Jonathan Pardons Homosexual Rapist, Triggering Fresh Controversy
President
Goodluck Jonathan enters the second week of his controversial pardon
set to contend with a flurry of new issues and criticism from many who
are trying to make sense of his reasoning for letting off former army
Major, Bello Magaji, convicted and sentenced to five years jail term for
sodomy, another name for homosexuality, by a military Court [General
Court Martial] in 1996.
Mr.
Magaji, a former military police officer attached to the Lagos Garrison
Command, was convicted for serial homosexual intercourse with four
students of the Army Cantonment Boys Secondary School in Ojo Cantonment
in Lagos. The teenagers were Mohammed Abubakar, Joseph Unigbe, Emmanuel
Ilagoh, and Isaac Jonah, according to court records obtained by PREMIUM
TIMES. Download full judgment here.
The
documents spoke of how Mr. Magaji intoxicated the young men, all from
poor background, with alcohol, making them dizzy and then forcing them
to have homosexual intercourse. He would then offer them token financial
inducement to meet family obligations.
Mr.
Bello Magaji whose reasons for making the list remains puzzling, was
one of about a dozen convicts that earned President Jonathan’s pardon
Tuesday after a Council of State meeting in Abuja along with the
president’s disgraced former boss, Mr. DSP Alamieyeseigha, a one-time
governor in Bayelsa State where the president served as his deputy.
Mr.
Magaji’s pardon, coming at a time that legislative and religious
institutions in the country are bracing for a stormy confrontation with
the local and international gay and lesbian communities is bound to
shock many observers of the Jonathan presidency.
In
November 2011, the Nigerian Senate passed a stunning anti-gay
legislation which criminalizes homosexuality and gay marriage with a
14-year jail term. Although the move drew sharp international rebuke
from both western and American political leaders, the Senate President,
Mr. David Mark, in February this year, went ahead to defend the move,
promising a delighted conference of Catholic bishops that the senate
will lead the fight against homosexuality in the country. Mr. Mark was
however at the meeting where Mr.Magagi got his pardon but was not on
record to have uttered a voice against the move.
A
similar bill to prohibit gay marriage also popularly passed through a
second reading in the House of Representatives last november. House
Majority leader, Mulikat Akande-Adeola (PDP-Oyo), said the proposed law
will return sanity to the institution of marriage. If both law chambers
pass the bill, Mr. Jonathan will be forced to sign a law that is bound
to test his will against the temper of the international community.
The
mood of the Supreme Court regarding the rights of homosexual people was
best rendered in the case of the same Mr. Magaji when in their appeal
ruling in 2008, they characterized the practice as a “beastly, barbaric
and bizarre offence.” A panel of five Justices lead by Justice Niki Tobi
subsequently threw the appeal of the former military police major to
the trashcan and affirmed his five-year jail term.
Justice
Niki Tobi also proposes, in his judgement that “Carnal knowledge with
the male sex is against the order of nature and here, nature should mean
God and not just the generic universe that exists independently of
mankind or people.” The order of nature is “carnal knowledge with the
female sex” he argued in the judgement.
With
the Supreme Court, the National Assembly, and the religious order
already walking a direct route from the president on the matter, he has,
it appears, lost the court of popular morality to lean on for his queer
decision on the Magaji pardon. As the Supreme Court records indicated,
but failed to developed in depth, Mr. Magaji was not only engaged in gay
sex which would have been consensual, but actually he was engaged in a
homosexual rape.
“The
common evidence of Emmanuel and Joseph is that they were asked to drink
a bottle each of small stout which intoxicated them; it was in their
state of intoxication that the appellant performed the dirty act of
sodomy on Emmanuel, and others, the Supreme Court report narrated.
The
Court report offers, in many of its lines, chilling narratives of Mr.
Magaji as a sex pervert. The following testimony of one of the teenagers
project a horrifying experience, one that will worry many who are
trying to understand President Jonathan’s mind with respect to this
particular pardon.
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