Ese Oruru alleged abductor, Dahiru, gets bail
Ese
The man accused of abducting 14-year-old
Ese Oruru, from Yenagoa, Bayelsa State, Mr. Yunusa Dahiru, alias
Yellow, finally left custody after spending over four months in Okaka
Prisons in the state capital.
It was learnt Dahiru was immediately
taken to his state, Kano, in company with a team of his defence lawyers
who usually flew into the state during court proceedings.
It was further learnt that contrary to
speculation that no Bayelsa indigene was willing to stand surety for the
suspect due to the ethnic and religious sentiments being whipped up,
the person who eventually fulfilled the bail conditions was from
Bayelsa.
Dahiru’s team of lawyers had been battling to free their client from prison since March but without success.
The development followed the stringent
bail conditions handed down to the suspect by Justice Ajiya Nganjiwa of
the Federal High Court, Yenagoa.
Justice Nganjiwa had set N3m bail bond
and two sureties in like sum, resident within the jurisdiction of the
court as conditions for Dahiru’s release.
He had also ordered that one of the
sureties must be a traditional ruler, while the second person must be a
civil servant on Grade Level 12 or above.
The bail conditions also stipulated that
the two sureties must submit their three-year tax clearance receipts
and that the defence counsel must sign an undertaking that the suspect
must not jump bail.
But Justice Nganjiwa later relaxed the
conditions after he was approached by Dahiru’s lawyers that they were
unable to meet some of the bail conditions.
The court had reduced the bail
conditions to a Grade Level nine civil servant and further granted the
prayer of the defence lawyers to also allow any traditional ruler from
any community in the country to stand as surety.
Recently, the court sessions to hear the
case had been done in secret, after Justice Nganjiwa granted the
prosecution team’s prayer that journalists and members of the public
should not be allowed to witness Ese Oruru’s cross-examination.
But a source involved in the secret
trial, when asked how Ese had been reacting on seeing Dahiru in the same
chambers during sessions, said the minor had been very antagonistic.
Dahiru is currently facing a five-count
charge of abducting, inducing by the use of deception and coercion,
illicit intercourse, sexual exploitation and unlawful carnal knowledge
of the minor.
Lead counsel for the Dahiru, Mr. Kayode
Olaosebikan, confirmed the release of his client, noting that “his
people have taken him away.”
He added that the cross-examination of the girl (Ese) would continue in the next adjourned date.
Oruru was recently delivered of a baby
girl and is still in the protective custody of the Bayelsa State Police
Command, which is responsible for her upkeep in collaboration with the
state government.
Her cross-examination by Yunusa’s lawyers will continue on September 13, 2016.
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