By Godwin Onyeacholem
The ridiculously lenient sentence recently slapped on Hamisu Bala, also known as Wadume, a broad-spectrum gangster whose specialty is kidnapping for ransom is a travesty of justice on a grand scale. No question. A measly seven-year jail term courtesy of a federal court in Abuja for a desensitized criminal whose atrocious exploits in one single night led to the cold-blooded murder of four persons including three policemen by a band of soldiers who had been hand in glove with him in sowing sorrow in Taraba State and the surrounding areas, must be another disturbing entry in the logbook of judicial charity.
As lawyers are wont to say, justice is three-way traffic: justice for the accused, justice for the state, and justice for society. However, given the shock and horror that have trailed this judgment since its delivery by Justice Binta Nyako, it is doubtful whether it satisfies this doctrine of the trinity about some of the demands of definitive justice.
Background to this disheartening judicatory finale is necessary for a proper understanding of the emotive reaction of the people a punishment considered to be a slap on the wrist and a deliberate, suitably devised scheme that led to this painful outcome.
On the night of August 6, 2019, a crack team of policemen from the intelligence response unit in Abuja led by Felix Aidolije, assistant superintendent of police, traced Wadume to Ibi, an administrative town on the south bank of River Benue in Taraba State, and arrested him. And then as he was being ferried back in a bus back to the state police command headquarters in Jalingo, the state capital, for onward dispatch to Abuja, soldiers from the 93 battalions in Takum manning the checkpoints on along the Ibi-Wukari highway gave a hot chase and started firing at the bus. The soldiers were led by Tijjani Balarebe, a captain.
Even after the bus was finally forced to stop following a barrage of fire from the soldiers’ guns and the policemen promptly showed sufficient evidence of who they were and their mission, three of them and one civilian were instantly shot dead while five others sustained serious injuries. Among the dead were Mark Ediale, an inspector; Usman Dan Azumi, sergeant; Dahiru Musa, sergeant, and one Jibrin, a civilian said to be working with the police.
By the time the gun smoke considerably cleared, the soldiers had seized Wadume, who had been indicted for several high-profile kidnapping cases in the state and had been removed from the bus and spirited away to the army barracks where the soldiers smashed the handcuffs and freed him to escape. The police swung into action and re-arrested Wadume in his hideout in Kano.
The soldiers’ mindless killing of fellow security personnel in the line of duty triggered instant outrage across the country. Amid the widespread anger, the police and the army squabbled over who was right and who was wrong in the unfortunate encounter. While the police, through its spokesman Frank Mba, deputy commissioner of police, accused the army of knowing full well that Wadume was a wanted criminal and that its men had purposely attacked the police operatives to ensure the suspect’s freedom, the army, through Sagir Musa, colonel, countered that its soldiers merely responded to a distress call from locals who alerted them to the presence of kidnappers moving around in a white bus in the area.
Musa said the soldiers never knew that they were policemen who had just arrested a kidnapper and that the bus had been flagged to stop at the checkpoints but had refused to do so, fuelling suspicion that the occupants were indeed kidnappers and so the soldiers gave chase and only returned fire when they were being shot at from the bus. The police charged back, saying the army lied and expressing significant fury at the army’s description of policemen performing a legal duty as “suspected kidnappers.”
The army never admitted that its men did anything wrong, much less arrest the soldiers involved in criminally disgraceful behaviour that resulted in the loss of lives. As the embarrassing back and forth went on between the two security arms, President Mohammadu Buhari stepped in to calm their frayed temper by directing the Defence Headquarters to investigate the incident. The seven-man panel which included police and DSS, headed by Ibikunle Olaiya, rear admiral, began work immediately. But as is often the case in this environment where vested interest often trumps truth, the panel’s insincere report blamed both parties for the incident and called for further investigation of Wadume and Balarabe. Meanwhile, Balarabe had reportedly confessed before the panel that he destroyed the handcuffs the police put on Wadume and let him off.
Two weeks after the incident, the police re-arrested Wadume in his hideout in Kano. The army turned down the police request for the 10 soldiers to be handed over for interrogation. And not even a letter by human rights lawyer Femi Falana to the attorney-general of the federation and minister of justice, Abubakar Malami, asking him to compel the army to release the soldiers to the police would change the situation. At that point, it became clear that justice was not going to be served in the matter.
But the reality of bias and dishonesty did not hit home until the police charged the case to court and listed the soldiers as defendants. At the first hearing, the soldiers were absent, but the trial judge ordered that the army bring them to court at the next adjourned date. Rather than direct the army to obey the order of the court, it was the attorney-general of the federation that instead used his statutory power to seize the case from the police and strike off the names of the soldiers from the charge sheet, thus effectively shielding the soldiers who were not only working with criminal elements in society but had also killed in the process, from prosecution.
And that abuse of prosecutorial power was the beginning of the end for the police, families of the victims, and society. Malami’s perversion of the extremely critical procedural justice laid the foundation for the light sentence the court handed down to Wadume, an inveterate kidnapper and killer who ought to be clamped behind bars for life.
Expectedly, in the absence of procedural justice, clearly missing in the judgment is one of its natural consequences – restorative justice. This means that the judgment offers no healing of the wounds of families of the dead, who were likely breadwinners of their families. This judgment denies the families a much-desired closure, and denies the police and society, too, but clearly in a less severe way.
The police had described the officers who lost their lives in a such cruel manner as the best in the intelligence response unit. As for Wadume, he will see this as justice. And Balarabe has since moved on normally in the army, as though nothing happened. He must have risen above his captainship now and may even rise to become the army chief someday.
If there was anyone persistently loud in his demand that the police officers must not die in vain, it was Falana. Now, what will he say?
Onyeacholem works in African Centre for Media and Information Literacy (AFRICMIL)