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Rauf Aregbesola, Nigeria's Minister of Interior |
Minister of Interior, Rauf Aregbesola
yesterday requested governors to sign the death warrants of convicts on death
row who have exhausted all avenues of appeal to free up space in the nation’s
correctional facilities, ThisDay reports.
The minister who made the plea while
speaking in Osogbo, Osun state, when inaugurating the newly constructed
headquarters of the Nigerian Correctional Service (NCS), Daily
Trust reported, said the nation’s correctional facilities are being
stretched by “an overpopulation capacity of 18 percent” — with facilities built
to serve 57,278 inmates currently holding 68,747 inmates, urging that to remedy
the decongestion, convicts on death row who have used up all means of appeal
must be hastened to the gallow.
According to Aregbesola, while the governors could free some condemned convicts on compassionate grounds due to old age or illness other inmates that have demonstrated exceptionally good behaviour could also be released or have their sentences commuted to life or specific terms in jail.
The minister disclosed that out of the
3,008 condemned criminals awaiting executions in Nigerian prisons, 2,952 were
males and 56 females, adding that 68,747 inmates, comprising of 67,422 males
and 1,325 females, are now been detained in facilities meant for 57,278
detainees.
He also noted that 50,992 inmates,
representing 74 % of the total population of inmates in the nation’s custodial
centres were awaiting trial inmates while only 17,755 inmates which is a mere
26 % were the actual convicts, Legit reports.
However, the minister submitted that the
federal government would build more correctional facilities to cover the six
geo-political zones of the country, in addition to the 3,000 high-capacity
custodial centre it is building in Kano and Rivers states, as well as Abuja. This
new additions, according to him would decongest the overpopulated correctional
centres to enable them play their reformative roles.
Recall in 2016, 2017 and 2018 the media
published related stories about State Governors in Nigeria allegedly refusing
to sign death warrants of condemned inmates in the countries correctional
centres which has been adjudged by many as a clear alternative to decongest
Nigeria’s correctional facilities.
·
The Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Mr
Abubakar Malami (SAN), has said the number of death row inmates in prisons
nationwide has reached 1,832, contributing to the congestion in the detention
facilities, The
PUNCH reports in 2018. According to the story, Malami, who disclosed this in his report of the activities of the
Federal Ministry of Justice for the three years under his watch, said death row
inmates who had exhausted their rights of appeal continued to contribute to the
overcrowding of the prisons due to governors’ reluctance to sign their death
warrants. He said in the report which he signed in April this year and a copy
of which this newspaper holds, that his ministry was preparing a memorandum to
be sent to the National Economic Council to seek its intervention. He stated,
“A major challenge presently being faced in efforts to decongest the prisons is
the reluctance of state governors to sign death warrants of condemned inmates
who have exhausted their appeals, thereby contributing to overcrowding.
· Nothing can be more traumatizing
than waiting for the hangman, Daily Trust reported in 2017 with the headline ‘Why
Govs Don’t Want To Kill Condemned Prisoners’. According to the report, when in 2013, the then Governor of Edo
State, Adams Oshiomhole, signed the death warrants of some condemned prisoners,
sources revealed that the condemned prisoners screamed and wailed on the way to
the gallows. But just as executions get emotional, during the military era, it
was a show as condemned prisoners were publicly shot, with crowds converged –
on Bar Beach in Lagos for instance – to witness the spectacle. Edo State is in
the lead of executions in Nigeria. In December 2016, the newly sworn in
Governor Godwin Obaseki signed death warrants on three condemned prisoners.
Human rights organization Amnesty International was unhappy, saying Nigeria
disregarded a moratorium not to undertake executions for seven years. However,
former President Goodluck Jonathan in 2013 urged state governors to sign death
warrants, even as his then Attorney-General and Minister of Justice, Mohammed
Adoke was against the death penalty.
·
According to a story by The
Nation 2016 captioned ‘Death
penalty: Who’ll sign the warrants?’, an
estimated 1,400 people are on death row in Nigeria. In several instances,
governors are unwilling to sign the death warrants. THE prisons are filled with
condemned criminals. They die many times before their death because they are
uncertain of the time the hangman would come for them. But, in a country where
torture is still used to extract confessions, and where the process of
investigation is flawed, many on the death row may be innocent, leading to
calls for abolition of the death penalty. Perhaps, the uncertainties in the
processes that lead to convictions explain why some governors are unwilling to
sign death warrants. No fewer than 1,400 people are on death row, with many of
them waiting for the hangman for years. The only exception is the reported
execution of three death row inmates at Oko Prisons in Benin City. Ogbomoro
Omoregie, Apostle Igene and Mark Omosowhota, were said to have been executed on
December 23 at about 6am. They had been sentenced to death by military
tribunals under the Robbery and Firearms (Special Provisions) Decree 1971 as
amended, in which there is no right of appeal.
- In October 2018 The Punch carried a story stating that ‘An advocacy group, Human Rights Law Service, has said there is no longer any justification for Nigerian judges to continue to pass death sentence on convicts in the country. This, according to HURILAWS, which is being spearheaded by a former President of the Nigerian Bar Association, Dr Olisa Agbakoba (SAN), is because state governors, who have the power to sign the death warrants for death row inmates, are shying away from such responsibility. The group, quoting Amnesty International, said there were no fewer than 2,285 death row inmates languishing in different prisons across the country, noting that in 2017 alone, a total of 621 persons were sentenced to death by the courts with no governor willing to sign their death warrants. The group said, “In practice, since May 29, 1999, most state governors have failed, refused or neglected to sign warrant of execution. The result is that death sentences are handed down by the courts and are not carried out.’
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