Wasila Tasi'u was 14 when she married Umar Sani, 35, and killed him and three others with rat poison. She could
face the death penalty if convicted of using rat poison to kill him.
"I am of the opinion that there is a case against the accused," High Court Judge Mohammed Yahaya said. "As such, I overrule the submission of no-case from the defence counsel."
Tasi'u's lawyers had argued that the state failed to
establish her intent to kill Sani and questioned the reliability of a
key prosecution witness.
The witness, a seven-year-old girl named Hamziyya who was
identified as the sister of Sani's other wife, testified that Tasi'u
gave her money to buy the poison on April 5 last year, the day Sani
died.
The defence said that relying on testimony from a minor
contravened Nigeria's Evidence Act and that the state's case should
therefore be thrown out...expdonaloaded.blogspot.com
The families of both the deceased and the accused have
rejected claims that she was forced to marry a man more than twice her
age, noting that 14 was an appropriate age to marry and that Tasi'u
chose Sani from a range of suitors.
Some locals have called for Tasi'u to face stiff punishment
to discourage other girls from taking similar action if they become
unhappy in their marriage.
But rights activists have demanded that Tasi'u be
rehabilitated as a victim of a forced marriage, which likely included
incidents of rape.
Tasi'u has remained largely stoic through her appearances
in court so far, crying when charges were first read against her, but
otherwise sitting silently, often with her head bowed.
On Tuesday she stood quietly in the dock, with her head fully covered in a sky-blue hijab.
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