The Department of State Services, DSS, has re-arraigned Husseni Ismaila (aka Maitangaran), the alleged mastermind of the 2014 multiple bomb attacks in Kano, at the Federal High Court, Abuja.
When the matter was called, the prosecuting counsel, Mr E.A. Aduda, told the court that the DSS had filed an amended four count charge against the defendant.
He prayed the court to read the charge to the defendant to take his plea.
The charges read:
- “That you Husseni Ismaila, alias Maitangaran, 34-year-old male, professed to be a member of Boko Haram, a terrorist group, therefore contravening provisions of the Terrorism Prevention Act 2013, and punishable under the same act.
- “That you Husseni Ismaila, alias Maitangaran, 34-year-old male in 2014, directly participated in an act of terrorism and made a video message confessing to the crime of bombing the Kano Central Mosque.
- “This led to the death of many Nigerians, including police personnel. The act contravened Section 1(2) (8) of the Terrorism Prevention Act, 2013, and is punishable under the same act.”
Ismaila, the defendant, pleaded not guilty to all four count charges.
The prosecuting counsel prayed the court to proceed with the trial in view of the not guilty plea of the defendant.
The defence counsel, Peter Dajang, however, told the court that the trial should not go on because the prosecution had flouted a valid order of the court.
According to him, the court on December 6, 2021, ordered the prosecution to transfer the defendant from its custody to the Kuje Correctional Centre to enable his lawyers and family members have access to him but the DSS was yet to obey the order as the defendant was still in its custody.
He added that the prosecution did not appeal the order when it was made by the court, and further argued that the court could not sit on appeal over its own ruling.
Dajang further argued that the court lacked the jurisdiction to entertain the application of the prosecution to vary the order on the grounds that it was made on December 6, 2021 and the prosecution had only six days to apply for a variation.
His words: “If the prosecution had intended to make an application to vary, they ought to have done that within time which is six days.
“Looking at the application which is seven months after the order was made, there is no prayer seeking the leave of court to file the application out of time.
“Also we submit that an order of court is a final decision of that court. When the order was made, parties were represented.
“The proper thing to have done was to appeal the decision and not to ask the court to sit on appeal over its decision, more so that the time for filing an appeal has long passed.”
The prosecuting counsel, however, told the court that the order was yet to be complied with because he had filed an application praying the court to vary the order.
The judge adjourned the matter till January 25, 2024 to rule on the application to vary the order it made that the defendant be transferred to Kuje.
Also, he fixed February 7, 2024, for continuation of the substantive matter.