11/28/17
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Norwegian police are conducting investigation into over 150 cases of alleged sexual abuse in the small rural community of Tysfjord in the country’s north.
Police Spokeswoman, Tone Vangen, said “some 92 of the village’s 2,000 residents stand accused of offences involving 40 children, the youngest just four years old.
She, however, said several cases were reportedly beyond the legal time frame for prosecution and the victims had apparently left Tysfjord.
She added that one of the suspects allegedly justified the abuse by saying he was a shaman.
Most of the cases involved the abuse of 15 to 16-year-old girls, often thought to be at the hands of family members or friends of the family.
Referencing to the point when 11 men and women came forward to police to inform them of the suspected abuse, Vangen said “police work up until June 2016 was not good enough.”
According to Vangen, the police will now work more closely with kindergartens, schools and paediatricians.
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The Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC) in Ogun, says it will deploy more than 1,000 personnel to ensure safety on the Lagos/Ibadan Expressway and respond to other emergencies during the yuletide.
The Sector Commander, Mr Clement Oladele, made this known on Tuesday, during the 2017 “Ember Month” Road Safety Campaign Mega Rally held at the Asero Park in Abeokuta, with the theme:” Right to Life on the Highway Not Negotiable”.
Oladele said that five life support ambulances, three roving patrol motor bikes and a heavy duty tow truck would also be deployed for the exercise.
According to him, the aim is to minimise road accidents by ensuring effective management of the anticipated upsurge in human and vehicular traffic during the period.
Oladele restated the corps’ commitment to reduce by at least half the number of people who died as result of crashes on the highways in 2016.
“From our data of 19,010 commercial vehicles and 228, 100 passengers that traveled last ember month in the state, we are anticipating about 300,000 passengers will travel between December 25, 2017 and January 1, 2018.
“We have planned a 24/7 patrol operations especially on the Lagos/ Ibadan expressway with resolve that we would not allow any passenger stranded on the highway,’’ he said.
He urged passengers to patronise only commercial vehicles affixed with standard speed limiters, driven by licensed drivers and fitted with standard tyres.
On his part, the Commissioner of Police in the state, Mr Ahmed Iliyasu, underscored the importance of sensitising motorists ahead of the festive season.
Iliyasu further urged all road users to exercise caution in the forthcoming yuletide, saying that the police in the state would continue to collaborate with the FRSC in order ensure a crime-free state.
The representatives of the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC), Nigeria Immigration Service, Nigerian Army, members of National Union of Road Transport Workers (NURTW) participated in the event.
Others are Road Transport Employers Association of Nigeria (RTEAN) and Amalgamated Commercial Motorcycle Association of Nigeria. 
(NAN)
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Imported banana, with low prices, has flooded Abuja markets, raising concerns about the country’s food security, the livelihoods of banana farmers and traders as well as the health of consumers.
An investigation by News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) at various markets and supermarkets in Utako and Maitama districts of Abuja on Tuesday revealed that the foreign banana was conspicuously displayed on several shelves.
Even the roadside fruits hawkers were not left out, as they apparently gave more priority to displaying the foreign banana than the local variety.
The sellers and buyers, who spoke to NAN, said that the imported banana had received high patronage due to certain factors such as its fresh appearance, smooth skin, size, taste and lower prices.
The banana imports notwithstanding, the Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) identifies Nigeria as one of the largest banana and plantain producing countries in Africa.
Recent statistics indicate that Nigeria produces about 2.74 million tonnes of banana annually, making the crop one of the important staple crops in the country.
However, some of the sellers and consumers of the imported variety of banana said that it was receiving high patronage because of its fresh look, packaging, size and taste.
NAN observed that the imported banana is usually displayed for sale in a bunch of five fingers, 10 fingers and 15 fingers, depending on the species.
A consumer, Malam Aminu Danlami, said that the imported banana was cheaper than the local species, adding that it also had a longer shelf-life when compared to the local banana.
He also said that the unique taste of the imported banana had made it more appealing to most banana consumers.
However, Mrs Rachael Oke, another consumer, bemoaned the flooding of FCT markets with imported, low-priced fruits whose sources could not be easily ascertained.
She said that the imported fruits included apples, small grapes, plums and all kinds of exotic fruits.
But Oke particularly frowned at banana importation, insisting that banana was cultivated in great quantities in many states across the country.
She emphasised that if the trend was not reversed, it could force thousands of banana farmers and traders out of business, while exerting more pressure on the shaky food security of the country.
One of the major banana importers at Utako market, who preferred anonymity, said that he used to import banana and other fruits from Togo, Cameroun and at times, Benin Republic; depending on the security situation and the prevailing currency exchange rates at different points in time.
He said that his banana importation business was very lucrative because he had many retail outlets in Abuja, Lagos, Rivers, Kano and Kogi states, while the patronage for imported banana was constantly increasing, when contrasted with that of the local variety.
He also added that the imported banana could retain its freshness for three weeks without losing its taste or look.
“It is easier for me to import banana than to import rice or vegetable oil because Customs (Nigeria Customs Service) will not disturb me.
“At times, I buy grains from Dawanu market in Kano and ferry them to Niger or Benin Republic or buy things from Taraba and take them to Cameroun. In those countries, I buy fruits and eggs for sales in my country,’’ he said
The man also noted that the imported banana could be preserved for a long time, unlike the home-grown species, adding that the same situation applied to other imported fruits like berries, apples and tangerines.
A fruits distributor, Malam Angulu Dangazuwa, said that it was better for him to sell the imported banana than the local banana variety.
“Hardly can you incur losses on it (imported banana) because it does not get spoilt easily; it sells faster and it is sweeter and readily available, if compared to the local variety,’’ he said.
Dangazuwa said that a box of imported banana with over 40 fingers cost about N2, 500, adding that a similar quantity of the local banana variety, which had a shorter shelf-life, cost about N3, 500.
He argued that the home-grown banana was still one of the most expensive fruits in the country nowadays.
A fruits seller at the Maitama Fruit Market, who simply identified himself as Abdulkareem, corroborated Dangazuwa’s viewpoint.
He, however, noted that in spite of the stated qualities of the imported banana, foreigners living in the country still had a preference for the local banana.
Mr Jaffet Uzordima, a banana farmer in Gwagwalada, noted that the growing craze for imported banana had somewhat posed a serious threat to local banana farmers, their productivity and the country’s economy.
He also said that the activities of the middlemen had negatively affected banana and plantain cultivation in the country.
“For a big bunch of plantain which is supposed to be sold for N1,200 or a big bunch of banana that is supposed to be sold at N300; the middlemen would force you to sell them at N800 and N100 respectively,’’ he said.
Uzordima grumbled that the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development was apathetic towards the development, while the Nigeria Customs Service (NCS) had done little or nothing to prevent smugglers from saturating the country’s markets with imported fruits.
He underscored the need for the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development and other stakeholders to develop the food and research components of the agricultural sector to enable the sector to cope with emerging challenges.
A source at the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development confirmed that the government was worried over prevalence of imported fruits in markets across Abuja.
The source, who spoke to NAN on condition of anonymity, said that the issue was fast becoming a national embarrassment and a threat to the food security programme of the government.
He conceded that the government was conscious of the potential threat of imported banana, particularly in relation to the local banana, the fruits markets and the national economy.
He said that the government was working round the clock to curb the illegal importation of fruits into the country.
According to the source, the ministry is working in concert with the NCS and the security agencies at the airport, which serves as one of the point of entry for the produce, to curb illicit fruit imports.
He said that the Nigerian Agricultural Quarantine Service (NAQS) is also working assiduously to monitor the importation of agricultural produce (plants, fruits and animals) into the country.
The source, however, noted that the agencies could not be too rigid with regard to efforts to regulate food imports because Nigeria was a signatory to the protocols of the World Trade Organisation (WTO).
He said that Nigeria, which was also as signatory to a protocol on the Sanitary and Phytosanitary (SPS) measures, needed to be more observant concerning the safety and security of food imports.
The source said that the ministry was striving to address the challenges hindering the efforts of farmers to boost their productivity.
He said that government was adopting a value chain approach to enhance productivity, increase agro processing and facilitate access to markets.
All the same, analysts underscore the need for the government to redouble its efforts to curb indiscriminate importation of fruits, particularly those fruits that are widely produced in the country.
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An Idi-Ogungun Customary Court at Agodi in Ibadan on Tuesday dissolved a 10-year-old marriage between John Bamidele and his wife, Yinka, over her disrespectful manners.
Bamidele had sought for the dissolution of the marriage on the ground that Yinka neither respected him nor obeyed his instructions as a husband.
In his testimony before the court, the plaintiff said that all efforts made to correct her wrongdoings always proved abortive.
“Therefore, I can no longer live with her so as to avoid her disrespectful way of life.
“Moreover, she is very stubborn, troublesome and in the habit of cursing neighbours whenever they have any little misunderstanding,‘’ he said.
Yinka, in her defence, blamed her husband for disrespecting him, saying that the plaintiff had never proved to be a responsible husband.
According to her, payment of school fees, clothing, feeding and other finances of the three children of the marriage were her sole responsibility.
She urged the court to do the wish of her husband by dissolving the marriage.
The President of the court, Chief Mukaila Balogun, upheld the prayer of the plaintiff and dissolved the marriage.
Balogun gave custody of the first child of the marriage to the plaintiff and ordered that the remaining two kids should remain with the defendant.
He also directed the plaintiff to pay N7,000 as monthly feeding allowance for the two kids.
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The Nigerian Army on Tuesday said it’s troops had killed 14 Boko Haram insurgents in clearance operations in Bama Local Government Area of Borno.
Brig.- Gen. Sani Kukasheka, Director Army Public Relations, said this in a statement issued in Maiduguri.
Kukasheka said that the troops also rescued 30 persons, captured one insurgent and recovered various caliber of ammunition from the insurgents.
He said that the troops had also cleared insurgents in their hideouts at Abusuriwa, Newchina, Bonzon, Usmanari, Goyayeri, Shitimari, Gashimari and Awaram villages in Bama local government area.
Kukasheka explained that 8 insurgents were killed while many of them escaped in the affected villages, adding that three males; 12 females and 15 children were rescued from the insurgents.
The army spokesman also disclosed that the troops also ambushed and killed six insurgents at Kumshe and Darel-Jamel villages.
According to him, the arrested insurgent was handed over to the appropriate authorities for intonation.
“Troops of 202 Battalion of 21 Brigade Nigerian Army in Conjunction with elements of Mobile Strike Teams (MSTs) on Operations LAFIYA DOLE, in furtherance of clearance and blockade Operation DEEP PUNCH II, on Saturday Nov. 25, 2017, cleared Boko Haram terrorists’ enclaves in Abusuriwa, Newchina, Bonzon, Usmanari, Goyayeri, Shitimari, Gashimari and Awaram amongst other villages in Bama Local Government Area of Borno.
“The troops whose continuous resolve in routing out the remnants of the suspected terrorists hibernating within the Brigade’s Area of Responsibility ensured that their superior fire power made the terrorists to flee in disarray, leading to the capture of one suspected terrorist while eight Boko Haram terrorists were neutralised.
“The gallant troops recovered four AK-47 rifles, three magazines, seven Dane guns, machetes, amongst other items.
“In addition, the troops also rescued three men, 12 women and 15 Children, among whom were an aged man and a woman held captives by the Boko Haram terrorists.
“The suspected terrorist has been handed over to the relevant authorities for further interrogation, while the rescued civilian captives are being attended to.
“Similarly, troops of 152 Battalion of the Brigade deployed as a blocking force at the Forward Operations Base, Kumshe, to aid a successful clearance operation ambushed some fleeing unsuspecting Boko Haram terrorists and neutralised five fleeing terrorists, while troops of 151 Battalion also deployed at the Forward Operations Base, Darel Jamel, neutralised a terrorist in an ambush”. (NAN)
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The Chief of Naval Staff (CNS), Vice Adm. Ibok Ete-Ibas, on Monday decorated 16 newly-promoted rear admirals urging them to rededicate themselves to the service of the nation.
Ibas made the call in Abuja while decorating the newly-promoted senior officers at the Naval Headquarters.
The CNS said there was no better time to serve the nation than now that the country was facing security challenges.
He said that promotions came with greater expectations and responsibilities, saying as such, they should put in their best as much were expected from them.
He noted that the decorated officers strived very hard to meet the requirements for the promotion.
According to Ibas, “the journey started several years ago, and today, you are being promoted as a result of your hard work, commitment, dedication and honesty to service of the nation.
“I therefore, urge you to see the promotion as an opportunity to do more for the service, and of course, the entire nation,” he said.
“It is only then that you will be convinced that you have added value to our noble profession and by protecting the territorial integrity of the country,” he said.
He also urged them to give their utmost best in their new ranks and by extension, began to work for the next level of elevation.
The CNS also reaffirmed the continued commitment of the service to the protection of the nation’s critical asset, the maritime domain against crude oil theft and any other illegal activities.
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Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo has assured World Bank officials that the government has now devised a clear pathway to achieve power sector reform objectives.
Osinbajo who received the officials on Monday in Abuja, lauded the World Bank for its commitment and support to the implementation of the Power sector recovery programme of the government.
The delegation of the World Bank (WB) and the International Finance Corporation (IFC) was led by Mr. Riccardo Puliti, Senior Director of the Bank’s Global Energy Practice.
The Vice President noted that the partnership with the World Bank had helped “Nigeria a great deal with the timelines and milestones that had to be achieved and also a great deal in refining our own approach to the entire reform process’’.
“We are completely committed to ensuring that we play our part in the arrangement and we think that this possibly one of the clearest pathways in a long time,’’ he added.
He lauded the partnership between the Federal Government and the World Bank team for the commitment and support shown to the implementation of the Power sector recovery programme.
In his remarks, the Senior Director on Global Energy Practice at the World Bank, Mr Riccardo Puliti, expressed satisfaction with federal government’s cooperation and commitment to the reform of the power sector.
According to him, the partnership between the World Bank and the federal government is a model which will add great value to the power sector in Nigeria.
Puliti equally praised the President Muhammadu Buhari for the remarkable achievements in the ease of business ranking released recently by the World Bank.
He noted that it was a major milestone for the country’s economic reform programme.
The meeting was attended by the Minister of Power, Works and Housing, Mr Babatunde Fashola and the Minister of Finance, Mrs Kemi Adeosun.(NAN)
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A bank worker, Olaoluwa Adejo, has been arrested by the Lagos State Police Command for the death of his 28-year-old wife, Maureen, at their home on Peluola Street, Oworonshoki, in the Bariga  area of the state.

The 32-year-old Lagos indigene was alleged to have tortured his wife of five years with a belt, as well as cutting her with a machete.

Their five-year-old son, Richard, in whose presence the incident reportedly happened, told PUNCH Metro that his father also forced a local insecticide, otapiapia, down the throat of his mother.

I am Richard Adejo. I am five years old. My daddy beat my mummy with a belt; machete her here (shows arms), machete her here (shows legs). He used the belt on her here (points at face); forced my mummy to drink otapiapia (insecticide). My daddy took my mummy away.

“My daddy said my mummy should get out of the house. My mummy said no. In the night, my daddy woke my mummy up and said, ‘Mosquito is too much, let me go and buy otapiapia’. My daddy forced my mummy to drink it. She shook her head. She vomited.

“My daddy slapped my mummy. My mummy did not do anything to him. My daddy gave her one blow. My daddy kicked her. My daddy told her to get out of the house and carry her load. Small blood came out. My daddy slapped her, kicked her, machete her, blow her, and put otapiapia in her mouth and in the food,” Richard told our correspondent during an interview on Monday.

The victim’s mother, Mrs. Kate Jonathan, told PUNCH Metro that Richard had given more graphic details of the incident to family members, police authorities and officials of the Lagos State Ministry of Justice.

She explained that her daughter had packed out of her matrimonial house five days to the incident and was living with her when she decided to return for a party at the children’s school. She said she never returned alive.

She said, “I was called on the telephone by an unknown number around 4pm on Sunday, November 12. The caller said, ‘Your daughter’s husband has killed her at Oworo’. He dropped the call.

 “Around 5pm when I got to their house, I discovered that the house was locked up. There were two boys guarding the house and they refused to open the door to me, saying the owner of the house instructed them not to open the door.

“I didn’t see my daughter or her husband. I was begging them to open the door when I saw Richard jumping up through the window. He saw me and asked the boys to open the door, but they refused.

“I broke the louvers of the window. The boy climbed a stool and said from inside, ‘my father has killed my mother and taken her away.’”

She said she reported the case at the Oworonshoki Police Station, where she was told that the suspect had already reported that his wife committed suicide by taking local insecticide, Sniper.

Jonathan said after making her statement, she left the station.

PUNCH Metro was told that Olaoluwa had already deposited the body of his wife in the Gbagada General Hospital mortuary and had allegedly gone to obtain court documents to enable him to bury her.

Our correspondent learnt that he was asked to return to the police station for a certain document, which led to his arrest based on his mother-in-law’s complaint.

The suspect was said to have been transferred to the State Criminal Investigation and Intelligence Department, Yaba.

However, the couple’s three children were said to have been taken to a family friend, a policeman, who lived in Agric, in the Ikorodu area.

Due to the insistence of the mother-in-law, the police were said to have demanded the release of the couple’s first child, Richard, for interrogation.

In a meeting at the SCIID, Yaba, Richard was alleged to have given an account of how his mother was allegedly murdered by his father.

The police reportedly ordered the removal of the corpse from the Gbagada General Hospital mortuary to the morgue of the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital, Ikeja.

The victim’s mother, Jonathan, who claimed to have visited the mortuary, said Maureen’s body had machete cuts and other torture marks.

She said, “My daughter, who worked as the manager of my chemical company had, about a week to the incident, complained that her husband said we would soon see her obituary.

“I sent my eldest daughter to accompany her to the house to know what happened. The man  begged and said he was only joking. He said he really loved his wife. I insisted that she pack out of the house.

“She was in my house for three days before she said she wanted to return home because her children’s school would be having a cultural party. She left and went to the party with her husband on Saturday. It was that night that she was brutalised and killed by the husband. From what we saw in the mortuary, she had blood in her nostrils and deep cuts in her hands and legs.”

The victim’s mother asked that Maureen’s three children, namely, Richard, five; Henry, three; and Omowunmi, six months, be released to her.

The policeman with the couple’s two children, Ajisafe, said he believed Olaoluwa did not kill his wife.

He explained that the suspect’s aged mother handed over the children to him for safekeeping.

The 83-year-old mother of the suspect, Florence Adejo, also denied that her son murdered Maureen.

She said, “He came to knock on the door of my house late that night. He fell on the ground and started weeping and lamenting that his wife had destroyed him. A crowd gathered in front of the house where I am the landlady. They tried to console him. He said his wife took Sniper. He said he thought it was a joke until their son, Richard, went to bring the container of the insecticide.

“She was taken to a private hospital where she was initially rejected before she was taken to the general hospital where she died. I was told her mother sells the insecticide and she brought it home for mosquitoes. Why she decided to drink it is what is beyond my understanding. My son said they didn’t have any disagreement between them and she was not mentally ill.”

The Police Public Relations Officer, SP Chike Oti, said investigations were ongoing into the incident.
He said, “The man came to report that his wife committed suicide. The DPO put some questions to him. We thought we should investigate further to know what really happened because there are some doubts we need to clear in the matter. The police are not accepting the claim of suicide hook, line, and sinker. The matter is at the SCIID and investigations are ongoing.”

Latest Reality Blog is a legal blog where you are updated on online latest news, gist, entertainment, events, motivational text, and genue articles.



President Muhammadu Buhari on Monday said the nation’s minimum wage should be anchored on social justice and equity.

He said the government must aim to go above the basic social protection floor for all Nigerian workers based on the ability of each tier of government to pay.

Buhari said this while inaugurating the 30-member National Minimum Wage Committee at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

The tripartite committee chaired by a former Minister of Housing, Ms. Ama People, is saddled with the responsibility of negotiating a new National Minimum Wage for Nigerian workers.

The President said, “The subject of a national minimum wage for the federation is within the Exclusive Legislative List of the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria (as amended).

“Accordingly, we should aim to go above the basic social protection floor for all Nigerian workers based on the ability of each tier of government to pay.

“I say this because minimum wage is the minimum amount of compensation an employee must receive for putting in his or her labour and as such should be anchored on social justice and equity.”

Buhari disclosed that government’s decision after considering the final recommendation of the committee would be sent as an executive bill to the National Assembly for it to undergo appropriate legislative scrutiny before passage into law.

He said the inclusion of state governors and private sector employers in the committee was meant to ensure ease of implementation of a new minimum wage nationwide.

The President said he was hopeful that the principles of full consultation with social partners and their direct participation would be utilised by the committee, bearing in mind the core provisions of the International Labour Organisation Minimum Wage Fixing Convention No. 131 and Minimum Wage Fixing Machinery Convention No.26 (ratified by Nigeria).

Accordingly, Buhari said conditions of genuine social dialogue should prevail in the spirit of “tripartism and collective bargaining agreements.”

“I therefore enjoin you all to collectively bargain in good faith, have mutual recognition for each other and always in a spirit of give and take.

“The committee is expected to complete its deliberations and submit its report and recommendations as soon as possible to enable other requisite machinery to be set in motion for implementation of a new National Minimum Wage,” he added.

While underscoring the importance of the exercise, the President described the Nigerian worker as a vital element in the growth and development of the country.

He noted that the last Minimum Wage Instrument had expired, adding that it was in recognition of the need to ensure a fair and decent living wage that the Federal Government set in motion necessary mechanism for the inauguration of the committee.

He recalled that during the period following the increase in petrol pump price in May 2016, a technical committee was established to examine and make recommendations to government on the measures to be adopted to cushion the envisaged painful effects of the increase on workers and the Nigerian populace at large.

He expressed the hope that the committee’s recommendation would be consensual and generally acceptable.

“I therefore urge you to amicably consider the issue of a National Minimum Wage and all matters that are ancillary to it with thoroughness and concern not only for the welfare of our workforce but the effect on the country’s economy,” he said.

Latest Reality Blog is a legal blog where you are updated on online latest news, gist, entertainment, events, motivational text, and genue articles.

A female lawyer, Yewande Oyediran, who was accused of killing her husband, Lowo, was on Monday sentenced to seven years’ imprisonment by Justice Muntar Abimbola of the Oyo State High Court, sitting in Ibadan, Oyo State, for manslaughter.

The former worker of the Department of Public Prosecutions in the Oyo State Ministry of Justice was accused of killing her husband with a knife after a disagreement on February 2, 2016, at their residence in the Akobo area of Ibadan. The disagreement was said to have arisen after Yewande accused her France-based husband, Lowo, of infidelity.

The offence was said to be contrary to Section 316 and punishable under Section 319 of the Law of Oyo State.

She was subsequently arrested and arraigned, but she pleaded not guilty to the murder charge preferred against her.

According to Justice Abimbola, her seven year jail sentence was to start running from the day of her arrest.

In justifying the sentence, the court said the convict was charged on a murder count by the prosecution and that although evidence pointed to her as the killer of her husband, witnesses presented by the defence counsel failed to establish the intent behind the killing.

The court held that going by the relationship between Yewande and Lowo as husband and wife, the killing was done without intent.

The court observed that from the evidence before it, the couple, who had no child together since they got married in 2014, constantly engaged in domestic violence.

The judge explained that the crime was not premeditated or intentional and that it was as a result of marital disagreement between a husband and his wife, adding that it was a case of manslaughter and not murder, which could have attracted death penalty.

Yewande’s lead counsel, Leye Adepoju, pleaded for lenient judgement after the judge established that the killing was not premeditated.

Adepoju argued that a long sentence would ruin the accused’s life, having suffered greatly as a result of what happened.

He also asked the judge to send Yewande to a correctional facility where she would be reformed, instead of a prison.

In passing the judgement, Justice Abimbola said, “All parties agreed that Lowo was stabbed. The death was not a natural one; the stabbing was not a self-inflicted one; the stabbing was not an act of God; and the defendant was the only direct witness. But the prosecution failed to carry out forensic test on the knife to ascertain whether it was the one tendered that was actually used in the stabbing or not.

“I also reject the injury on the deceased being a result of intervention from a third party. Who then is the assailant? The assailant is the defendant. She did not deny this in her statement. Can we say that the deceased stabbed himself or it was an act of God? The defendant, having been seen with a knife, and the deceased, having been stabbed with a pair of scissors earlier, and the fact that the defendant was last seen with the deceased and was holding a knife, could be said to be direct and positive circumstantial evidence.

“I cannot but hold that the defendant was the attacker. She accepted that a knife was involved, and there was no serious mark of injury on her, but only a bump on her head; there was no abnormal bleeding on her. Her clothes were intact. I can rightly infer that the defendant caused the injury after the encounter of fight. The defendant unlawfully caused the death of the deceased and I so, find her guilty of manslaughter.

“Having considered the plea of leniency from the defence counsel and the plea of allocatus with the series of evidence before me, I hereby sentence the defendant to seven years’ imprisonment starting from the time of her arrest.”

The private prosecutor engaged by the state Ministry of Justice to prosecute the case, Mr. Akinyele Sanyaolu, said after the judgement was pronounced that he was satisfied with the sentence.

“I am satisfied with the judgement, but I don’t know whether the state will be happy or not. The court has really done a great job. The court was able to establish between murder and manslaughter in matrimonial matters, and that was why it came to the issue of intention, which was why the court didn’t sentence the accused to death because they were married and the law presumed that she did not have the intention to kill her husband,” he added.