Update On Police and Shiite Clash In Abuja
Scores of members of the Islamic Movement in Nigeria were injured on Monday in Abuja during a clash with policemen at the Maitama area of the city.
It was gathered that the police arrested about 115 Shiite members who were protesting against the continued incarceration of their leader, Sheik Ibrahim El-Zakyzaky, by the Federal Government.
The protesters had moved to the National Human Rights Commission when the police swooped on them and fired tear gas canisters at them to break up the protest.
The Shiite members in turn, threw stones at the policemen, damaging many parked vehicles and injuring passersby and motorists.
According to Punch, their action infuriated the cops who responded with live bullets, some of which hit the Nigerian Communications Commission building and other offices in the vicinity.
The security personnel also scalded the mob with hot water from their cannon truck.
The development paralysed commercial activities in the area as everyone fled while vehicles avoided the neighbourhood.
The police had last Friday cordoned off the Unity Fountain where the Shiite members usually hold their rallies.
They also arrested an activist and convener, Concerned Citizens, Deji Adeyanju, who had been championing the protests for over seven weeks.
The activist was also said to have been detained at the police command shortly after the clash between the police and the Shiite members on Monday.
A member of the IMN, Mohammed Gamawa, accused the police of firing live bullets at the protesters. He said many of the injured were taken to the Special Anti-Robbery Squad office.
Gamawa said, “As I am talking to you, I’m at a hospital in Gwarimpa, receiving treatment for tear gas inhalation. We have about 115 members that were taken away, some of them with bullet injuries.
They take them to SARS office, they would not treat them and so far, six of our members have been left to bleed to death from gunshot injuries since we commenced our daily protests about 80 days ago.”
When asked about the damage to some cars by his members, Gamawa denied that Shiite members did the damage, noting that the police might have hired thugs to vandalise the cars.
“Our members were not involved in vandalising the vehicles; there is probability that the police hired some thugs to do that. It is not in our character. Last Friday, they fired tear gas canisters at my car in order to burn it. They would have told the world that we set the car on fire, but it was my car they fired at,” he said.
Also, the group in a statement said the police were out to portray the movement as violent in nature, adding that it would not relent on its peaceful protest until El-Zakzaky was released from detention.
The statement signed by the IMN’s spokesman, Ibrahim Musa, said what happened was a show of shame.
The statement read in part, “What happened today in Abuja was purely a show of shame by the police, who are hell-bent on forcibly stopping our legitimate campaign for the government to obey the orders of its courts by freeing Sheikh Zakzaky.
“This is a legitimate struggle. We have a right to protest and assemble peacefully. This we have done in Abuja and all other places peacefully for almost two and half years now. We have stepped up the campaign in Abuja since the last 100 days (and it is noteworthy that it had been peaceful) with daily protest at the unity fountain and processions.
“Last week, the authorities used combat ready policemen to forcibly stop the rotest. They also arbitrarily arrested Deji, one of the conveners of the protest. He was clearly told that ‘the government is uncomfortable with the free Zakzaky campaign’ going on in Abuja. He was told to stop it.
“Clearly, they have been looking for ways to infiltrate the protest and give it a semblance of riot so that they could use that as an excuse.
“We are the victims. No amount of cheap blackmail will make us to succumb. Our protest has always been peaceful and we have proved this to the world beyond any reasonable doubt, even in the face of extreme provocation.”
Shittes injured 22 policemen –PPRO
The Federal Capital Territory police spokesman, Anjuguri Manzah, said the protesters destroyed police vehicles and injured 22 policemen.
He added that the 115 Shiite members that were arrested would be taken to court.
He explained that the rioters attacked residents and smashed vehicle windscreens, noting that the police recovered catapults, iron bars, stones, ball bearings and pink headbands from them.
“The FCT Police Command hereby warns members of Shiite movement against further disrupting the peace, harmony and free flow of traffic in FCT. Anyone caught in the act of violent demonstration or any act capable of causing the breach of public peace will be made to face the wrath of the law,” Manzah said in a statement.
Falana Flays Attack
Human rights lawyer, Mr. Femi Falana (SAN), condemned the attack on Shi’ites.
Falana was the detainees’ lawyer who on December 2, 2016, obtained the judgment of the Federal High Court in Abuja, ordering some members’ release from the custody of the State Security Service.
The Federal Government has yet to comply with the judgment.
Falana declared on Monday that the detainees must be released in compliance with the order of the Federal High Court if the government was “genuinely desirous” of stopping the protest.
He said the “violent attack in which some of the protesters were killed and injured by security forces is barbaric.”
He said the attack, which he described as “totally unacceptable,” was staged “in a desperate bid to stop the Shiites from further exposing the lawlessness of the Federal Government”.
He maintained that the security forces had “breached the fundamental rights of the protesters to life, freedom from torture, freedom of assembly and freedom of expression.”
It was gathered that the police arrested about 115 Shiite members who were protesting against the continued incarceration of their leader, Sheik Ibrahim El-Zakyzaky, by the Federal Government.
The protesters had moved to the National Human Rights Commission when the police swooped on them and fired tear gas canisters at them to break up the protest.
The Shiite members in turn, threw stones at the policemen, damaging many parked vehicles and injuring passersby and motorists.
According to Punch, their action infuriated the cops who responded with live bullets, some of which hit the Nigerian Communications Commission building and other offices in the vicinity.
The security personnel also scalded the mob with hot water from their cannon truck.
The development paralysed commercial activities in the area as everyone fled while vehicles avoided the neighbourhood.
The police had last Friday cordoned off the Unity Fountain where the Shiite members usually hold their rallies.
They also arrested an activist and convener, Concerned Citizens, Deji Adeyanju, who had been championing the protests for over seven weeks.
The activist was also said to have been detained at the police command shortly after the clash between the police and the Shiite members on Monday.
A member of the IMN, Mohammed Gamawa, accused the police of firing live bullets at the protesters. He said many of the injured were taken to the Special Anti-Robbery Squad office.
Gamawa said, “As I am talking to you, I’m at a hospital in Gwarimpa, receiving treatment for tear gas inhalation. We have about 115 members that were taken away, some of them with bullet injuries.
They take them to SARS office, they would not treat them and so far, six of our members have been left to bleed to death from gunshot injuries since we commenced our daily protests about 80 days ago.”
When asked about the damage to some cars by his members, Gamawa denied that Shiite members did the damage, noting that the police might have hired thugs to vandalise the cars.
“Our members were not involved in vandalising the vehicles; there is probability that the police hired some thugs to do that. It is not in our character. Last Friday, they fired tear gas canisters at my car in order to burn it. They would have told the world that we set the car on fire, but it was my car they fired at,” he said.
Also, the group in a statement said the police were out to portray the movement as violent in nature, adding that it would not relent on its peaceful protest until El-Zakzaky was released from detention.
The statement signed by the IMN’s spokesman, Ibrahim Musa, said what happened was a show of shame.
The statement read in part, “What happened today in Abuja was purely a show of shame by the police, who are hell-bent on forcibly stopping our legitimate campaign for the government to obey the orders of its courts by freeing Sheikh Zakzaky.
“This is a legitimate struggle. We have a right to protest and assemble peacefully. This we have done in Abuja and all other places peacefully for almost two and half years now. We have stepped up the campaign in Abuja since the last 100 days (and it is noteworthy that it had been peaceful) with daily protest at the unity fountain and processions.
“Last week, the authorities used combat ready policemen to forcibly stop the rotest. They also arbitrarily arrested Deji, one of the conveners of the protest. He was clearly told that ‘the government is uncomfortable with the free Zakzaky campaign’ going on in Abuja. He was told to stop it.
“Clearly, they have been looking for ways to infiltrate the protest and give it a semblance of riot so that they could use that as an excuse.
“We are the victims. No amount of cheap blackmail will make us to succumb. Our protest has always been peaceful and we have proved this to the world beyond any reasonable doubt, even in the face of extreme provocation.”
Shittes injured 22 policemen –PPRO
The Federal Capital Territory police spokesman, Anjuguri Manzah, said the protesters destroyed police vehicles and injured 22 policemen.
He added that the 115 Shiite members that were arrested would be taken to court.
He explained that the rioters attacked residents and smashed vehicle windscreens, noting that the police recovered catapults, iron bars, stones, ball bearings and pink headbands from them.
“The FCT Police Command hereby warns members of Shiite movement against further disrupting the peace, harmony and free flow of traffic in FCT. Anyone caught in the act of violent demonstration or any act capable of causing the breach of public peace will be made to face the wrath of the law,” Manzah said in a statement.
Falana Flays Attack
Human rights lawyer, Mr. Femi Falana (SAN), condemned the attack on Shi’ites.
Falana was the detainees’ lawyer who on December 2, 2016, obtained the judgment of the Federal High Court in Abuja, ordering some members’ release from the custody of the State Security Service.
The Federal Government has yet to comply with the judgment.
Falana declared on Monday that the detainees must be released in compliance with the order of the Federal High Court if the government was “genuinely desirous” of stopping the protest.
He said the “violent attack in which some of the protesters were killed and injured by security forces is barbaric.”
He said the attack, which he described as “totally unacceptable,” was staged “in a desperate bid to stop the Shiites from further exposing the lawlessness of the Federal Government”.
He maintained that the security forces had “breached the fundamental rights of the protesters to life, freedom from torture, freedom of assembly and freedom of expression.”
No comments