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Maryam Sanda & Tinubu’s Crisis Of Clemency By Farooq A. Kperogi - Politics - Nairaland

Nairaland ForumNairaland GeneralPoliticsMaryam Sanda & Tinubu’s Crisis Of Clemency By Farooq A. Kperogi (6596 Views)

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Maryam Sanda & Tinubu’s Crisis Of Clemency By Farooq A. Kperogi by Racoon(op): 7:43am On Oct 18, 2025
In today's Saturday Tribune column, I take advantage of the Tinubu government's admission that it has not yet finalized its much-criticized state pardon to advise it, especially regarding the unmerited clemency granted to Maryam Sanda who murdered her husband in cold blood:

President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, like his predecessors, has the constitutional right to grant clemency. He draws this right from Section 175 of the 1999 Constitution, which grants him the power to pardon convicts and commute sentences. But constitutional rights are not moral shields, and mercy must ennoble justice, not mock it.

Prerogative of mercy, designed to temper justice with compassion, has, in the estimation of several people, been cheapened by the recent pardons Tinubu approved for murderers, drug traffickers and other hardened criminals.

The list of 175 beneficiaries of Tinubu’s pardon includes people convicted of violent crimes and narcotics offenses. Among them is Maryam Sanda, sentenced to death in 2020 for killing her husband, Bilyaminu Bello, in a fit of murderous fury.

The case captured the imagination of the nation because it symbolized both the collapse of domestic civility and the delicate hope that justice could still work in Nigeria. Now, Tinubu’s pardon threatens to turn that hope to scorn and righteous indignation.

Following fierce, furious, sustained public backlash, the federal government hurriedly clarified on Thursday that no inmate has yet been released under the current Presidential Prerogative of Mercy exercise. Attorney-General Lateef Fagbemi said the process “remains at the final administrative stage” and that it is still undergoing verification and review.

That acknowledgement of bureaucratic pause is what has prompted this reflection. If the government is really and truly reviewing the pardons, it still has time to salvage its moral standing. Once the releases occur, it will be too late to reverse the damage.

The most exasperating aspect of the exercise is how it was packaged. When news broke that Maryam Sanda was among those granted clemency, the outrage was instantaneous. To soften the blow, a press conference was convened, and Bilyaminu Bello’s biological father by the name of Ahmed Bello Isa, who had been entirely absent from his son’s life, was suddenly thrust before cameras to claim credit for Sanda’s release.

Reading from what appeared to be a prepared statement, he said he had sought the pardon because he wanted his grandchildren to have the benefit of growing up with their mother. The wealthy and well-connected father of Maryam Sanda, who appeared to have engineered the news conference, sat beside the deadbeat father and enjoyed the theater.

Meanwhile the family that had adopted, nurtured, educated and buried Bilyaminu Bello watched in shock and disempowering rage. They said the pardon reopened old wounds and compounded their grief with humiliation.

Forgiveness is virtuous only when it is voluntarily given. It can never be coerced or legislated. We all know that the spectacle of the biological father’s news conference was designed to sanitize the gross injustice of Maryam Sanda’s unmerited pardon and to launder the privilege of her parents through a choreographed display of mawkish sentimentality.

But it succeeded only in deepening public disgust. No one disputes that mercy has a place in governance. A humane system recognizes remorse and rehabilitation. But presidential pardon must be the culmination of justice, not its subversion. When the powerful can engineer clemency for their own, while the poor rot in overcrowded prisons for petty theft, mercy becomes a weapon of inequality.

If the rationale for the pardons is “good conduct,” how was that measured for an insensate, blood-soaked murderer like Maryam Sanda who was sentenced only five years ago? Where is the proof of her repentance, the evidence of her rehabilitation, the testimony of those hurt by her actions?

Were the adoptive parents of Bilyaminu Bello even consulted? It’s obvious they were not. The public statement signed by Dr. Bello Haliru Mohammed on behalf of the family calling the pardon “the worst possible injustice any family could be made to go through” is all the proof you need.

To have Maryam Sanda walk the face of the earth again, free from any blemish for her heinous crime as if she had merely squashed an ant, is the worst possible injustice any family could be made to go through for a loved one,” the statement said.

The presidency’s statement that many pardoned inmates had learned trades or earned degrees in custody is neither here nor there. Drug barons can run classroom workshops, and murderers can earn degrees, but that does not erase their crimes. It doesn’t give justice to the victims of their transgressions.

The integrity of justice does not lie in whether convicts can read the Bible, recite the Qur’an or weld steel. It lies in whether the law retains meaning after the verdict.

This is not, of course, the first time Nigerian presidents have abused the power of mercy. Past leaders have freed convicted looters, coup plotters, and cronies under the guise of national reconciliation.

What is new, at least based on my recollection of past presidential pardons, is the raw, remorseless, I-dare-you brazenness of Tinubu’s. The inclusion of notorious drug traffickers and violent offenders, even as ordinary Nigerians struggle daily with the terror of crime and narcotics abuse, communicates the message that crime pays if you have the right connection in high places.

That reality has the capacity to sap the last ounce of moral energy from law enforcement officers who risk their lives to arrest traffickers and murderers. It also tells victims that their pain can be erased by elite connections.

It is particularly obscene that this mass pardon occurred just months after Tinubu’s government rolled out a “war on drugs” campaign and urged young Nigerians to resist the lure of narcotics. How can a government that preaches zero tolerance for drug trafficking now pardon convicted traffickers in the same breath?

Yes, as I pointed out earlier, the President’s prerogative of mercy is legal. But legality is not morality. The framers of the Constitution imagined that the power to pardon would correct miscarriages of justice. It was not intended to become a recycling plant for impunity.

Clemency must not reward crime. A pardon should emerge from a rigorous, transparent process involving victims’ families, prosecutors, correctional officials and mental-health professionals, not from political patronage or backroom lobbying. And it should be rare, not routine.

If Tinubu insists on exercising this right, let him do so for prisoners of conscience, wrongly convicted individuals, and those who have served decades for non-violent offenses. It insults justice if it’s mostly for the wealthy and the well-connected who can summon ministers to plead their cause.

By including Maryam Sanda and other violent offenders, the Tinubu administration has set a perilous precedent. It invites every future convict with political or financial clout to expect similar treatment. It signals to judges that their sentences can be casually undone, and to prosecutors that their diligence is futile.

Most dangerously, it erodes public faith in the rule of law. Once people believe justice is negotiable, they seek it elsewhere, often in violence or vigilantism. Nigeria’s fragile social fabric cannot afford that descent.

The Attorney-General’s statement that the list is still “under review” offers the president a chance to rethink. He can still remove names that discredit the exercise and reinforce public confidence by publishing transparent criteria for eligibility.

He can also seize this moment to reform the clemency process itself. The Presidential Advisory Committee on the Prerogative of Mercy must include civil-society representatives, victim-advocacy groups and credible clergy.

If this government truly values mercy, let it show compassion to the countless awaiting-trial inmates languishing without verdicts, some jailed longer than the sentences for their alleged crimes. Mercy belongs not in freeing the privileged guilty but in rescuing the forgotten innocent.

Every pardon sends a message. The absolution of Maryam Sanda tells Nigerians that if you are the scion of a powerful and wealthy family you can murder and get away with it.

True mercy cannot be scripted, televised or bartered for lineage. Tinubu’s mass clemency, if implemented as announced, will deepen Nigeria’s moral anemia.

The president should pause the process, strike out the names that insult justice, and remember that mercy divorced from morality is corruption. For once, let power bow before principle.
https://www.farooqkperogi.com/2025/10/maryam-sanda-and-tinubus-crisis-of.html

Re: Maryam Sanda & Tinubu’s Crisis Of Clemency By Farooq A. Kperogi by Orlandoo(m): 7:46am On Oct 18, 2025
Tinubu keep making unpopular decisions that always backfires. How can a president be pardoning hardened criminals and murderers just to look famous?
Re: Maryam Sanda & Tinubu’s Crisis Of Clemency By Farooq A. Kperogi by Racoon(op):
Just imagine! Like the controversy surrounding the release of hardened unrepentant criminals that the government initially celebrated as achievement, now another unimaginable controversy is setting in. For goodness sake, these are the necessary things that ought to have been thoroughly reviewed if needed be before the official announcement.

However, as expected of policy somersaults in the the Tinubu's rudderless government, Nigerians & the international community is about to witness another bout of their cluelessness ineptitude and incompetency
Re: Maryam Sanda & Tinubu’s Crisis Of Clemency By Farooq A. Kperogi by Racoon(op): 7:50am On Oct 18, 2025
Being senselessly nervy, jerky and impulsive under the influence of white powder is not political sagacity.
Re: Maryam Sanda & Tinubu’s Crisis Of Clemency By Farooq A. Kperogi by Goodlady(f):
The matter tire public opinion.
If they claimed they v repented, then some criminals may start forming holiness to gain clemency in future too. The problem here is Nigerians have lost trust in the process to determine if indeed those that were given clemency merited it. The case of this guy called Sunday Jackson should be looked into holistically. https://thenigerialawyer.com/supreme-court-upholds-deaith-sentence-for-farmer-sunday-jackson-who-killed-fulani-attacker-in-self-defense/. Does he not deserve clemency too. What about thousands of awaiting trials?
Why not take a thorough approach to it and decongest prisons by releasing those worth releasing? Crime is bad, convicted criminals deserve to serve their tail or sentence but at the same time when clemency is involved, it must not be abused.
Re: Maryam Sanda & Tinubu’s Crisis Of Clemency By Farooq A. Kperogi by Efuaye(m): 8:12am On Oct 18, 2025
Most presidents always abuse their power of prerogative to forgive or pardon, but the one demonstrated by this president gives credence to all negative perceptions about him.
I don't know if the blame should be his or his AG and his other special advisers.
Re: Maryam Sanda & Tinubu’s Crisis Of Clemency By Farooq A. Kperogi by Brendaniel: 8:13am On Oct 18, 2025
Tinubu plays politics with everything, that's why Nigeria is the way it is today, he is using Nigeria and Nigerians to play politics, he doesn't care about the repercussion as long it favors him at the moment
Re: Maryam Sanda & Tinubu’s Crisis Of Clemency By Farooq A. Kperogi by nairalanda1(m): 8:17am On Oct 18, 2025
The palava ultimately is simple...pardon a woman who killed her kids father...so that she can look after the same kids...who when they understand what's up when older...would be pissed.

A lot of issues there.
Re: Maryam Sanda & Tinubu’s Crisis Of Clemency By Farooq A. Kperogi by seunmsg(m): 8:19am On Oct 18, 2025
Tinubu deserves all the sticks he’s getting for the presidential pardon. It was a very reckless and irresponsible use of presidential power. I see absolutely no justification for pardoning majority of the criminals that made the list.
Re: Maryam Sanda & Tinubu’s Crisis Of Clemency By Farooq A. Kperogi by zero8zero(m): 8:20am On Oct 18, 2025
Racoon:
https://www.farooqkperogi.com/2025/10/maryam-sanda-and-tinubus-crisis-of.html
seunmsg:
Tinubu deserves all the sticks he’s getting for the presidential pardon. It was a very reckless and irresponsible use of presidential power. I see absolutely no justification for pardoning majority of the criminals that made the list.
Brendaniel:
Tinubu plays politics with everything, that's why Nigeria is the way it is today, he is using Nigeria and Nigerians to play politics, he doesn't care about the repercussion as long it favors him at the moment
Efuaye:
Most presidents always abuse their power of prerogative to forgive or pardon, but the one demonstrated by this president gives credence to all negative perceptions about him.
I don't know if the blame should be his or his AG and his other special advisers.
Orlandoo:
Tinubu keep making unpopular decisions that always backfires. How can a president be pardoning hardened criminals and murderers just to look famous?
Does this amebo and self acclaimed professor of guesstimation aware that the father of the deceased has come out openly to tell us he was the one that pleaded for pardon for the woman.
After sitting down on his laptop writing his usual bullcrap, he will then come back to retract as he had done several times.
Re: Maryam Sanda & Tinubu’s Crisis Of Clemency By Farooq A. Kperogi by Almunjid: 8:20am On Oct 18, 2025
Brendaniel:
Tinubu plays politics with everything, that's why Nigeria is the way it is today, he is using Nigeria and Nigerians to play politics, he doesn't care about the repercussion as long it favors him at the moment
If a politician doesn't play political games, what else do you expect him or her to play? Play football? Every Nigerian politician, without exception, is manipulating politics for personal gain, jeopardizing our collective future.

Peace!
Re: Maryam Sanda & Tinubu’s Crisis Of Clemency By Farooq A. Kperogi by ChoCho54(f): 8:21am On Oct 18, 2025
grin

Twenty more characters is needed to send the brain dead out of aso rock.
Re: Maryam Sanda & Tinubu’s Crisis Of Clemency By Farooq A. Kperogi by 0luSegun00: 8:22am On Oct 18, 2025
Go home and sin no more.

Allahuakbar
Re: Maryam Sanda & Tinubu’s Crisis Of Clemency By Farooq A. Kperogi by 86scorpion: 8:25am On Oct 18, 2025
Tinubu's government is doing everything possible to be the most unpopular government in Nigeria's recent history.
Re: Maryam Sanda & Tinubu’s Crisis Of Clemency By Farooq A. Kperogi by ChiefOloye(m): 8:34am On Oct 18, 2025
I won't support Asiwaju on the pardon. However, the flaws in the clemency show that the President is human, after all
Re: Maryam Sanda & Tinubu’s Crisis Of Clemency By Farooq A. Kperogi by Efuaye(m): 8:34am On Oct 18, 2025
Are you also aware that this so-called father was never in the life of the young man?
He abandoned them at infancy, only for him to show up now, claiming to be the dad to the dead son he never knew!

I hope you know that this Tinubu government knows how to fix things with propaganda and money.

zero8zero:
Does this amebo and self acclaimed professor of guesstimation aware that the father of the deceased has come out openly to tell us he was the one that pleaded for pardon for the woman.
After sitting down on his laptop writing his usual bullcrap, he will then come back to retract as he had done several times.
Re: Maryam Sanda & Tinubu’s Crisis Of Clemency By Farooq A. Kperogi by ChiefOloye(m): 8:35am On Oct 18, 2025
I won't support Asiwaju on the pardon. However, the flaws in the clemency show that the President is human, after all.
Re: Maryam Sanda & Tinubu’s Crisis Of Clemency By Farooq A. Kperogi by ARISHEM: 8:35am On Oct 18, 2025
Tinubu was definitely not consulted during the pardons. Instead of his supporters saying he was not they keep beating chest by saying he was. Deliberately proving that he is a despot
Re: Maryam Sanda & Tinubu’s Crisis Of Clemency By Farooq A. Kperogi by Mrexcell(m): 8:47am On Oct 18, 2025
Does tinibu and his apc gang has the morality and conscience to comprehend all these? undecided
Re: Maryam Sanda & Tinubu’s Crisis Of Clemency By Farooq A. Kperogi by CharlotteFlair: 8:48am On Oct 18, 2025
Me, I'm tired of tinubu"s matter makachi.
Re: Maryam Sanda & Tinubu’s Crisis Of Clemency By Farooq A. Kperogi by Privatepart00: 8:58am On Oct 18, 2025
zero8zero:
Does this amebo and self acclaimed professor of guesstimation aware that the father of the deceased has come out openly to tell us he was the one that pleaded for pardon for the woman.
After sitting down on his laptop writing his usual bullcrap, he will then come back to retract as he had done several times.
If you read what the writer wrote you wouldn't have written this.
Obviously you read but didn't understand what you read "a father that abandoned his son from infancy, appearing for a press brief that he okay for the wife to be pardoned"

Can the absentee father know the pain his siblings are passing through?
Try to use your conscience most times
Re: Maryam Sanda & Tinubu’s Crisis Of Clemency By Farooq A. Kperogi by CharlotteFlair: 9:04am On Oct 18, 2025
zero8zero:
Does this amebo and self acclaimed professor of guesstimation aware that the father of the deceased has come out openly to tell us he was the one that pleaded for pardon for the woman.
After sitting down on his laptop writing his usual bullcrap, he will then come back to retract as he had done several times.
Too low for zero, did you read where it said the so called father was never in his son's life? Did you also read where the writer said the foster parents of the father was first to condemn the gaffe in strong terms?
Re: Maryam Sanda & Tinubu’s Crisis Of Clemency By Farooq A. Kperogi by dantajay: 9:06am On Oct 18, 2025
Everything is wrong with the names of person's on list of the presidential pardon.
Re: Maryam Sanda & Tinubu’s Crisis Of Clemency By Farooq A. Kperogi by zero8zero(m):
Efuaye:
Are you also aware that this so-called father was never in the life of the young man?
He abandoned them at infancy, only for him to show up now, claiming to be the dad to the dead son he never knew!

I hope you know that this Tinubu government knows how to fix things with propaganda and money.
Privatepart00:
If you read what the writer wrote you wouldn't have written this.
Obviously you read but didn't understand what you read "a father that abandoned his son from infancy, appearing for a press brief that he okay for the wife to be pardoned"

Can the absentee father know the pain his siblings are passing through?
Try to use your conscience most times
CharlotteFlair:
Too low for zero, did you read where it said the so called father was never in his son's life? Did you also read where the writer said the foster parents of the father was first to condemn the gaffe in strong terms?
cashmyles:
And if you read thoroughly and with open mind, you'll see the father was a deadbeat who was irresponsible and not in the life son
Na you know o, this same Kperogi told you that Aisha divorced late Buhari and left his house to leave alone. Later, he came out to apologize for misinformation. It is the same person writing nonsense again to deceive you. When will you guys be logical and use your reasoning ffs!.
Re: Maryam Sanda & Tinubu’s Crisis Of Clemency By Farooq A. Kperogi by CharlotteFlair: 9:16am On Oct 18, 2025
zero8zero:
Na you know o, this same Kperogi told you that Aisha divorced late Buhari and left his house to leave alone. Later, he came out to apologize for misinformation. It is the same person writing nonsense again to deceive you. When will you guys be logical and use your reasoning ffs!.
If I didn't know your mental capacity before, you just cleared my doubts.

Between you and kperogi, who is more at an advantage to know what goes on in buharis house?
If his recant, which we all know was an arranged recant after the motive was achieved,makes you sleep at night, then sleep on.
Re: Maryam Sanda & Tinubu’s Crisis Of Clemency By Farooq A. Kperogi by cashmyles: 9:17am On Oct 18, 2025
zero8zero:
Does this amebo and self acclaimed professor of guesstimation aware that the father of the deceased has come out openly to tell us he was the one that pleaded for pardon for the woman.
After sitting down on his laptop writing his usual bullcrap, he will then come back to retract as he had done several times.
And if you read thoroughly and with open mind, you'll see the father was a deadbeat who was irresponsible and not in the life son
Re: Maryam Sanda & Tinubu’s Crisis Of Clemency By Farooq A. Kperogi by ariesbull: 9:21am On Oct 18, 2025
Tge folks from the East was actually the wise people who saw tomorrow! They warned them, they avoided the. They were called small dot by the sophisticates clowns now this is where we are today as a nation


We would imagine how this was
Re: Maryam Sanda & Tinubu’s Crisis Of Clemency By Farooq A. Kperogi by Gotocourt: 9:26am On Oct 18, 2025
Orlandoo:
Tinubu keep making unpopular decisions that always backfires. How can a president be pardoning hardened criminals and murderers just to look famous?
Na little things dey make opposition strong, that girl should be left there. My father had same fate too, fear who no fear that gender.
Re: Maryam Sanda & Tinubu’s Crisis Of Clemency By Farooq A. Kperogi by AfDapone: 9:31am On Oct 18, 2025
zero8zero:
Does this amebo and self acclaimed professor of guesstimation aware that the father of the deceased has come out openly to tell us he was the one that pleaded for pardon for the woman.
After sitting down on his laptop writing his usual bullcrap, he will then come back to retract as he had done several times.
What has coming out "openly to tell us he was the one that pleaded for pardon for the woman" has to do with law and cold blood murder?
Re: Maryam Sanda & Tinubu’s Crisis Of Clemency By Farooq A. Kperogi by Deepspirituals: 9:52am On Oct 18, 2025
nairalanda1:
The palava ultimately is simple...pardon a woman who killed her kids father...so that she can look after the same kids...who when they understand what's up when older...would be pissed.

A lot of issues there.
The Kids Would be Taken care off ,There are Many Orphans that Grew Up and becomes somebody in Life ...

So that is Not any Reasons for Sparing the Murderer.

It's even Dangerous Spiritually for the Murderer of one's Father to take care of the Children. She is Evil..An Evil Incarnate shouldn't be allowed to Take care of child to Grow .

She would inputs the seed of Evil in those Children..

I don't even know why this Woman is still living self .
Re: Maryam Sanda & Tinubu’s Crisis Of Clemency By Farooq A. Kperogi by zero8zero(m): 10:00am On Oct 18, 2025
CharlotteFlair:
If I didn't know your mental capacity before, you just cleared my doubts.

Between you and kperogi, who is more at an advantage to know what goes on in buharis house?
If his recant, which we all know was an arranged recant after the motive was achieved,makes you sleep at night, then sleep on.
So, a man holed up in the US becomes a housefly perching on the wall of Buhari's house to know about everything?. A man who apologized saying his "source" back home got it wrong and you are here saying it was arranged, na you arrange am?. Na people like you small packaging dey deceive. I hope you no dey take this sense cross road.
Re: Maryam Sanda & Tinubu’s Crisis Of Clemency By Farooq A. Kperogi by Nijaforward: 10:05am On Oct 18, 2025
Taking Tinubu serious is just like accepting you are a fool
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