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Home ECOWAS Nigeria

Kogi, Niger, Nasarawa governors begged to sign death warrants of criminals

In separate interviews, residents also appealed for the outright abolition or fine-tuning of the law to address its attendant challenges and threats.

by Diplomatic Info
July 29, 2025
in Nigeria
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Kogi, Niger, Nasarawa governors begged to sign death warrants of criminals
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Some residents of Kogi, Niger, and Nasarawa have called on their governors to sign death warrants for prisoners on death row. This is in the interest of justice and decongestion of prisons, the residents explained.

In separate interviews, the residents also appealed for the outright abolition or fine-tuning of the law to address its attendant challenges and threats.

The residents responded to the agency’s survey on reasons for the governor’s negative attitude toward the death warrants. The respondents called for outright stripping of the governors of such power provided in the constitution.

Section 212(1), 33(1), and (161) of the 1999 Constitution granted governors the power to exercise mercy and pardon offenders, including the signing of death warrants.

Taiye Alabi, a Kogi-based lawyer, said most governors do not want to be the cause of death of any person, and have deliberately refused to sign any death warrant before them.

“Inasmuch as there is no need for abolishing the laws on the death penalty, the signing by governors should be cancelled. Once an accused is tried and all evidences show and prove that the person is guilty and sentenced to death, he or she should immediately be killed without delay by any governor needing to sign to determine his or her fate,” Mr Alabi said.

Adegboyega Kolade, a legal practitioner, said he supported the death penalty law simply because people, unfortunately, play politics with everything in Nigeria. Mr Kolade flayed calls for the abolition of the death penalty.

Hamza Lawal, the executive director of Initiative for Grassroot Advancement in Nigeria, said many governors since 2016 have refused to sign death warrants for inmates on the death row largely due to the slow process of appeals on those cases.

Mr Lawal, a human rights activist, said, “We all know that an accused or convict has the right to appeal his or her conviction or judgment.”

He noted that such a process took time due to a huge backlog of cases resulting from the limited capacity of courts and judges in the country.

“I don’t think death penalty should be abolished because certain crimes deserve the death penalty, especially intentional murder and reasonable offences,” stated Mr Lawal. “One challenge that is already surfacing due to the refusal by governors to sign death warrants is the over-congestion of our correctional institutions.”

However, Idris Miliki, the executive director of Conscience for Human Rights and Conflict Resolution, expressed displeasure with the death penalty, calling for its scrapping.

Another lawyer, Mr Adejo Isah, said, “The law on death sentence should be abolished. We know that death is sacrosanct, but adequate use must be made of every human being before his death. The impact of the refusal by the governors to sign death warrants is monumental on the positive side.”

In Niger, a public commentator and security expert, Abdullahi Jabi, has called for the establishment of a special body with the sole responsibility of executing those people convicted by the competent court of law. He said that it had become imperative since the governors found it difficult to sign the warrant.

“I am of the opinion that a specialised body be put in place specifically for the execution of those people who had been convicted by the nation’s competent courts for one offence or another,” said Mr Jabi. “With this in place, no doubt it will go a long way to address the ugly situation headlong and not necessarily waiting for the governors to sign the warrant, being the case today.”

Additionally, lawyer Mohammed-Abdulkadir Lapai stated that rather than killing those convicted by the nation’s competent courts, they should be pardoned and engaged in meaningful ventures for the benefit of society.

He, however, urged relevant authorities to consider alternative solutions, such as pardoning those who were convicted and engaging them in meaningful ventures that would benefit society.

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