A
14-year-old girl accused of poisoning the 35-year-old man she was forced to
marry was set to go on trial for murder in northern Nigeria on Monday, a case
that has thrown the spotlight on the influence of Islamic law in region.
Wasila
Tasi'u has also been charged with the murder of three others who allegedly ate
the food laced with rat poison that she prepared and served in April this year,
a week after her marriage to Umaru Sani. continue...
Police
say Tasi'u confessed to poisoning Sani and his guests at the wedding party in
the village of Unguwar Yansoro village, about 60 kilometres (40 miles) outside
Nigeria's second city of Kano.
"She
did it because she was forced by her parents to marry a man she did not
love," Kano state police spokesman Musa Magaji Majia told AFP.
Her
lawyer Hussaina Aliyu rejects claims that her client made a legally valid
confession. She
said Tasi'u was questioned by police without a parent or lawyer present and so
any comments she may have made are inadmissable in court.
Aliyu,
who works with International Federation of Women Lawyers (FIDA), has sought to
have the case transferred to a juvenile court, a bid rejected by justice
officials in Kano.
"All
we are saying is do justice to her. Treat the case as it is. Treat her as a
child," Aliyu said. The
marriage of teenage girls to much older men is rampant in deeply conservative,
mainly Muslim northern Nigeria, especially in poorer rural areas.
The
region has since 2000 been under sharia Islamic law which some say does not
prohibit the marriage of underage girls. But
Nigeria's federal, secular laws also apply in the north, creating a confusing
hybrid legal system where sharia police try to work with government authorities
to enforce criminal justice.
The
issue of child marriage has been fiercely debated in Nigeria over the past
year, sparked by a proposal from a northern lawmaker that any girl, regardless
of her age, should be legally considered an adult once she is married.
That
measure has not become law but the proposal was intensely criticised, including
by activists in the mainly Christian south who say Nigeria should not permit
any application of sharia, even in the north.
For
Aliyu, the defence lawyer, this case is not a referendum on youth marriage in a
Muslim society.
Rather,
she argued, the primary issue is that criminal charges filed against a minor
should be handled by a juvenile court.
"She
is still a child," the lawyer said.
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