Zacheaus Somorin with agency reports
Nearly 350 dead bodies were buried in a
mass grave in Kaduna, after clashes between the army and supporters of a
Shiite cleric, a public official has told an inquiry into the unrest.
The testimony of Muhammad Namadi Musa,
the director-general of the Kaduna State Interfaith Bureau, lends
weight to claims that at least 300 people were killed in the violence in
December last year.
The clashes came after the army said
supporters of the cleric Ibrahim Zakzaky, who heads the Islamic Movement
of Nigeria (IMN) group, tried to kill the chief of army staff.
Zakzaky has not been seen since his
home and the IMN mosque in Zaria, Kaduna state, were destroyed,
prompting calls for his release and criticism that the government is
flouting due process.
Musa said on Tuesday that he received a
telephone call on December 13 requesting him to go to the state
government headquarters in Kaduna city. He told the hearing he was then
ordered to travel to Zaria with the Kaduna state commissioner of police
“to find out the number of corpses and how they would be buried”.
At the Ahmadu Bello University
Teaching Hospital (ABUTH) “we counted 156 corpses”, while 191 others
were collected from the army base in Zaria, he said. “Most corpses were
covered with black materials and they included women and children,” he
told the inquiry, saying the bodies were transported for burial in a
convoy of trucks with military escort.
Earlier, the secretary to the Kaduna
state government, Lawal Balarabe Abbas, said the mass burial was
authorised by “a warrant obtained from a chief magistrates’ court in
Kaduna”. Nigeria’s military, which has been accused of human rights
abuses against civilians in the insurgency by Sunni Muslim jihadists
Boko Haram, has said its troops acted appropriately.
Chief of Army Staff General, Tukur
Yusuf Buratai, in January told a separate inquiry by the National Human
Rights Commission, that soldiers “acted in accordance to the rule of
engagement” and their orders.
No official death toll has been
released but Human Rights Watch has said “at least 300” were killed and
Amnesty International put the figures at “hundreds”. The Nigerian army
said that the high death toll numbers were “unsubstantiated.”
One medic at ABUTH told AFP in January
that he counted at least 400 bodies in the morgue on the evening of
December 12 while locals said as many bodies were also littered on the
streets. The IMN has said some 730 members were unaccounted for, “either
killed by the army or… in detention”.
In February, prosecutors said 191 IMN
supporters in custody were charged with firearms and public order
offences. Zakzaky and the IMN have previously clashed with Nigeria’s
secular authorities over their quest to establish an Islamic state
through an Iranian-style revolution. The cleric has periodically been
incarcerated for alleged incitement and subversion.
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