Global rights group, Amnesty International, AI, has accused the Nigerian government of secret and illegal detention of several Nigerians. It insisted that the situation was total disrespect for fundamental human rights of the victims.
AI said it expects government to produce all those in its detention and charge them to court if there are allegations against them. The body said this as details of the charges slammed against 16 top Nigerian Government, Army and Police officials before the US District Court for the District of Columbia by lawyers of 10 pro-Biafra activists, emerged.
AI, on Tuesday, said that the enforced disappearance of persons, which is being perpetrated by government agencies, is prohibited under the International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance, to which Nigeria is a state party.
Amnesty Int’l via a statement by its media manager, Isa Sanusi, in commemoration of the International Day of the Disappeared, called on the government to release details and whereabouts of all those it held or holding.
‘The authorities must do the right thing now by releasing all of them or disclosing information about their fate or whereabouts”,
Amnesty International said its research showed that most enforced disappearances take place in the conflict-ridden North-east of Nigeria where young men are often seized by the military after being accused of affiliation to Boko Haram. The organisation said it obtained details of men, women and children who are victims of enforced disappearance in other parts of Nigeria.
According to figures provided to Amnesty by the Islamic Movement of Nigeria (IMN), at least 600 of their members’ whereabouts are not known since the clashes with the military in December 2015 in Zaria, Kaduna state.
The figures showed that more than 350 people are believed to have been unlawfully killed by the military between December 12 and 14, 2015. Amnesty quoted the families of some of the victims who told the group about their painful ordeal of years in search for justice. One Malama Zainab Isa told AI that her husband, Abdullahi Abbas, and their six children’s whereabouts or fate is not known since the night of December 14, 2015, following the clashes in Zaria.
“We don’t know whether the seven of them are alive or dead and no one is giving us any information that can ease our pain,”
Amnesty also quoted Ibrahim Aliyu, whose three brothers’ whereabouts or fate is not known since 2012 after arrest by state security services.
“Our mother is now perpetually ill, because she thinks a lot about my brothers’ fate. Sometimes, I feel I can’t bear the pain anymore,”
AI urged the Nigerian authorities to investigate all cases of enforced disappearances and bring all those suspected of criminal responsibility to justice in fair trials before ordinary civilian courts without recourse to death penalty.
“We call on authorities to investigate cases of enforced disappearance across Nigeria to end this crime under international law that makes the victims vulnerable to torture and other human rights violations.
“The families of the victims of enforced disappearance have already waited too long for answers. They deserve justice, truth and reparation now,”
Posted: at | |