The latest reports
of the Amnesty International (AI) have revealed how no fewer than 150
pro-Biafra protesters in the South East were killed by the Nigerian security
forces
led by the military.
The group, in a
press statement yesterday, based its figure on analysed 87 videos, 122
photographs and 146 eyewitness testimonies relating to demonstrations and other
gathered between August 2015 and August this year.
The Indigenous
People of Biafra (IPOB) emerged in 2012
and campaigns for an independent Biafran state. Almost 50 years ago, an attempt
to establish Biafra state led to a civil war from 1967 to 1970.
There has been
series of protests, marches and gatherings by members and supporters of IPOB
since August last year by the group which has been seeking the creation of a Biafran
state.
However, tension
increased following the arrest of IPOB leader,
Nnamdi Kanu on October 14, 2015, who has since remained in detention.
The statement read:
‘’The Nigerian security forces, led by the military, embarked on a chilling
campaign of extrajudicial executions and violence resulting in the deaths of at
least 150 peaceful pro-Biafra protesters in the south east of the country,
according to an investigation by Amnesty International published today
(yesterday).
It further stated
that available data consistently showed that the Nigerian military fired live
ammunition with little or no warning to disperse crowds.
AI also said it
found evidence of mass extrajudicial executions by security forces, including
at least 60 people shot dead in the space of two days in connection with events
to mark Biafra Remembrance Day.
“This deadly
repression of pro-Biafra activists is further stoking tensions in the
South-east of Nigeria. This reckless and trigger-happy approach to crowd
control has caused at least 150 deaths and we fear the actual total might be
far higher,” said Makmid Kamara, Interim Director of Amnesty International
Nigeria.
“The Nigerian
government’s decision to send in the military to respond to pro-Biafra events
seems to be in large part to blame for this excessive bloodshed. The
authorities must immediately launch an impartial investigation and bring the
perpetrators to book.”
According to the
group, the largest number of pro-Biafra activists were killed on Biafra
Remembrance Day on 30 May 2016 when an estimated 1,000 IPOB members and
supporters gathered for a rally in Onitsha, Anambra State.
It went further to
state that night before the rally,
Nigerian security forces raided homes and a church where IPOB members
were sleeping.
“On Remembrance Day
itself, the security forces shot people in several locations,’’ it said.
Although Amnesty
International said it had not been able to verify the exact number of
extrajudicial executions on the occasion,
it estimated that at least 60 people were killed and 70 injured in the
two days.
Fearing that the
real number of extrajudicial executions might be higher, AI quoted one Ngozi, 28, mother of one who told
the group that her husband left in the morning to go to work but called her
shortly afterwards to say that the military had shot him in his abdomen.
“He said he was in a
military vehicle with six others, four of whom were already dead. He (my
husband) started whispering and said they just stopped (the vehicle). He was
scared they would kill the remaining three of them that were alive… He paused
and told me they were coming closer. I heard gunshots and I did not hear a word
from him after that.
“The next day, Ngozi
searched for her husband and finally found his body in a nearby mortuary. The
mortuary attendants told her that the military had brought him and six others. She saw three
gunshot wounds; one in his abdomen and two in his chest, which confirmed her
fear that the military had executed him.”
The Amnesty also
said it reviewed videos of a peaceful gathering of IPOB members and supporters
at Aba National High School on February 9, 2016, during which the Nigerian
military surrounded the group and fired live ammunition at them without any
prior warning.
“Many of the
protesters at Aba were rounded up and taken away by the military. On February
13, corpses, including those of men known to have been taken by the military,
were discovered in a pit near the Aba highway.
“It is chilling to
see how these soldiers gunned down peaceful IPOB members. The video evidence
shows that this was a military operation with intent to kill and injure,” said
Kamara.
In many of the
incidents detailed in the report, including the Aba High School protest, AI
said the military applied tactics designed to kill and neutralize an enemy,
rather than to ensure public order at a peaceful event.
“All IPOB gatherings
documented by Amnesty International were largely peaceful. In those cases where
there were pockets of violence, it was mostly in reaction to shooting by the
security forces. Eyewitnesses told Amnesty International that some protesters
threw stones, burnt tyres and in one incident shot at the police. Regardless,
these acts of violence and disorder did not justify the level of force used
against the whole assembly.
“Amnesty
International’s research also shows a disturbing pattern of hundreds of
arbitrary arrests and ill-treatment by soldiers during and after IPOB events,
including arrests of wounded victims in hospital, and torture and other
ill-treatment of detainees.
Vincent Ogbodo (not
real name), a 26-year-old trader, said he was shot on Remembrance Day in Nkpor
and hid in a gutter. When soldiers found him they poured acid on him. He told
Amnesty International: “I covered my face. I would have been blind by now. He
poured acid on my hands. My hands and body started burning. The flesh was
burning… They dragged me out of the gutter. They said I’ll die slowly.”
A man who was
detained in Onitsha Barracks after the Remembrance Day shooting on May 30, 2016
told Amnesty International: “Those in the guardroom (detention) were flogged
every morning. The soldiers tagged it ‘Morning Tea’.”
The group lamented
that despite the overwhelming evidence that the Nigerian security forces
committed gross human rights violations including extrajudicial executions and
torture, no investigations have been carried out by the authorities.
‘’A similar pattern
of lack of accountability for gross violations by the military has been
documented in other parts of Nigeria including the north east in the context of
operations against Boko Haram’’.
“Amnesty
International has repeatedly called on the government of Nigeria to initiate
independent investigations into evidence of crimes under international law, and
President Buhari has repeatedly promised that Amnesty International’s reports
would be looked into. However, no concrete steps have been taken,” said Makmid
Kamara.
In the very rare
cases where an investigation is carried out, there is no follow up. As a result
of the apparent lack of political will to investigate and prosecute perpetrators
of such crimes, the military continues to commit human rights violations and
grave crimes with impunity.
In addition to
investigations, the Nigerian government must ensure adequate reparations for
the victims, including the families. They should end all use of military in
policing demonstrations and ensure the police are adequately instructed,
trained and equipped to deal with crowd-control situations in line with
international law and standards. In particular, firearms must never be used as
a tool for crowd control.
AI said on September
30, 2016, it shared the key findings of
its report with the Federal Minister of Justice and Attorney General, Chief of
Defence Staff, Chief of Army Staff, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Minister of
Interior, Inspector General of Police and the Director-General of the state
Security Services.
Although it stated
that responses were received from the Attorney General and Inspector General of
Police, but neither answered the questions raised in the report.
Follow Solenzo Blog on




0 Comments