LAST
Wednesday’s release of a damning report by Amnesty International
alleging “horrific war crimes” by the Nigerian armed forces has sent
shock waves within the military hierarchy.
This is because any of
the military officials indicted may end up at the International
Criminal Court at The Hague, The Netherlands.
The military was
getting used to the periodic allegations of human rights abuses by
Amnesty International, but to now face allegations of war crimes,
including murder of 8,000 people, starving, suffocating and torturing
others to death set off alarm bells .
There has been anxiety in many quarters as to how the report would be handled by the government of President Muhammadu Buhari.
Amnesty International’s report Indeed, the accusations are grievous.
Amnesty
said in its 133-page report titled: Stars on their shoulders. Blood on
their hands- War crimes committed by the Nigerian military – that since
March 2011, more than 7,000 young men and boys died in military
detention and more than 1,200 people were unlawfully killed since
February 2012.
It said it can vouch for the authenticity of the
report based on years of research and analyses of evidence including
leaked military reports and correspondence, interviews with more than
400 victims, eyewitnesses and senior members of the Nigerian security
forces.
Amnesty International’s Secretary General, Mr. Salil
Shetty, in the report outlined the roles and possible criminal
responsibilities of those along the chain of command – up to the Chief
of Defence Staff and Chief of Army Staff, submitting that “this
sickening evidence exposes how thousands of young men and boys have been
arbitrarily arrested and deliberately killed or left to die in
detention in the most horrific conditions.
It is also about the
responsibility of Nigeria’s leadership to act decisively to end the
pervasive culture of impunity within the armed forces.”
Shetty
then listed the war crimes to include alleged mass deaths in custody,
starvation, dehydration and disease, overcrowding and suffocation,
fumigation, torture, and extrajudicial executions. Amnesty also claimed
that high level military commanders knew of the crimes.
The body
then charged: “Despite being informed of the death rates and conditions
of detention, Nigerian military officials consistently failed to take
meaningful action.
Those in charge of detention facilities, as well as their commanders at Army and Defence headquarters, must be investigated.
For
years the Nigerian authorities have downplayed accusations of human
rights abuses by the military. But they cannot dismiss their own
internal military documents.
They cannot ignore testimonies from
witnesses and high-ranking military whistle blowers. And they cannot
deny the existence of emaciated and mutilated bodies piled on mortuary
slabs and dumped in mass graves.
“We call on newly-elected
President Buhari to end the culture of impunity that has blighted
Nigeria and for the African Union and international community to
encourage and support these efforts. As a matter of urgency, the
President must launch an immediate and impartial investigation into the
crimes detailed in Amnesty International’s report and hold all those
responsible to account, no matter their rank or position. Only then can
there be justice for the dead and their relatives.”
In September
last year, Amnesty released similar report, indicting the military and
police for brutal torture and extra judicial killing of Nigerians
including children held in their custody. It also said between 5,000 and
10,000 Nigerians have been detained since 2009.
To add to the
Amnesty pressure, the United States accused Nigeria of extensive human
rights abuses in its fight against Boko Haram and says its laws forbid
arms transaction with any country so accused.
Amnesty
International’s report is certain to complicate efforts at resolving the
issues to allow Nigeria obtain military support and equipment. The
62-page report, presented by Nicola Duckworth last September was titled:
“Welcome to Hell Fire’ Torture and Other Ill-Treatment in Nigeria.”
There
were vehement denials by the military and Police who were joined by
some Nigerians and groups in accusing Amnesty of seeing only the alleged
atrocities of the Nigerian military and other security agencies.
Amnesty
then released another report in February 2015 stating that it has
evidence and reasonable belief that Islamist militant group Boko Haram
and the Nigerian military have committed crimes under international law
in the context of the conflict in North-East Nigeria.
Amnesty in a
written statement to the 28th Session of the United Nations Human
Rights Council said the Nigerian security forces in its response to Boko
Haram had committed serious human right violations, claiming it had
evidence to suggest Nigeria’s military had also committed war crimes.
It
then added its concern on the “deaths of more than one thousand
suspects in military detention facilities as a result of extrajudicial
executions, torture, starvation, disease, suffocation or other reasons
associated with extremely poor conditions.”
Cashing in on the
latest report by Amnesty, Joel Gillin, writing in the U.S. liberal
magazine, The New Republic, stated that with the new war crimes
allegations, the United States should think twice about deeper military
ties with Nigeria.
Gillin slammed his country for planning to
send a team to Nigeria to work more closely and coordinate in the
Nigeria’s battle against Boko Haram, which is a sign of good faith in
warming relationship with Nigeria’s new President.
According to
him: “The timing is unfortunate. Although it’s wrong-headed, perhaps the
deeper co-mingling of the U.S. and Nigeria makes a certain morbid
sense. In the name of fighting terrorism, both countries severely
overreacted, committing serious war crimes that are likely to go
unpunished. While some of us may hope to see Nigerian officials tried in
the International Criminal Court, as Amnesty International has called
for, we have also grown used to impunity in the War on Terror excesses,
as even U.S. officials who admit to their crimes remain free.”
But generally, Amnesty’s latest assessment of the military did not go down well with Nigerians.
http://www.ngrguardiannews.com/2015/06/anger-in-military-over-amnesty-report/
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