Editorial
Aluu 4: Justice At Last?
After nearly five years of legal hiccups leading to palpable suspense among concerned families, friends and sympathisers, justice seems to have finally arrived for the four University of Port Harcourt (Uniport) students, now widely celebrated as the Aluu 4, who were brutally lynched in the morning of October 5, 2012 by an irate mob at Omuokiri-Aluu in Ikwerre Local Government Area of Rivers State.
This followed the recent ruling of a Port Harcourt High Court, presided over by Justice Letam Nyordee, which sentenced to death three persons, including a police sergeant, for their roles and complicity in the extra-judicial killing of the four Uniport students. The convicts are Police Sergeant Lucky Orji, Ikechukwu Louis Amadi and David Chinasa (alias Kapoon). The four other suspects charged along with them were discharged and acquitted for lack of sufficient evidence.
The Tide recalls that a total of 12 suspects were initially arraigned for the murders, but based mainly on the report of the state’s Director of Public Prosecution (DPP) and ample graphic evidence, five of them, including the traditional ruler of Omuokiri-Aluu, Alhaji Hassan Welewa, were eventually discharged and acquitted earlier in January this year.
The trial judge, in his ruling, said the death sentences on the three condemned men were based on diligent prosecution and confessional statements made by the convicts which, according to him, corroborated the evidence in the video clips that were tendered by the prosecution during the trial. He said the convicts had, by their dastardly acts, violated Section 319 (1) of the Criminal Code, Cap. 37, Vol. 2, Laws of Rivers State of Nigeria, 1999.
According to the learned judge, human life was precious and that nobody can be justified for killing a fellow human being.
Justice Nyordee equally blamed men of the Joint Military Task Force (JTF), Aluu Police Post and a reinforcement team from Isiokpo Divisional Police Headquarters for not mobilising on time to avert the tragedy.
The slain Uniport undergraduates, namely Ugonna Obuzor, Lloyd Toku-Mike, Tekena Elkannah and Chiadika Biringa, whose video footage went viral almost instantly, were said to have been on an early morning mission to recover a long overdue debt from an elusive off-campus student when the latter, rather than pay up his debt, allegedly raised a false alarm, branding them robbers. The crowd that quickly assembled later gave way to a willing execution squad that was apparently not interested in any pleas of innocence and so, began the dehumanising acts of stripping naked, beating, clubbing, gun-butting and eventual torching of the four promising lads.
Going by the sensational nature and slow process of the murder trial, the recent pronouncement would hopefully serve to assuage the feelings and also heal the psychological trauma inflicted on the families of the deceased, particularly the female student who helplessly witnessed the savage killing of her sibling. Already, two of the affected parents, Messrs Toku Mike and Messiah Obuzor, have hailed the judgement as one that has not only vindicated the slain boys but also pulled the tag of criminals off them.
The Tide salutes the courage of Justice Nyordee in accepting to sit over the Aluu 4 case when others would readily have searched for whatever excuses to wash their hands off such a high-profile and sensational murder case.
We agree with the judge that although the lives of these students are irreparable losses to their families and the larger society, the ruling, nevertheless, serves as a deterrent to anybody who may wish to resort to jungle justice when faced with similar circumstances.
We also endorse the verdict as one which has exposed the inefficiency of our security outfits which usually delay and, oftentimes, fail to promptly respond to distress calls until long after an impending tragedy had occurred. We, therefore, implore the nation’s security agencies to be more pro-active and effective in the discharge of their statutory responsibilities and obligations.
The Tide also underscores the role of graphic evidence, particularly video clips, in arriving at the Aluu 4 ruling. Indeed, internet publishing which includes posting of pictures on the Web is already proving to be a veritable tool in justice administration. In fact, with the nagging presence of such video footage on social media platforms, there was hardly any way a good prosecutor would not have had a splendid outing in this matter.
In any case, we pray that the souls of these vindicated young men rest in eternal peace.
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