The presiding Senior Magistrate, Anna Akobi, who said the
adjournment, was to give the court time to determine the appropriate sanctions
for the offence, ordered Ikwen’s remand in Keffi Prison.
Ikwen was arraigned on Friday on a one-count charge of
negligent conduct.The prosecutor, Asp Peter Adams, said the deceased, Theresa
Benandart, was living with the accused in his residence at Asokoro Extention,
Abuja, until she took ill and died on Feb. 8.
Adams said the deceased’s uncle, Francis Benandart,
reported the case at the Asokoro Police Station from where it was later
transferred to the FCT Police Command, Abuja.
“Theresa died on Feb. 8 after a brief illness and her
body was deposited at the General Hospital in Asokoro, Abuja. “The accused
later collected her corpse and buried her without informing her parents or the
police,’’ he said.
According to the prosecutor, the offence contravenes
Section 196 of the Penal Code.
The accused, who appeared remorseful, narrated how he met
the deceased and the efforts he made to contact her family after her death.“I
met Theresa barely a month before her death, and my intention was to marry her.
I was even planning to travel to Cross Rivers to see her parents but she told
me they died long ago.“I insisted she took me to her grandparents living in Masaka,
Nasarawa, but she refused, saying she left them over five years ago because
they were maltreating her.
“When she died, there was no means of contacting her
relations because the incident happened barely a month after we started
dating.“In order not to abandon the corpse at the mortuary and due to the love
I have for her, I had to claim it and take it for burial thinking I was doing
the right thing,” he said.
His counsel, Ayim Okpoga, pleaded with the court to
temper justice with mercy, saying the deceased’s friend that could have
assisted him to locate her family fled on hearing about her death.
“My client was obviously in shock, and wasn’t thinking
straight, having lost a loved one. This can happen to anybody.“I plead with
this court to consider his age as a young man full of ambition in delivering
its judgment.’’
(NAN)
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