-like particles, black in colour'.

Gezawa High Court (pictured) overflowed
yesterday as prosecutors closed their case in the murder trial, with
people peering in through the open windows and a crowd so large it
spilled out of the gallery door
The
neighbour ate four of the small balls made of bean paste but 'was not
comfortable with the taste', he said, adding: 'It was only Umar (Sani)
who continued eating.'
Previous
court reports suggested three other people had died after allegedly
eating the contaminated food, but all four deaths had been combined into
one murder charge.
The
case has raised the spectre of child marriage in Nigeria, where
campaigners say almost two fifths of children are married off before
their 18th birthday.
Some
16 per cent are married before they turn 15, according to the campaign
group Girls Not Brides - and the rates are the highest in the north,
near where Wasila lived.
Hussaina Ibrahim from the International Federation of Women Lawyers (FIDA), who is representing the teenager, said previously, 'We are against the trial. The whole process violates her fundamental rights.
'The UN Convention on the Rights of the Child says she should be in education. She should be in school'.

Sani Garba, 55, holds a picture of Wasila,
who is his daughter-in-law, at her abandoned matrimonial home in the
village of Unguwar Yansoro. Polygamy and child marriage are widespread
in northern Nigeria
But others including the 14-year-old's own relatives have rejected the notion she was forced into marriage.
They
have said that 14 is a common age to marry in the deeply impoverished
region and that she chose Sani from among many suitors.
A
motion by defence lawyers to have the case moved to juvenile court was
rejected, despite claims by human rights activists that she is too young
to stand trial for murder in a high court.
The
use of Sharia law has also made the case more complicated, because
there are no guidelines saying where Islamic law ends and state law
begins.
According
to Human Rights Watch, Nigeria is not known to have executed a juvenile
offender since 1997, when the country was ruled by military dictator
Sani Abacha.
Comments
Post a Comment