Tuesday, October 21, 2008

'Innocent' Nigerians on Death Row

'Innocent' Nigerians on death row

Hundreds of prisoners on Nigeria's death rows did not have a fair trial and may be innocent, the human-rights group Amnesty International says.

It says many confessions are extracted under torture and people are sentenced to death on that evidence alone.

An Amnesty report calls on Nigeria's government to halt all executions.

"The judicial system is riddled with flaws that can have devastating consequences," Amnesty's Aster van Kregten said.

Prosecutor Williams Ashu admitted the report had identified real concerns.

"We're working on trying to resolve the problem," told the BBC's Focus on Africa programme.

Overstretched'

Amnesty's Mr van Kregten said in a statement: "It is truly horrifying to think of how many innocent people may have been executed and may still be executed."

According to the 78-page report, almost 80% of inmates in Nigerian prisons say they have been beaten, threatened with weapons or tortured in police custody.

It says that after a prisoner has been hanged, other death-row prisoners are forced to clean the gallows.

"The police are overstretched and under-resourced. Because of this, they rely heavily on confessions to 'solve' crimes - rather than on expensive investigations," Ms van Kregten said.

Mr Ashu agreed that more needed to be done to train and equip the police force.

"The work they are doing is very hard work that some of them are not adequately trained for it," he said.

Ledap, a Nigerian legal organisation which co-authored the report, says that under Nigerian law, confessions under torture cannot be used as evidence in court.

"Judges know that there is widespread torture by the police - and yet they continue to sentence suspects to death based on these confessions, leading to many possibly innocent people being sentenced to death," Ledap's Chino Obiagwu said.

Bribes

Amnesty says that death-penalty trials can take more than 10 years to conclude, with some appeals waiting for 14 years or more.

"I am not an armed robber. I am a shoemaker. I bought a [motorcycle] from someone who stole it," death row inmate Jafar, 57, told Amnesty.

He filed an appeal 24 years ago, but he is still waiting for it to be heard as his case file has gone missing.

"The police asked me to be a witness. They got the man who sold [me] the [motorcycle] but shot him to death. After that, I became the suspect."

In the report, many prisoners said that when the police picked them up, they asked for money to release them.

Those who could not pay were treated as suspected armed robbers, they say.

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/world/africa/7681519.stm

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