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Nigeria security forces 'killed 150 peaceful pro-Biafra protesters' | Nigeria security forces 'killed 150 peaceful pro-Biafra protesters' |
(about 2 hours later) | |
Nigeria's security forces have killed more than 150 peaceful protesters since August 2015, a human rights group has claimed. | Nigeria's security forces have killed more than 150 peaceful protesters since August 2015, a human rights group has claimed. |
Amnesty International said the military used live ammunition and deadly force against pro-Biafra protesters who were campaigning for an independent state in the south-east. | |
Nigeria's police denies allegations that it used unnecessary force. | Nigeria's police denies allegations that it used unnecessary force. |
The country's army said Amnesty was trying to tarnish its reputation. | The country's army said Amnesty was trying to tarnish its reputation. |
Amnesty's report is based on interviews with almost 200 people, alongside more than 100 photographs and 87 videos. | Amnesty's report is based on interviews with almost 200 people, alongside more than 100 photographs and 87 videos. |
Among the allegations contained in the report are what Amnesty called "extrajudicial executions", when 60 people were shot and killed in south-eastern Onitsha city, in the two days surrounding Biafra Remembrance Day in May 2016. | |
"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, Amnesty's interim director for 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, Amnesty's interim director for Nigeria. |
Other victims detailed in the report include a 26-year-old man who was shot in Nkpor, but hid in a gutter, still alive. He said when soldiers found him, they poured acid over him, and told him he would die slowly. | Other victims detailed in the report include a 26-year-old man who was shot in Nkpor, but hid in a gutter, still alive. He said when soldiers found him, they poured acid over him, and told him he would die slowly. |
Another woman said she had been speaking to her husband on a mobile phone when he told her he had been shot in the abdomen. He was calling from a military vehicle, she said, and she heard gunshots. She later found his body in a morgue with two more wounds in his chest, leading her to believe he had been executed after the call. | Another woman said she had been speaking to her husband on a mobile phone when he told her he had been shot in the abdomen. He was calling from a military vehicle, she said, and she heard gunshots. She later found his body in a morgue with two more wounds in his chest, leading her to believe he had been executed after the call. |
'Unimaginable atrocities' | |
The human rights organisation said pro-Biafra protests had been "largely peaceful" despite occasional incidents of protesters throwing stones and burning tyres - and one occasion when someone shot at police. | The human rights organisation said pro-Biafra protests had been "largely peaceful" despite occasional incidents of protesters throwing stones and burning tyres - and one occasion when someone shot at police. |
"Regardless, these acts of violence and disorder did not justify the level of force used against the whole assembly." | "Regardless, these acts of violence and disorder did not justify the level of force used against the whole assembly." |
But army spokesman Sani Usman that "the military and other security agencies exercised maximum restraints despite the flurry of provocative and unjustifiable violence". | But army spokesman Sani Usman that "the military and other security agencies exercised maximum restraints despite the flurry of provocative and unjustifiable violence". |
The two main secessionist groups in the south-east, the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) and the Movement for the Actualisation of the Sovereign State of Biafra, had committed "unimaginable atrocities", he said. | |
This included burning and killing people from other parts of Nigeria and forcing them to flee, Col Usman added. | |
In the past year there has been a series of protests to demand the creation of the state of Biafra in the south-east, home to the Igbo people. | |
Prominent IPOB leader Nnamdi Kanu has been detained without trial since October 2015, with the government defying a court order to release him. | |
Analysis: Martin Patience, BBC News, Lagos | |
The mention of Biafra continues to trigger powerful emotions in Nigeria - and memories of the country's darkest chapter. | |
In 1967, nationalists attempted to create the independent state of Biafra in the south-east. It was to be a homeland for the Igbo people, one of the country's largest ethnic groups. | |
But the bid for independence plunged the nation into a three-year civil war that killed at least a million people. | |
Almost 50 years on and the bitterness of that period still lingers. Many Igbos claim they are still being punished for the conflict. | |
In the past year that anger has manifested itself in a younger generation who have staged a wave of protests, fuelled, in part, by high unemployment and anger about official corruption - issues that are hardly unique to the Igbos. | |
But IPOB appears to have gained momentum after the Nigerian authorities detained Mr Kanu, accusing him of treason. | |
It is this heavy-handed approach, say human rights groups, that is inflaming the tensions. |