.Reveals Widespread Torture
A damning report by Amnesty International (AI) has showed that Nigeria security forces, particularly the army, perpetrated extrajudicial executions and torture against pro-Biafra protesters across Nigeria’s south-east, between August 2015 and August 2016, which led to at least 150 deaths.
The report titled: “Bullets Were Raining Everywhere”: Deadly Repression of Pro-Biafra Activists”, released on Thursday (based on 87 videos, 122 photographs and 146 eye witness accounts), exposed that soldiers of the Nigeria military fired live ammunition, without warning, to disperse protesters, most of them members of the separatist group, Indigenous People of the Biafra (IPOB).
AI report reveals that at least 60 defenceless IPOB protesters were shot dead within two days leading to the Biafra Remembrance Day of May 30.
It showed that he largest number of IPOB members were killed during the Biafra Remembrance Day of May 30, 2016. According to the report about 1,000 members of the group had gathered for a rally in Onitsha, Anambra State. Also it said that security forces raided their homes and a church where they were sleeping.
“On Remembrance Day itself, the security forces shot people in several locations. Amnesty International has not been able to verify the exact number of extrajudicial executions, but estimates that at least 60 people were killed and 70 injured in these two days. The real number is likely to be higher,” the report said.
AI spoke to a woman named simply as Ngozi (not her real name), the 28-year-old wife of one of the slain members of IPOB about the callous events of that day.
She told AI that her husband called her shortly after he left for work in the morning that soldiers have shot him in his abdomen, telling his wife he was in a military vehicle with six others, four of whom were already dead.
“He 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 after a long search, Ngozi found her husand body in a nearby mortuary. Mortuary attendants told her that the military had brought him and six others. She said he had three gunshot wounds one in his abdomen and two in his chest, which was a sign of execution.
Also, one Chukwuemeka (not his real name), a 25-year-old trader, told AI that he was shot and taken together with corpses to the barracks.
“They dumped us on the ground beside a pit. There were two soldiers beside the pit. The pit was very big and so many dead people were inside the pit. I cannot estimate the number of people in the grave. … We were dumped on the ground.”
But he was lucky to escape; he hid in the bushes.
Amnesty International said it reviewed videos of a peaceful gathering of IPOB members at Aba National High School on February 9. The Nigerian military surrounded the group and then opened fire indiscriminately on everyone in sight without any warning.
Many of the protesters were then rounded up and taken away. Four days later, 13 corpses including some of the men taken away were found dumped near the Aba Highway.
According to AI, the military took the bodies of people killed and injured in Onitsha and Asaba to the military barracks in Onitsha. Video footage shows soldiers loading the dead and injured into their Hilux van.
“Initially, when they were still dumping corpses, I could see 10 to 12 lifeless bodies. That was in the morning. In the evening, there were more but I could not estimate,” A man who was detained in the barracks and who saw the corpses dumped in front of the military mortuary said.
Apart from extra-judicial killings, the report also showed very disturbing use of widespread torture and ill-treatment of those arrested by the military.
Vincent Ogbodo (not his real name), a 26-year-old trader, said he was shot on May30, 2016 in Nkpor and hid in a gutter. He said when soldiers found him they poured acid on him.
“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.”
Another man detained at the Onitsha Barracks revealed that “those in the guard room were flogged every morning. The soldiers tagged it ‘Morning Tea’.”
“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.”
“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,” Mr. Kamara said.
According to AI most IPOB protests have been largely peaceful. But said that on occasions, protesters hurled stones, burned tyres and in one case shot a police officer.
“Regardless, these acts of violence and disorder did not justify the level of force used against the whole assembly,” AI stated.
AI regretted that notwithstanding overwhelming evidence of extrajudicial killings and torture of protesters, no action has been taken by the government of President Muhammadu Buahri. The result is that in a democracy perpetrators of such heinous crime are still circulating as free citizens.
It said this lack of accountability for human rights violations by the military is similar to documented cases in other parts of the country especially in the country’s north-east region where the military fights a war 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,” Mr. Kamara said.
“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
The Nigerian Army denies the accusations. Interestingly, in a bid to thwart the planned release of AI’s report on Thursday, the Nigeria army on Wednesday evening released a statement denying that soldiers killed and tortured defenceless pro-Biafra agitators.
It claimed that the report was an attempt to tarnish the reputation of Nigerian security forces and that of the army especially.
Col. Sani Usman, in the statement, claimed that IPOB members relished in the use of violence that threatens the security of the country.
