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Nyanya bomb blast suspect, Aminu Sodiq Ogwuche

Trial of ‎Aminu Sodiq Ogwuche and six others charged with complicity in the April 14, 2014's bomb blasts at Nyanya Bus Stop, near Abuja, has been adjourned to June 2nd and 3rd to enable the trial court determine whether the suspects made statements voluntarily or did under torture.
The trial judge adjourned the matter to conduct trial-within-trial after the accused’s lawyers objected to the admissibility of alleged confessional statements of the accused persons
‎Justice Mohammed adjourned till June 2nd and 3rd, 2015 to commence the trial-with-in trial in the matter to ascertain the voluntariness of the confessional statements of the accused persons.
The accused persons, Aminu Sadiq Ogwuche, Ahmed Abubakar, Mohammed Ishaq, Ya’u Saidu (alias Kofar Rama); Anas Isa, Adamu Yusuf and Nasir Abubakar, are facing terrorism-related charges.
At the resumed hearing of the matter on Wedenesday, the prosecution counsel, Mohammed Diri, sought to tender the statements of the accused persons through the first prosecution witness, but the accused persons' counsel led by Ahmed Raji, SAN, objected.

Raji, in his submission, told the court that the first accused person, Aminu Sadiq Ogwuche, was beaten and severely tortured before his statement was obtained.
In the circumstance, he argued that the statement was not voluntarily given and hence, should not be admitted as evidence by the court.
In the same vein, counsel to the second accused person, Abdul Mohammed, urged the court not to admit the statement of his client as it was obtained under severe torture.
Mohammed then prayed the court to conduct trial-with-in trial to ascertain the voluntariness or otherwise of the statements before the prosecution was allow to tender them.
Counsel to the rest accused persons aligned themselves with the submissions of Raji and Abdul Mohammed and prayed the court to order trial with-in-trial in the matter.
Responding, the prosecution counsel, Diri, urged the judge to discountenance the submissions of the defence counsel, adding that the statements of all the accused persons were voluntarily obtained, contrary to their submissions.
It will be recalled that the Federal Government on Tuesday said it would tender 37 documentary evidence and call five witnesses in the trial of the Nyanya bomb blasts suspects.
The first prosecution witness, an investigator with the Department of State Security (DSS) had already told the court that ‎he knew Ogwuche in 2011 when he was deported from the United Kingdom (UK) for belonging to a terrorism group there.
He also told the court how he obtained the statements of all the accused persons at various time, adding also that the accused persons gave their statements voluntarily.