A Kano High Court sitting in Gezawa on Tuedsay set free Wasila
Tasiu, 14, accused of killing her husband and three others in April last
year.In a landmark judgment, Justice Mohammed Yahaya ruled that the
court had no option than to comply with the application that originated
from theOffice of the Attorney General and Commissioner for Justice that sought to terminate the case.
“I have no alternative than to pronounce according to the law that the application for nolle proseque is hereby granted,” the presiding judge said.
Consequently, Justice Yahaya declared that Wasila was discharged.
The verdict threw the courtroom into wild jubilation, as hordes of human rights activists were present.
Earlier, the prosecution’s lawyer, Lamido Abba Soron Dinki, tendered an application dated May 20th that was signed by the Attorney General and Commissioner for Justice, urging the court to discontinue with the high profile murder case which has attracted global attention.
Dinki said: “In the nolle proseque is a delegation of power by the Commissioner for Justice to me and I hereby submit the notification and the instrument to the court.”
The Kano State Government had asked that the case be dismissed because she was a minor who had been forcibly married.post by expdonaloaded.blogspot.com..“I have no alternative than to pronounce according to the law that the application for nolle proseque is hereby granted,” the presiding judge said.
Consequently, Justice Yahaya declared that Wasila was discharged.
The verdict threw the courtroom into wild jubilation, as hordes of human rights activists were present.
Earlier, the prosecution’s lawyer, Lamido Abba Soron Dinki, tendered an application dated May 20th that was signed by the Attorney General and Commissioner for Justice, urging the court to discontinue with the high profile murder case which has attracted global attention.
Dinki said: “In the nolle proseque is a delegation of power by the Commissioner for Justice to me and I hereby submit the notification and the instrument to the court.”
The girl is to be freed from detention following the ruling, reported the BBC.
When the case was reported in 2014, it threw a spotlight on the issue of child brides and forced marriages in Nigeria.
The girl admitted to killing her husband by concealing rat poison in his food, the police in Kano said at the time.
The girl’s father had forced her to marry the 35-year-old man, police said.
The Islamic police in Kano and many other parts of northern Nigeria are trying to stop parents from forcing children into marriages.
The region has a majority Muslim, and a mixture of a secular and lslamic system of government.
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