Amnesty International has condemned the killing of 13 protesters allegedly killed by security personnel across Nigeria, describing the incident as “unjustified and unacceptable”.
The Country Director, Isa Sanusi, disclosed this in a statement on Friday.
“The Nigerian authorities must investigate these incidents impartially and effectively and ensure that security personnel suspected of responsibility for the alleged deadly use of force are held to account through fair trial,” he said.
The organisation noted that the killings occurred in Suleja, Niger State, where six people were killed and dozens severely wounded; Maiduguri, where four people were killed; and Kaduna, where three people were killed.
Amnesty International also expressed concern over the Nigerian authorities’ “growing hostility to dissent” and the “relentless repression of the right to freedom of peaceful assembly”.
“Our findings, so far, show that security personnel at the locations where lives were lost deliberately used tactics designed to kill while dealing with gatherings of people protesting hunger and deep poverty,” the statement read.
The organisation called on the Nigerian government to take concrete steps to address the impact of recent reforms on economic, social and cultural rights, including people’s rights to health and education.
“All those arrested for taking part in the protests must be released immediately and unconditionally. Authorities must also end the rampant violations of the people’s rights to peaceful assembly and freedom of expression,” Sanusi added.
Meanwhile, responding to the allegation, the Niger State Police Command, in a report issued and made available by the command’s Police Public Relations Officer, Wasiu Abiodun, on Thursday, acknowledged the chaos that broke out in Tafa Local Government Council Secretariat,
in the state where miscreants looted, vandalised and partly set the building ablaze, noting that vehicles were damaged and burnt, while security agencies responded, made arrest and dispersed the hoodlums.
According to Abiodun, during the process, there was no loss of life, and there was no report of such as protesters were dispersed with the use of minimum force, highlighting however, that some miscreants were mildly injured during stampede and most of them were taken to different nearby medical facilities for treatment.