A Nigerian High Court siting in Abuja was on Wednesday told that Senator
Aliyu Mohammed Ndume, standing trial on a four count charge that included
providing logistics and funding to dreaded Boko Haram sect, had a record of 73
communications in the form of sms, mms and voice calls between 3rd October and
3rd November, 2011, with convicted former spokesman of the sect, Konduga, now
serving a 3 years jail term.
This
disclosure was made by prosecution witness 3, Mr. Aliyu Usman, a forensic
expert in the employ of the directorate of state security services, SSS, who
started giving evidence in the trial on Tuesday. The witness also told the
court that Ndume saved Konduga’s
phone number on his own hand set as “Mal Ali BH” while Konduga saved the
Senator’s phone number on his own phone as “INDUME Sen Ali”. Both
phones were confiscated and had been tendered in evidence in the trial.
He further
informed the court that the phone examination report gathered through forensic
analysis were burned into 3 DVDs and were equally printed in hard copies.
“These
extractions, assessment, documentation and reporting were done according to
forensic standard and submitted to the chairman of the special investigation
panel which investigated the matter at the SSS office”.
Attempts by
the prosecutor, Mr. Thompson Olatigbe to tender the 3 DVDs were however opposed
by Senator Ndume’s lawyer, Mr. Rickey Tarfa, a senior advocate of Nigeria.
Mr. Tarfa
observed that the materials which are computer generated are secondary evidence
and not the original copies. Citing section 84 of the Evidence Act, Tarfa
argued that for the materials to be admitted in evidence, that the Act provides
that a statement must be prepared to authenticate the veracity of such material
and pointed out that there is no such statement accompanying the DVDs which the
prosecution wants the court to admit in evidence.
According to
the senior advocate, ”The absence of any statement showing that these copies
are original and authenticated copies makes them inadmissible. There ought to
be an explanation about the unavailability of the original copies as what is
sought to be tendered are secondary evidence. There is also no foundation as to
why a secondary evidence is being sought to be tendered”.
He
subsequently opposed the admission of the DVDs as exhibits in the matter.
In his
reaction, the prosecution, Mr. Olatigbe agreed that the DVDs are secondary
evidence developed from the primary evidence which are Konduga’s and Senator
Ndume’s hand sets which have already been admitted as exhibits P5 and P6 in the
trial.
“The 3DVDs
are mere extractions from both phones, the content and facts contained in
the DVDs are all in the two phones and it is the duty of the court and the
parties to look at the said phones viz a viz the materials sought to be
tendered. The information on the DVDs were obtained through the phones by use
of forensic tool kits”.
He
thereafter urged the court to admit the DVDs in evidence in the interest of
justice. He also pointed out that the sections being relied upon by Ndume’s
lawyer in opposition to the admissibility of the DVDs doe not apply.
Justice Gabriel Kolawole subsequently adjourned till Friday, 14th
December, to rule on the admissibility of the DVDs.

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