A Federal High Court in Lagos on Monday sentenced
an Iranian, Azim Aghajani, and his Nigerian accomplice, Ali Jega, to 17 years
imprisonment each for illegal importation of firearms into the country in 2010.
Justice Okechukwu Okeke found the two guilty of four, out of the five counts
preferred against them by the office of the Attorney-General of the Federation.
Aghajani and Jega were alleged to have illegally
imported 13-by-20 feet container load of firearms and explosives into Nigeria
from Iran on July 17, 2010 by falsely declaring on the Bill of Lading that the
consignment contained construction materials.
The judge sentenced the two to five years for each
of three counts and to two years for the fourth count, ruling that the
sentences would run concurrently from February 1, 2011, when they were
arraigned. He also ordered that all the items seized from the accused be
forfeited to the Federal Government.
The judge however discharged and acquitted Aghajani
and Jega of the offence of “being in control” of the imported firearms. “As for
count 1, which has to do with importation of firearms into the country without
licence, there is no doubt that the accused persons actually imported the
consignment,” he said.
He discharged and acquitted them of the offence in
the second count, saying having not paid the necessary custom fees, the accused
“could not be said to have been in control of the consignment”. “There is no
evidence that the payment of the custom duty was made. If they had made any
payment, I would have taken it that they were in constructive possession of the
consignment,” he said.
He added, “It is not in doubt that the Bill of
Lading which disclosed the consignment to have glass wool and pallets of stone actually
contained arms and ammunitions.
“It is my view that the accused made a false
declaration on the Bill of Lading they claimed contained glass wool and pallets
of stones whereas it contained arms and ammunition.”
The judge also asked Aghajani’s counsel, Chris Uche
(SAN), to liaise with the federal ministries of Justice and interior on his
request that his client be allowed to serve his jail term in his home country.
The judge, who had given the accused persons and their
lawyers the opportunity to plead for mercy, said their plea for mercy was
“touching and moving” but that he had to follow the law.
credits: www.bbc.co.uk
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