Wasila Tasi’u, from a poor, rural family could face the death penalty if convicted in a case that has outraged rights activists who say a girl who married a man more than twice her age should be treated as a victim, not a criminal.
According to Vanguard, Prosecutor Lamido Abba Soron-Dinki’s first witness was a seven-year-old girl identified as Hamziyya, who was living in the same house as Tasi’u and her husband Umar Sani, when the child-bride allegedly laced his food with rat poison.
Hamziyya was identified as
the sister of Sani’s “co-wife”, referring to a woman the deceased farmer had
married previously.The seven-year-old testified that Tasi’u gave her 80 naira
($0.45, 0.36 euros) to buy rat poison from a local shop on April 5, the day
Sani died.
“She said rats were
disturbing her in her room,” Hamziyya told the court.
The prosecution alleges
that Tasi’u instead put the poison in the food she had prepared for a
post-marriage celebration, perhaps because she regretted her decision to marry
Sani.
Hamziyya’s testimony was
supported by Abuwa Yusuf, a shopkeeper in the town of Unguwar Yansoro, who
confirmed selling the poison to the child.
Sani’s neighbour,
30-year-old farmer Abdulrahim Ibrahim, testified that he was offered the food
allegedly prepared by Tasi’u.
“When he brought the food
(I) noticed some sandy-like particles, black in colour,”
He ate four of the small
balls made of bean paste but “was not comfortable with the taste”, he said,
adding: “It was only Umar (Sani) who continued eating.”
He said he later saw Sani
in the garden visibly ill and took him home.While trying to care for Sani, he
learnt that three others who ate the food had died suddenly.
Prosecutors allege that
Tasiu’s poison food killed four people and have joined all the reported deaths
into one murder charge.
Judge Mohammed Yahaya,
sitting at the Gezawa High Court, has entered a plea of not guilty for Tasi’u,
who refused to respond at a previous hearing on October 30 when the charges
were put to her.
The judge has rejected
defence applications for the case to be transferred to a juvenile court.
Poor girl
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