Nigerian Army confirms killing of pro-Biafra protesters, says it acted in self-defence
The
Nigerian Army has said its troops acted in self-defence when they shot
dead some jubilating members of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB)
in Onitsha, Anambra State last Thursday.
Soldiers attached to the
302 Artillery Regiment in the commercial town shot at the IPOB members,
who were celebrating the decision of a Federal High Court in Abuja to
unconditionally release the Director of Radio Biafra, Nnamdi Kanu,
killing five instantly and injuring 25 others.
The IPOB members,
on hearing the court’s ruling ordering Kanu’s release, trooped out en
masse and converged around the statue of the late Biafran leader, Chief
Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu, located at the Onitsha end of the bridge.
They
were said to be singing and jubilating preparatory to a procession but
were stopped by policemen and soldiers who were guarding the bridge.
But
violence broke out when the IPOB members were accosted by the security
forces and asked to stop their march towards the bridge, an order the
group allegedly defied.
But the army’s Deputy Director Public
Relations, 82 Division, Enugu, Col. Hamza Gambo, denied the claim that
the youths were celebrating peacefully, adding that its troops were
attacked first by those it described as an “irate mob”.
Gambo
said: “At 1335 hours on December 17, 2015, an unknown rowdy mob
numbering about 200, whose identity is yet-to-be ascertained, attacked
troops of 302 Artillery Regiment deployed in River Niger Bridge in
Onitsha.
“The bridge, as we all know, is the major link connecting
the western region and the entire South-east as well as the South-south
region. It is of great strategic significance to the entire nation.
“The
irate mob was intent on disarming the troops and blocking the bridge.
Motorists experienced hell that day as they were held for hours both at
the entry and exit points of the bridge.
“Several frantic efforts
were made by the mob during the crisis to snatch the company commander’s
rifle and overrun the troops’ position right on the bridge.
“On
sensing the imminent danger of taking over the bridge by the unknown
assailants and the threat of being mobbed, necessitated the troops’
action of defending the key national installation (River Niger Bridge)
and themselves.”
“He said that the troops fired warning shots into the air but the mob was “undeterred and kept advancing”.
“The troops had no option than to open fire in self-defence in line with Nigerian Army rules of engagement.
“In
the process, three criminals were shot, while on our own side, a
company commander was seriously injured and magazines were damaged.
“Our
officer and other assailants who were wounded during the avoidable
incident were evacuated for treatment at 302 Artillery Regiment hospital
facility,” he added.
The statement by the army on the Onitsha
incident came just as the Ohanaeze Youth Council (OYC) appealed to
President Muhammadu Buhari to prevail on the Department of State
Services (DSS) to obey the court order by freeing Kanu.
In
a statement issued yesterday in Umuahia, Abia State, by the National
President of OYC, Mr. Okechukwu Isiguzoro, and its Secretary, Mr.
Nnabuike Okwu, the group expressed shock that the “tin gods” at the DSS
had flagrantly refused to comply with the court order.
The court
had on Thursday dismissed the various charges brought against the leader
of IPOB and Radio Biafra boss and ordered that he be released without
any condition, but three days after, the DSS has continued to hold on to
him in defiance of the court order.
The OYC said that the
attitude of DSS was provocative and an abuse of the rule of law, adding
that the president must rein in the security agency to save the country
from anarchy and the violation of human rights of Nigerian citizens.
“We
are pleading with the federal government to, as a matter of sacrifice
for the continued peace and unity of Nigeria, to please release Nnamdi
Kanu,” the OYC said.
It warned that the call had become necessary
because it would be “extremely difficult for us to continue to calm his
followers and sympathisers who see his detention as a provocation”.
The
Ohanaeze youth wing, which has been working tirelessly to pacify
pro-Biafra protesters, expressed its frustration at the stance of the
DSS, warning that the agency was creating unnecessary tension in the
land.
“We know how much effort it took us to prevail on IPOB and
MASSOB members to stop their protests before the court ruling, and we
don’t know what to tell them again, as Kanu is still in detention three
days after he was discharged by a court of competent jurisdiction,” the
OYC said.
Aside from calling for Buhari’s intervention, the OYC
also urged the international community to intervene and save Nigeria
from being plunged into another theatre of crisis when the country is
still contending with the Boko Haram insurgency in the North-east.
According
to OYC, the looming danger of renewed protests by Kanu’s followers,
sympathisers and Biafran agitators was capable of setting off a major
strife in Nigeria which it said must be avoided.
It also urged all pro-Biafra activists and Igbo youths to avoid playing into the hands of those engaging in provocative actions.
“We
call on all Igbo youths, especially IPOB and MASSOB members, as well as
other Biafran agitators, to resist the snare by the enemies of Ndigbo
to again turn Igbo soil into a theatre of war.
“The destruction in
the North-east is what our enemies want to see happen in South-east but
we must collectively resist that. Some people are looking for an
opportunity that the likely protests that Kanu’s continued detention
might spark to use war planes to send Ndigbo backwards again,” the group
said.
To buttress its concern, the OYC referred to the incident
at Onitsha when security agents shot dead members of IPOB and MASSOB as
they jubilated over the court order on Kanu’s release.
“It was a
tip of the iceberg of the agenda of our enemies to decimate Ndigbo on
the excuse of quelling uprisings. To be forewarned is to be fore armed,”
the OYC said.
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