The Nigerian Army on Thursday inaugurated a General Court Martial at
the Mogadishu Cantonment at Asokoro in Abuja, to try
97 soldiers for
alleged mutiny.
NAN reports that 15 of the soldiers are senior
officers and that Lagos-based lawyer, Mr Femi Falana, is appearing for
68 of the accused soldiers.
They are also being charged with
assault, Absence Without Leave (AWOL), house breaking, conduct
prejudicial to good orders, service discipline and other offences.
The court was inaugurated after none of the accused soldiers raised objection to the constitution of the 13-man panel.
The
President of the court, Brig.-Gen. Musa Yusuf, in an inaugural speech,
assured the accused soldiers that the court would be guided by the
principles of fair-hearing and justice.
“You shall be given the facilities and conditions necessary for the proper defence of your cases.
“In
line with the provisions of section 35(2) of the 1999 Constitution (as
amended), every one of you shall be presumed innocent by the court until
proved otherwise.
“Let me assure you that the GCM will base its decisions and findings only on the facts presented before it,” Yusuf said.
He
appealed to journalists, in the interest of national security, the
accused soldiers, patriotism and justice, to be fair and objective in
reporting the proceedings of the court.
Speaking to newsmen after
the inauguration, Falana said he reposed confidence in members of the
general court martial to do justice.
“I have taken part in a
number of courts of this nature and even where we lost, we have to go on
appeal and we succeeded; so, there is no cause for alarm,” he said.
The trial of the soldiers was adjourned until 16 October.
It will be recalled that a similar panel had, on 16 September, sentenced 12 soldiers to death by firing squad for mutiny.
Source:PM News
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