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General News on Friday, February 8, 2019
Source: clbadfmonline.com
2019-02-08
play the videoMaxwell Ayinbisa
His Lord Osman Abdul Hakim, president of the court in charge of the case in which an eleven-year-old bricklayer was set on fire by a twenty-nine-year-old bricklayer for glancing at a woman in the bathroom, blamed the prosecutors for not holding the suspect sooner after the incident occurred in 2017.
William Jalulah, Clbad91.3FM correspondent for the Upper East Region, who first explained the heartbreaking story, went to the Bolgatanga District Court on Friday, February 8, 2019 to the first hearing. has drawn the attention of the court since the incident occurred more than a year ago, until what Clbad News has revealed for the first time.
The judge, however, awarded the suspect a deposit of 20,000 GHS with four sureties and two properties. He is scheduled to appear again in court on February 26, 2019.
The suspect, Nsobila John, was in court with his lawyer who asked to be released on bail, explaining to him that the suspect was not a risk of absconding.
The lawyer added that the suspect had been cooperating with the police since the beginning of the investigation and would appear in court whenever he needed it.
The prosecutor, Chief Inspector Mohammed Adnan, urged the court to place the suspect in custody because some people had threatened him with death after the incident had been brought to light. projectors.
The judge, however, accepted the application for bail.
Context
The young Maxwell Ayinbisa still treats the wounds of his son who was more than a year old after the suspect sprinkled him with gasoline and set him on fire for allegedly throwing a dart. 39, eye on a woman in a bathroom.
On November 24, 2017, Ayinbisa and two of her friends were sent to buy gas at a gas station.
According to Ayinbisa, on the way to the race, a man accused him and his friends of having a look at a woman in a bathroom.
The little boy said that his friends had run away and left him behind. He was seized by his accuser, Nsobila John, who tore off a gallon of gasoline, sprinkled it with fuel and hit him with a match.
When William Jalulah from Clbad News visited the victim's family in Pobaga, a suburb of Bolgatanga in the area, he met a suffering boy whose head, torso and sore hands were in a bandage.
The foul smell of his puss-filled wounds was unbearable.
The victim's father, Mustahpa Rahamani, told Clbad News that the suspect, after handling the boy's initial medical bills, had abandoned him.
Chief Superintendent Samuel Punobyin, commander of the Bolgatanga City Police, told Jalulah that the families of the victim and the suspect had reached an agreement to settle the case amicably.
He noted that the suspect had agreed to pay all medical expenses before he was released on bail.
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