A
Court of Appeal sitting in Abuja has stayed the execution of the death
sentences passed on two of the twelve Nigerian soldiers court martialled
by the army authorities last September.
The soldiers were
tried under the General Court Martial which sat at the Army Headquarters
Garrison, Mogadishu Cantonment in Abuja, on allegations of offences of
conspiracy to commit mutiny and mutiny under the armed forces act 2004.
Three
of the convicted soldiers, CPL Stephen Clement, CPL Igomu Emmanuel and
Private Andrew Ngbede, however approached the appellate court through
their lawyer, Chief Godwin Obla (SAN), to challenge the decision of the
court martial, which convicted and sentenced them to life imprisonment
and death.
The convicted soldiers raised 11 grounds of appeal
each in their separate appeals challenging the very many fundamental
irregularities and improprieties characterizing the entire trial at the
general court marshal and asked the court to stay the execution of their
sentences pending the hearing and determination of their appeals.
In
his ruling the lead judge, Justice Abubakar Abdulkadir, restrained the
Nigerian Army or its agents from carrying out the execution of life
imprisonment and death sentence imposed by the General Court Martial and
ordered that the convicted soldiers be granted access to their lawyers.
The court also ordered the Nigerian Army to avail the convicted
soldiers of the record of proceedings of the General Court Martial
which tried and convicted them to enable them compile records for their
appeal.
The application for stay of execution filed by the third
convicted soldier, CPL Stephen Clement, is yet to be heard as it was
not listed on the court’s list on the day those of the other convicted
soldiers were heard.
Credit: Channels
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