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Lovelife090994
August 4th, 2014, 07:27 PM
http://news.yahoo.com/nigeria-girl-faces-murder-trial-over-forced-marriage-111331032.html

Gezawa (Nigeria) (AFP) - A Nigerian court on Monday postponed the murder trial of a 14-year-old girl accused of poisoning the 35-year-old man she was forced to marry, 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.

"Wasila was to appear today," but the case has been postponed indefinitely because of a backlog caused by a judicial staff strike, said Salisu Yakubu, registrar at the High Court in town of Gezawa.

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.

Under Nigeria's marriage act, which applies nationwide, a woman under the age of 21 who wants to marry must have the consent of her parents.

With that consent there is no minimum marrying age, including in the Christian south, "which is very, very unfortunate," said human rights lawyer Festus Keyamo.

But cases of underage marriage are rare in the south, and the Tasi'u case has called attention to the confusing hybrid legal system in the north, where the secular criminal code is unevenly applied as police and prosecutors try to strike a balance with sharia provisions.



- Illegal trial -



Jiti Ogunye, another rights lawyer, said sharia was irrelevant in the Tasi'u case.

"A girl of 14 cannot stand trial under the criminal code. This case is just adding to our country's negative reputation in the eyes of the international community," he told AFP.

He called on Kano authorities to immediately dismiss the charges and start treating Tasi'u as a victim, noting the possibility she was raped by the man she was ordered to marry.

"Rather than talking about making her liable for an alleged crime, Kano state should be rehabilitating her. She is a victim," he added.

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 with full citizenship rights.

The senator who floated the proposal, Ahmed Yerima of Zamfara state, had reportedly married a 13-year-old Egyptian girl and wanted her to become a Nigerian citizen.

The measure from Yerima, also an ex-governor of northwestern Zamfara, has not become law, but the proposal was intensely criticised by activists who say Nigeria should not permit any application of sharia, even in the north.

Defence lawyer Aliyu said the case should not be a debate about youth marriage in a Muslim society.

She supported Ogunye's argument that regardless of religion or region, a child cannot face criminal charges in a high court and the case must be moved to the juvenile system.

"She is still a child," the lawyer said.


Oh dear Lord, why is this stuff still happening in the world? She's a girl! A young girl! Who in their sane mind marries their daughter to a man for than twice her age!? And then she's underage? The heck is this world coming to, coal? I don't condone violence but it is no wonder the girl tried to poison this pedophile called her groom-I-hope-never-to-be.

CharlieHorse
August 4th, 2014, 08:18 PM
http://news.yahoo.com/nigeria-girl-faces-murder-trial-over-forced-marriage-111331032.html


Oh dear Lord, why is this stuff still happening in the world? She's a girl! A young girl! Who in their sane mind marries their daughter to a man for than twice her age!? And then she's underage? The heck is this world coming to, coal? I don't condone violence but it is no wonder the girl tried to poison this pedophile called her groom-I-hope-never-to-be.

yes, the morals and values in other places are very different than our own here.

Waleedbt
August 4th, 2014, 08:24 PM
This is wrong, sure in Islam we can marry after the girl being able to have her period, but no marriage goes on unless the girl approves.
If you are wondering why so young, well one being the girl will have someone who she can trust and avoid any kind of 'sex' outside marriage. This also applies to men, making us stop masturbating or being horny which we all know will lead to no good.

Nigeria has always had very wrong and weird laws, such as wanting to kill a man because he said he 'might' be gay. The guy did nothing with another man.

The only person who must be punished here is the (islamic pastor) who went along with it.

Merged double post. In the future, please use the 'edit' button if you want to add something to your post.

Lovelife090994
August 4th, 2014, 09:50 PM
yes, the morals and values in other places are very different than our own here.

I'd hardly call that a value; marrying off your underage daughter to a 35-year-old, and when she retaliates showing she doesn't want him you accuse her of murder.

This is wrong, sure in Islam we can marry after the girl being able to have her period, but no marriage goes on unless the girl approves.
If you are wondering why so young, well one being the girl will have someone who she can trust and avoid any kind of 'sex' outside marriage. This also applies to men, making us stop masturbating or being horny which we all know will lead to no good.

Nigeria has always had very wrong and weird laws, such as wanting to kill a man because he said he 'might' be gay. The guy did nothing with another man.

The only person who must be punished here is the (islamic pastor) who went along with it.

Merged double post. In the future, please use the 'edit' button if you want to add something to your post.

Your post is a little mixed, one-side here, another-side there. Anyway, neither should be right. I don't care if it is security. Parents should have no right to marry off their young daughters. In new Islam maybe the woman has the choice but here in Nigeria, clearly not. The same Nigeria where girls are sold as property to men? Religion or not, this cannot go on.

CharlieHorse
August 4th, 2014, 09:57 PM
I'd hardly call that a value; marrying off your underage daughter to a 35-year-old, and when she retaliates showing she doesn't want him you accuse her of murder.

Yes, and clearly your morals are different from the people's who are married her off like that.

Lovelife090994
August 4th, 2014, 10:00 PM
Yes, and clearly your morals are different from the people's who are married her off like that.

Different ideas yes. But, very, very dangerous. I'd never approve of marrying a daughter off to some older man, known or not. Not when the daughter is underage. Even if she wasn't I wouldn't like it. You can't be okay with 100% everything in existence.

Typhlosion
August 4th, 2014, 10:05 PM
Two wrongs don't make a right so... Why are we pitying the girl?

It's a shame there are cultures that force marriage.

CharlieHorse
August 4th, 2014, 10:11 PM
You can't be okay with 100% everything in existence.

I never said I was ok with it. I think it's horrible, but I recognize that other cultures do this for many reasons.


It's a shame there are cultures that force marriage.

Yes

Gamma Male
August 4th, 2014, 10:44 PM
What a fucked up culture.

Vlerchan
August 5th, 2014, 04:03 PM
Two wrongs don't make a right so... Why are we pitying the girl?
What if someone doesn't consider it a 'wrong'?

Typhlosion
August 5th, 2014, 06:32 PM
What if someone doesn't consider it a 'wrong'?Someone may not consider killing the to-be forced husband 'wrong', but there were three other unrelated people who did die.