Kirikiri maximum security prisons |
A judge has urged state
governors to sign the death warrant of over 1,600 inmates on death sentence in
order to decongest the prisons.
News
Agency of Nigeria report continues:
The
Chief Judge of Delta State, Marshal Umukoro, spoke on Wednesday in Ibadan
during the 2017 Aquinas’ Day colloquium of Dominican Institute.
At
the lecture titled “The Judiciary and Criminal Justice System: Odds and Ends,”
Mr. Umukoro said that recent statistics from the National Human Rights
Commission, NHRC, indicated that no fewer than 1,612 inmates are on death
sentence in Nigeria prisons.
The
chief judge said that signing the death warrant would reduce prison congestion,
and served as deterrent to others.
Local
and international organizations such have Amnesty international have repeatedly
called for the abolition of the death penalty. Death penalty is however still
legal in Nigeria where it can used to punish people convicted of crimes like
murder and armed robbery.
Last
week, a court in Abeokuta, the Ogun State capital, sentenced a man to
death for stealing a motorcycle, phone, and some money from a victim who
he also inflicted serious body injuries on.
Before
executions can be carried out, however, the death sentence must be approved by
the state governor where the judgement was issued. Some state governors,
however, use their prerogative to commute the death sentences to prison terms.
On
Wednesday, the Delta State chief judge also called for synergy between the
police, prisons and the courts in order to boost justice administration.
“Some
criminal cases have been hanging without progress for over a year in some
courts due to transfer of Investigative Police Officer (IPO) or as a result of
IPO going on short course.
“Some
courts too do not cooperate with the police and the prison to expeditiously
dispose of criminal cases.
“This
does not only lead to unnecessary waste of time, but also greatly affects the disposition
of the accused person and the witnesses who look forward to seeing the end of
the case,’’ the chief judge said.
Mr. Umukoro said that more fora should be organized from time to time with the aim of sensitizing various relevant stakeholders in the criminal justice sector on the need for mutual co-operation.
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