Home spotlight Bride in Kano apprehended for allegedly murdering husband nine days after wedding

Bride in Kano apprehended for allegedly murdering husband nine days after wedding

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  • Ugandan woman kills husband, buries body under bedroom floor

“It is only when caught in the swift, sudden turn of death, that mortals realise the silent, subtle, ever-present perils of life.” — Herman Melville

Security operatives in Kano State are said to have apprehended one Saudat, a newly wedded bride, for allegedly stabbing her husband, Salisu, to death just nine days after their wedding.

Leadership reports that the tragic incident reportedly took place in Farawa community of Kano days after the couple’s wedding, which was held on Sunday, April 27, 2025.

The marriage was reportedly arranged by relatives of the couple, but lacked mutual affection between both parties.

According to reports, the deceased had initially expressed reservations about the union but he was said to have been persuaded by family members to go ahead with the marriage.

Although the circumstances surrounding their dispute leading to the death remain unclear, community members, however, alleged that Saudat may have poisoned her husband before stabbing him during an argument.

Tensions flared in the community as angry youths attempted to lynch the suspect, but prompt intervention by security operatives prevented mob action as the suspect was taken into custody.

The Kano State Police Command is yet to respond officially to the incident.

In a related development, a 43-year-old Ugandan woman is accused of murdering her husband and burying his body beneath the floor of their bedroom, a crime that has shocked a quiet rural community and unearthed a web of unanswered questions surrounding land deals, paternity, and hidden motives.

Sharon Nshemereirwe is alleged to have killed her husband, Beinomugisha, in their mud-and-wattle home in Kaniga I village, Buhweju district, Rwengwe subcounty. 

According to police investigations, the motive remains unclear, but the details emerging from the case paint a grim picture of betrayal and concealed truths. 

The disappearance of Beinomugisha initially prompted inquiries from friends and relatives. 

Nshemereirwe reportedly told them her husband had gone to South Sudan for work.

“He got a construction job and is working hard for us,” she consistently claimed.

However, family members grew suspicious.

Investigators believe the murder occurred on the night of Thursday, April 13, 2025.

Nshemereirwe allegedly struck her husband in the head with a hammer while he slept. Afterwards, she is said to have wrapped his body in bedsheets, a blanket, and a tarpaulin before burying him in a shallow grave dug under their bedroom floor. The burial site was then covered with more tarpaulin.

Before allegedly burying her husband, Nshemereirwe reportedly sent her 13-year-old son, Silver Beinomugisha, away for the day, instructing him to stay at the family’s roadside shop after school. Silver later told police he was told not to come straight home.

The silence surrounding Beinomugisha’s disappearance was eventually broken when Nshemereirwe reportedly confessed to the crime.

“I thought I could keep it to myself forever,” she allegedly told investigators. “But I broke down and told one of my siblings. I didn’t think they would tell.”

Following the alleged murder, Nshemereirwe reportedly locked the bedroom and began sleeping in the sitting room, meters away from her buried husband.

Further investigation revealed that five individuals were living in the home at the time: a two-week-old baby, Silver, a nine-year-old daughter with a mental disability, the deceased husband, and Nshemereirwe.

The case took another turn with the discovery of a 33-year-old woman, Caroline Kansiime, in the home when investigators arrived.

Nshemereirwe claimed Kansiime was a maid, but Kansiime said she was just visiting. She revealed she met Nshemereirwe through her sister in Kampala.

Kansiime also noted that Nshemereirwe was breastfeeding a three-week-old baby, claiming it belonged to one of her children but not specifying which one.

At Beinomugisha’s funeral, a relative, Federiko Mubangizi, claimed the baby was Nshemereirwe’s, alleging she concealed the pregnancy and later claimed the infant was abandoned by an in-law. Mubangizi pointed to a scar on Nshemereirwe’s stomach as evidence.

Local village chairperson Michael Tindyebwa said the late Beinomugisha had long doubted the baby’s paternity, leading to frequent arguments with Nshemereirwe. The couple had also reportedly fought over finances and a proposed land sale.

Frank Mukama, the local council chairperson for the area, urged police to thoroughly investigate Nshemereirwe and raised concerns about whispers that Beinomugisha had sold land shortly before his death. Tindyebwa confirmed the land sale but could not identify the buyer, raising Mukama’s suspicions.

Greater Bushenyi regional police spokesperson, Martial Tumusiime said Beinomugisha’s body was exhumed on April 31 following a court order, and a post-mortem examination was conducted.

Beinomugisha, a builder and businessman, is survived by eight children from three relationships. At the time of his death, he was reportedly helping to lay tiles at a local church.

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