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Kudirat Abiola: Lagos government wants Al-Mustapha dead

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The Lagos State Government has asked the Supreme Court to uphold the death sentence awarded against Maj. Hamza al-Mustapha and Alhaji Lateef Shofolahan by Justice Mojisola Dada of the Lagos State High Court on January 30, 2012.

They asked the apex court to set aside the judgment of a Lagos Court of Appeal that acquitted Maj. Hamza al-Mustapha, Chief Security Officer to the late Head of State, General Sani Abacha and Alhaji Lateef Shofolahan in the murder of Alhaja Kudirat Abiola.

The state government filed a notice of appeal seeking vacation of the decision of the appellate court on 10 different grounds.

The Lagos state Attorney General and Commissioner of Justice, Adeniji Kazeem, signed the notice of appeal on behalf of the state government.

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Lagos argued that the testimonies of its prime witnesses, Barnabas Jabila, also known as Sergeant Rogers, and Mohammed Abdul, who had confessed to their roles in the murder, were detailed and consistent.

It claimed that the contradictions in the witnesses’ testimonies were not material enough to warrant the decision of the Court of Appeal to disregard their entire evidence.

The state government also submitted as an error in judgement, the decision by the appeal court that declared the testimony of Barnabas Jabila as inconsistent and unreliable.”

The state government insisted that Barnabas Jabila, in his testimony before the Lagos State High Court, was consistent and that the details supplied by him were “not materially controverted.”

Lagos faulted the decision of the Court of Appeal for failing to take into cognisance the testimony of Mohammed Abdul and argued that the appellate court “erred in law when it held that there were material contradictions that rendered the testimony of Mohammed Abdul unreliable.”

It said Mohammed Abdul gave graphic and detailed evidence of the conspiracy to and murder of Alhaja Kudirat Abiola, thereby contending that the appellate court erred in discharging and acquitting Mustapha and Shofolahan.

After a 12-year long trial before the Lagos State High Court, Justice Dada sentenced both Mustapha and Shofolahan to death on January 30, 2012 for complicity in the murder of Kudirat.

In a lead judgement by Justice Amina Augie, however, the Court of Appeal in Lagos discharged and acquitted both Mustapha and Shofolahan for lack of credible evidence precisely on July 12, 2013



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