The Supreme Court yesterday sentenced a policeman, Usman Maigari
to death for strangulating his 12-year old wife to death 14 years ago for
ritual purposes and dumping her corpse by a culvert for worms and birds to
feast on.
The Supreme Court, which dismissed an appeal brought by the cop
yesterday, said Maigari was not fit to live amongst decent human beings.
“To say the least, the appellant (the policeman) displayed a
complete disregard for human life, with the archetypal characteristics of a
beast dressed in police uniform with which he set about the abuse of that
office and had thought he had enough expertise to cover up the dastardly acts
with the impunity that went along with persons of such genre, best kept away
from human society, especially as he held nothing sacred,” the summit court
held.
Yesterday’s decision brought to vain his 14 years of legal
battle to save his life. Maigari was arraigned before the Sokoto High Court on
July 13, 2000 charged with culpable homicide punishable with death under
Section 221(b) of the Penal Code.
He was accused of causing the death of his second wife, Sa’adatu
Torankawa (whose age was put between 11 and 13 years) on January 11, 1999 “by
strangulating her to death for ritual reasons, then conveying her corpse and
dumping it in a culvert near Janzomo village, along Kajiji- Shagari Road. He
pleaded not guilty and underwent trial. In his defence, he denied killing his
wife, but said she died while he was conveying her to the hospital. “I can
remember that sometime in January 1999, my wife Sa’adatu fell sick one night.
Then I conveyed her on my motorcycle from Yabo in order to take her to hospital
in Sokoto.
“However, after we had passed Milgoma village, she died. When I
noticed that she was dead, I put her body in a sack, then conveyed the corpse
on my motorcycle and dumped it under a culvert along Shagari- Kajiji Road, near
one village called Janzomo,” he said.
He also told the court that he hid the news about Sa’adatu’s
“ailment” and subsequent death from everyone, including his second wife,
Hauwa’u and his deceased wife’s relatives. He said he was scared that his
in-laws could kill him. At the conclusion of trial, the trial judge, Justice
Abbas Bello found him guilty and sentenced him to death by hanging.
He challenged the decision at the Court of Appeal, Sokoto and
lost, forcing him to appeal to the apex court. The Supreme Court, in the
judgment read yesterday by Justice Mary Peter- Odili, upheld the decisions of
both lower courts.
The court had wondered why the convict, a policeman, chose to
keep his wife’s ailment and subsequent death to himself if he had no ulterior
motive. The apex court also queried his decision to dump his wife’s body at the
car park of the hospital and later, under a culvert, where it was later
discovered by passers-by, rather than take her to the doctor for medical
attention.
The court also questioned how Maigari, not being a medical
doctor, concluded that his wife was dead and why he chose to dump her corpse
under a culvert along the road to rot away, rather than inform her relatives
for her to be properly buried. The apex court upheld the evidence in a medical
report tendered by the prosecution to the effect that the deceased died from
strangulation.
“What is sure is that there is enough circumstantial evidence,
cogent, compelling, unequivocal and irresistible leading to the conclusion that
the appellant and no other, caused the death of his wife, a young person of
between 12-13 years, by strangulating her to death and dumping her corpse in a
culvert.
“It is also to be said that the proof put forward by the
prosecution was beyond reasonable doubt in tragic circumstances most
especially, in the present situation, where the perpetrator of this heinous,
animalistic crime is an officer of the Nigerian Police Force, who donned the
uniform of state, not with pride and dignity of a law enforcement personnel,
but wore the uniform which he was unworthy to be seen in.
“The circumstances are such that I see no redeeming feature
available to the appellant and therefore no basis to either fault what the
trial court and Court of Appeal did.
“Rather, this court has no choice but affirm the concurrent
findings of the two courts below, which were supported by the evidence on
record and nothing on which a deviation can be hung,” Justice Peter- Odili
held.
She
subsequently dismissed the appeal for lacking in merit and affirmed the
conviction and sentencing of Maigari to death by hanging. Justices Mahmud
Mohammed, Muhammad Saifullah Muntaka-Coomassie, Nwali Sylvester Ngwuta and
Olukayode Ariwoola, who equally participated the hearing of the appeal, agreed
with the lead judgment
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Society
Dat is nigerian police 4 u, they do things as it pleases them even with intimidation.I would rather run to armed robber for safety than nigerian police I swear.
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