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Boko Haram suspects on trial in Nigeria's Kainji town | Boko Haram suspects on trial in Nigeria's Kainji town |
(35 minutes later) | |
The first in a series of trials of more than 6,600 people, accused of being members of militant Islamist group Boko Haram, has opened in Nigeria. | The first in a series of trials of more than 6,600 people, accused of being members of militant Islamist group Boko Haram, has opened in Nigeria. |
The trials are being held in secret by civilian court judges at a military facility in north-central Kainji town. | The trials are being held in secret by civilian court judges at a military facility in north-central Kainji town. |
Rights activists say they are concerned about the lack of transparency in what has been described as the biggest terrorism trials in Nigeria's history. | Rights activists say they are concerned about the lack of transparency in what has been described as the biggest terrorism trials in Nigeria's history. |
Some 20,000 people have been killed in Boko Haram's eight-year insurgency. | Some 20,000 people have been killed in Boko Haram's eight-year insurgency. |
Only nine people have been convicted so far of being involved in the rebellion. | |
Four judges have started the trials at the military centre in Kainji, sources at the ministry of justice told the BBC's Ishaq Khalid in the capital, Abuja. | |
Up to 1,670 people will be tried in the coming weeks with a further 5,000 people after that, our reporter says. | |
More than 1,600 suspects are being held at the centre, where many have been for years. | |
In a report in 2015, Amnesty International said that military forces had arbitrarily detained about 20,000 people as part of its campaign to end the insurgency. | |
The trials are likely to last for months, or even years, because of the huge number of suspects who will be tried individually, Justice Minister Abubakar Malami said. |