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Amnesty Int’l tasks Tinubu’s govt to investigate human rights violations in S’East

Amnesty International has tasked the Federal Government of Nigeria to address the security crisis in the South-East region of the country.

In a statement it released in Enugu on Tuesday, the international human rights group said that to address the crisis, the Nigerian government to carry out transparent, impartial and effective investigation of killings, assassinations, enforced disappearances and other atrocities committed by state and non-state actors since August 2015.

It noted that the persistent failure of the government to address the security crisis in the country’s South-East region has created a free-for-all reign of impunity in which numerous State and non-State actors have committed serious human rights violations and killed at least 1,844 people between January 2021 and June 2023.

The rights group added that the report: A Decade of Impunity: Attacks and Unlawful Killings in Southeast Nigeria, which documents unlawful killings, torture, enforced disappearances and arbitrary arrests at the hands of rampaging gunmen, state-backed paramilitary outfits, vigilante, criminal gangs and cults groups in the South-East region provides the authorities with adequate leads to open an investigation that will end the impunity and provide victims with justice.

“The Nigerian authorities’ brutal clampdown on pro-Biafra protests from August 2015 plunged the South-East region into an endless cycle of bloodshed, which has created a climate of fear and left many communities vulnerable.

“Assassinations of prominent personalities and attacks on highways, security personnel and facilities are chilling reminders of the region’s insecurity,” said Isa Sanusi, Director of Amnesty International Nigeria.

The report, according to Amnesty, is based on interviews with 100 people, including survivors, victims’ relatives, civil society members, lawyers, traditional leaders, and religious leaders.

Amnesty International said it also conducted research missions to Owerri in Imo state, Asaba in Delta state, Obosi in Anambra state, and Enugu in Enugu state between April 2023 to November 2023.

Gunmen killed over 400 people in Imo state between January 2019 and December 2021, often emerging from their camps unmasked to carry out attacks on residents, police stations, and vigilante offices, the rights group disclosed.

The raids, it noted, have triggered reprisal attacks resulting in death and injury for thousands of residents.

According to Amnesty International, victims described how the gunmen appear, routinely demanding money from communities during burial ceremonies and weddings.

Anyone who resists risks being subjected to violent attack during the night, and their house set on fire.

Ebulie, who survived an attack by gunmen in Ihiala told Amnesty International: “The “unknown gunmen” are armed – some come with guns, cutlasses, and machetes. If they come for an attack, anyone that blocks their way, they will kill them. It has been a terrible situation, people are scared…”

Nigerian authorities continue to blame the pro-Biafran organization IPOB (Indigenous People of Biafra) and its militant arm, the Eastern Security Network (ESN) for most of the deadly attacks in the region.

IPOB/ESN deny involvement in the activities of the “unknown gunmen” and their camps.

However, the enforcement of a sit-at-home order by IPOB/ESN, across the South-East region, issued on August 9, 2021, has led to human rights violations with people beaten or even killed for defying the order, Amnesty noted.

“Schools have been shut, exams disrupted, forcing children to stay away from schools. Markets have been closed with harsh economic consequences for communities across Abia, Anambra, Ebonyi, Enugu and Imo states.

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