Talal Ahmed Roda, one of the three Lebanese prosecuted by the Federal Government in experience of the armoury discovered in Kano, was on Friday jailed forever by an Abuja Federal High Court. But another two accused persons – the co-owner of Amigo Supermarket, Mustapha Fawaz, and Abdallah Tanini, were set free following the court ruled that the prosecution did not prove the 16-count charge brought against them.
The 16-count charge filed against the three accused persons and two business concerns – Amigo Supermarket and Wonderland Amusement Park Resort – involved components of terrorism, money laundering and miscellaneous offences.
In
the judgment which lasted hrs, Justice Ademola Adeniyi held that the
prosecution was incapable of prove the terrorism and money laundering
areas of the charge against some of the accused persons. However, the
3rd accused person, Roda, who was resident in the house situated on No. 3
Gaya Road, Kano, where in actuality the armoury was discovered within
an underground cell by the State Security Service, was convicted for
conspiring to illegally import and store prohibited weapons.
Roda,
a Lebanese who was born in Nigeria, was a squatter in the house that
was owned by another Lebanese, Abdalhassan Tahir, an in-law to Fawaz,
the very first accused person.
Justice
Ademola held that the prosecution presented ample evidence to prove
that Roda conspired with Tahir, who is currently at large, to import and
store the weapons in the house on No. 3 Gaya Road, Kano.
Moreover,
Roda had admitted, in statements tendered in court by the prosecution,
that he serviced the weapons, which were stored in coolers within an
underground bunker.
Specifically,
Roda was convicted on counts 7 and 9 of the 16-count charge, which
accused him of conspiring together with his landlord, Tahir, Ghazi
Kassim and others at large to illegally import and store the prohibited
weapons at No. 3 Gaya Road, Kano.
The
said weapons include 21 rocket propelled grenades with chargers, one
rocket propelled grenade launcher, 16 RPC chargers, four landmines, 11
anti rockets (16mm), two mortars (81mm), 76 military type hand grenades,
17 AK47 rifles, 10,921 bits of AK47 ammunition and nine PPK pistols.
Others
are one PPK pistol magazine, one sub-machine gun, 103 parcels of TNT
slabs each containing three pieces TNT, 334 ammunition, 80 bits of
explosives initiators, 18 hand grenades, two improvised explosive
devices, and four bits of Walter IPK launchers.
Counts 7 and 9 – on which Roda was convicted – which concerned the illegal importation and storage of the prohibited weapons, are offences contrary to section 1 (14)(a)(i) of Miscellaneous Offence Act, CAP M17, LFN 2004, both of which attract life sentences.
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