Publish date6 Oct 2018 - 16:42
Story Code : 365507

Nigerian demonstrators demand release of Shia leader

Hundreds of Nigerian demonstrators in the capital Abuja have taken to the streets calling release of prominent Shia leader Sheikh Ibrahim Zakzaky imprisoned since 2016.
Nigerian demonstrators demand release of Shia leader
The protest was held in front of the Federal Ministry of Justice. Spokesman for Zaksaky’s Islamic Movement in Nigeria (IMN), Abdullahi Muhammad, explained on Friday that the protest move came since “our leader would not be released to us.”

“We his followers are tired, and we want the Minister of Justice Abubakar Malami to do the needful by releasing our leader,” Muhammad said, further insisting that Prosecution Counsel Dari Bayero had complained of lack of adequate security in Zakzaki’s home town of Kaduna, prompting presiding Judge Gideon Kurada to adjourn the court without issuing a release order for the elderly cleric.

“This is inhuman; the government keeps telling us they are protecting Zakzaky and keep coming up with excuses,” Muhammad further emphasized, adding: “Today at a Kaduna High Court, the ruling on the bail application of our leader was again adjourned to November 7.”

Scores of Zakzaki’s followers were arrested during a brutal raid by the security forces on the Shia cleric’s IMN headquarters in December 2015.

During the raid, Nigerian forces killed nearly 300 Zakzaky supporters, including three of his sons, and later buried them in mass graves.

Zakzaky and his wife, who were shot and injured during the raid, were taken into custody and accused of plotting to attack the military convoy of army Chief Tukur Buratai in an earlier incident.

Members of his Islamic group insisted, however, that they were merely holding a rally when Buratai’s convoy happened to pass by at the time. Facing the crowds of protester, agitated Nigerian security forces shot them and Buratai’s car sped away, thinking an assassination attempt was underway.

A Federal High Court had ordered Zakzaki’s unconditional release in 2016, but the Nigerian government has so far refused to abide by the ruling.

This is while a spokesman for the Islamic movement stated back in March that the government in Abuja was planning to indefinitely hold the cleric and his wife in custody.

Following government’s refusal to release the prominent cleric in Africa’s most populous country,  his followers began staging near daily protest rallies in Abuja and parts of the North.

In late August, meanwhile, UK-based rights group Amnesty International (AI) accused Nigeria’s government of carrying out unlawful arrests and practicing “enforced disappearance,” calling on Abuja to clarify the fate of hundreds of jailed Shia activists.

The organization further stated that the fate of at least 600 members of the Islamic Movement in Nigeria remained unknown since their arrest in 2015.

“The Nigerian government has used enforced disappearance as a longstanding tactic to silence critics and instill fear in civilian populations,” Amnesty International Nigeria Director Osai Ojigho said at the time. “Enforced disappearance is an instrument of intimidation that grossly violates human rights. It is unacceptable and must stop.”

Earlier in August a top Nigerian court had cleared dozens of Zakzaki’s followers of criminal charges, raising hopes for the release of the cleric himself.

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