
A suspected mastermind of the October 1,
2010 bombing in Abuja, Charles Okah, caused a row, by attempting to
commit suicide during Tuesday’s proceedings in his trial before a
Federal High Court in Abuja.
Okah, after ending an emotion-filled
comment about his protracted trial during the court session, grabbed a
nearby chair with which he made repeated but futile attempts to break a
window in order to create an opening through which he could jump down
from the courtroom located on the third floor of the five-storey
building.
His frustration on Tuesday was ignited by his lawyer’s absence in court.
Defence lawyers – Mr. Samuel Zibiri and
O.O. Otemu – were provided by the Federal Government-owned Legal Aid
Council, after Okah in October last year, dispensed with the services of
a Lagos lawyer, Mr. Festus Keyamo, whose law firm had defended him
since the case started in 2010.
Okah, who is standing trial along with
Obi Nwabueze for terrorism charges arising from the October 1, 2010
bombing incident, sought the permission of the trial judge, Justice
Gabriel Kolawole, to speak after it was discovered that his lawyer was
not in court.
After the judge granted him permission
to speak from the dock, Okah in an emotional outburst expressed
frustration about his long incarceration and the attendant deprivation
of the opportunity to cater for his family.
Okah said, “I have been incarcerated for about five years now, and I have a family to cater for.
“My children would grow up without feeling the warmth of their father. I’m tired of this endless trial.”
It took the intervention of lawyers and
some other persons who were in the courtroom for their respective cases
to stop his attempt to commit suicide after his emotion-laden speech.
The chair with which he attempted to
break the window was collected from him after he was overpowered and
Justice Kolawole promptly adjourned the case till October 20.
The lead prosecuting counsel, Dr. Alex Izinyon (SAN) , was in court during the Tuesday’s dramatic event.
Okah, is a brother to former leader of
the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta, Henry Okah, who is
already serving jail terms in South Africa for the bombing near the
Eagle Square, Abuja, on October 1, 2010 in which about 12 persons were
said to have died.
The prosecution had a major breakthrough in the case when it called its first witness on April 23, 2015.
For over four years, Okah and his legal team deployed a flurried interlocutory applications which hindered progress in the case.
At the opening of his case, Izinyon
called the first prosecution witness, Mr. John Afolabi, who is an
exhibit keeper at the Department of State Services, and through whom 14
exhibits were tendered and admitted by the court as exhibits on Tuesday.
The witness said during his
evidence-in-chief that the items were retrieved by DSS investigators at
“scenes of investigation” into the bombing incident.
The first exhibit admitted by the trial
judge, Justice Gabriel Kolawole, was a list of items which Afolabi said
were retrieved during the investigation conducted into the bombing by
the DSS.
Other exhibits were the 13 items
contained in the list. The list comprised an old Mazda 626 car with
registration number LAGOS BY 318 FKJ, military wear and camping
materials.
Sourced from Punch NIgeria.
Sourced from Punch NIgeria.
No comments:
Post a Comment