
Deponent Franque Devisse denies the accusation that he was the one who introduced a knife into the Machava Maximum Security Prison to execute Nini Satar. The prisoner accuses the defendant Leão Wilson of trying to entice him to lie in exchange for freedom. Following the trial of the attempted murder of Nini Satar, two more deponents were heard this Wednesday. The first was Franque Davisse, accused of having facilitated the entry of a knife into the B.O., in order to execute Momed Satar, in February of last year. Confronted with the fact, Franque refuted the accusations and revealed that he was coerced by the defendant Leão Wilson to accuse Nini Satar, in exchange for freedom. “This Monday (24th), when they were leaving here, Leona Wilson came to me and told me to come lie here to the court, saying that Nini was the one who handed me the knife. But I couldn't do that, because I know it's a crime”, said Franque Davisse, after having stated that he had never seen that knife that is so much talked about. Asked if he had heard about Nini Satar's assassination plan, Franque said he only heard about the case after the matter was triggered, when the Attorney General's Office began an investigation into the B.O., in order to discover the contours of that case. The 36-year-old inmate says that, on one of the occasions, his pavilion was questioned, through the fence that separates his from the other, by António Chicuamba, one of the defendants in the process, requesting that he send a contact phone number written on a piece of paper to another prisoner (arguido), named Damião Mula. “Once there, I handed over the contact and he returned it saying that the number was not complete and that he should not accept anything when he was called by the PGR, this because Leão (defendant) was dealing with everything with the ‘bosses’. When I returned, Chicuamba was already being collected for interrogation. Then I called Ismael (another inmate) and informed him of what happened, so he advised me to tell Nini everything”, he said. The second declarant, Armando Vilanculos, a prison intelligence officer, is implicated in the case as the person who would have facilitated the entry of the cell phone used to make recordings that prove the involvement of the six defendants. But this one also denied everything. Vilanculos is cited as the person who received José Ngulela's cell phone, at one of the stops in the Jardim neighborhood, in Maputo City, to facilitate his entry into the B.O.. But that one says that, as an intelligence officer, he was integrated into a team made up of members of the PGR, SERNAP and other elements of the justice framework.
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