By Rafiu Ajakaye
LAGOS, Nigeria (AA) - The trial of at least 1,600 Boko Haram suspects resumed on Monday as courts resumed from their annual vacation, according to a Justice Ministry spokesman.
“The trials are going on right now. But they are not open to the public because we do not want to endanger the lives of people,” Othman Salihu Isa, a spokesman for the justice minister, told Anadolu Agency.
Isa also did not name the judges handling the cases for “security reasons and because of the sensitivity of the trial”.
The Justice Ministry had announced in a statement in September that four judges have been picked along with special prosecutors and defense attorneys to speed up the trial which begins with Boko Haram suspects being held at a military facility in central Nigeria Kainji town.
That statement claimed the trial of some 651 suspects being held in northeastern Maiduguri would follow as the authorities continue to review cases arising from military operations against the Boko Haram insurgency.
The trial is dogged by what Justice Minister Abubakar Malami called the poor investigation of cases, reliance on confession-based evidence, lack of forensic evidence, bickering between investigators and prosecutors in the early stages of the investigation and security fears of the counsel handling the cases.
Nigeria is battling to end the seven-year insurgency in the northeast in which tens of thousands have been killed and at least two million displaced from their homes across the Lake Chad region.