The High Court of the Federal Capital Territory, Abuja, on Monday, convicted and sentenced Maryam Sanda to death by hanging for killing  her husband, Bilyaminu Bello.

Delivering judgment, Justice Yusuf Halilu  said “every available evidence”  had proved that Maryam “fatally” stabbed her husband to death in Abuja on November 19, 2017.

Justice  Halilu said, “The concept of justice is tripled in nature, justice to the deceased, Bilyaminu, whose life was cut short in a brutal manner and whose innocent blood cries to high heavens for vengeance, justice to the perpetrators of the crime, who cannot be denied the benefit of the procedure ordained by God in the Garden of Eden that is fair hearing or fair trial, justice to  society whose membership has been depleted by one.

the couple

“I am left in no doubt that the defendant has not just failed but woefully failed to explain the death of the deceased bearing in mind her discredited colourfully dressed evidence.

“I am more than convinced that the defendant fatally stabbed the deceased with the same knife she threatened him with which she has also mentioned in her statement to the police with the full knowledge was not just probable or certain.

“When I come to terms with the fact that the person involved here is the accused person’s lawfully married husband and who has a baby with him at the time of his gruesome murder.

“This is not just sad and unfortunate but indeed wicked. While I am in sympathy with the position of the accused person, a young mother, two children, whose father by her inhuman action sent him to an early grave, my sentiment will not go far to free the accused person from the long arm of the law. After all, it is indeed in law that sentiment has no place in judicial process, particularly when the sentiment is against the law.

“Clearly, with every available evidence before me, I have come to the irresistible conclusion that you, Maryam Sanda,  are  guilty of the murder of Bilyaminu, your husband, who you indeed killed in cold blood. You are hereby convicted for the murder of Bilyaminu as charged.

“In view of the fact that you were the only one last seen with him and now that your story of ‘sisha’ bottle has been discredited beyond doubt that same was broken after the death of Bilyaminu, I ask you both questions in view of the evidence of PW1, PW2, PW3, PW4 and exhibit A,B,C and G, which are all unanimous on the injuries inflicted on the deceased. And the fact that you threatened to cut the private parts of the deceased severally.”

The police  on November 24, 2017 arraigned Maryam  alongside her mother, Maimuna Aliyu, brother Aliyu Sanda and their house help Sadiya Aminu on two counts of culpable homicide and an ancillary offence.

Maryam was a  nursing mother and  also three-month pregnant  when  she was arraigned.

She was delivered of her second baby girl during  her two years and two months’ trial.

The prosecution in the first count accused Maryam of stabbing her husband.

The incident was said to have occurred in the couple’s apartment at 4 Pakali Close, Wuse 2 Abuja  about 3.50am on November 19, 2017.

The three others were accused of  causing the “evidence of the offence to disappear” by “cleaning the blood from the scene of crime with the intention” of shielding her “from legal punishment.”

On April 4, 2019, Justice Halilu in a ruling on the no-case submission filed by the four defendants after the prosecution closed its case with six witnesses discharged the three other defendants but ruled that Maryam had a case to answer.

Maryam, who  had been attending the trial since November 2017 having her face covered with a veil, called one other person with herself as the two defence witnesses.

Justice Halilu dismissed her claim that her husband fell on the shards of a broken ‘sisha’ bottle during a fight between them.

Maryam had claimed that a fight broke out between them after she saw the picture of a nude girl on her husband’s phone.

The judge noted from the testimonies of Ibrahim Mohammed, the first prosecution witness and the friend of the deceased and Usman Aliyu, the fourth prosecution witness, who were both in the house before and after police visited there, the ‘sisha bottle’ was only broken after the death of her husband.

The first prosecution witness had earlier witnessed the scuffle between the couple and had to retrieve a knife from Maryam three or  four times, thus  preventing her from carrying out her threat to cut off her husband’s private parts.

“I am fortified by the unshaken evidence of PW1 and PW4 to conclude that the ‘almighty sisha’ bottle was broken and the living room was scattered to serve as a smokescreen, all carefully stage-managed to cover Maryam Sanda’s action,” the judge ruled.

He held that although there was no eyewitness to the incident and there was no confessional statement by anyone admitting to the commission of the crime, there was enough circumstantial evidence pointing to the guilt of Maryam as the killer of her husband.

The judge ruled, “From the totality of the evidence of the defendant, who was the last person to be seen with the deceased when he sustained the injuries that eventually led to his death, coupled with the surrounding circumstances that led to the death of the deceased, evidence of PW1, PW2, DW1 And DW2 (the accused) as reproduced in the body of this judgment, it is now very irresistibly clear that the defendant, fatally injured the deceased by stabbing him in the heart region, thigh, back, using  the same knife which she had threatened to use on the deceased with the premeditated intention of killing him.”

Maryam, who appeared in court wearing a black flowing dress with a black veil covering her face, ran out of the courtroom through the door next to the dock  weeping profusely when Justice  Halilu pronounced her guilty.

Her mother and other relatives  broke down in tears.

In the middle of the confusion the defence lawyer, Regina Okoti-Eboh, attempted to make a plea for allocutus (plea for mercy), but the judge said he needed to rise for the courtroom to restore to calm.

Her father was also pacing up and down the courtroom and intermittently seen with her daughter trying to pacify her.

Justice Halilu  said the offence for which the convict was convicted being one based on Section 221 of the Penal Code, there would be no room for allocutus.

“It has been said that thou, shall not kill. Whoever kills in cold blood shall die in cold blood.

“Maryam Sanda should reap what she has sown. It is blood for blood.

“She is hereby sentenced to death by hanging until she dies,” the judge said.

Source:Punch