Amnesty international’s report: Igbo lives do not matter to Buhari’s regime – HURIWA

0
685
HURIWA condemns airstrike in Imo

A civil society organisation, the Human Rights Writers Association of Nigeria, HURIWA, says the President Muhammadu Buhari’s regime is suffering from acute Igbophobia and nonchalance to the sanctity of human life.

It slammed the Presidency over “a belated reaction to the damaging report by Amnesty International” on Police extrajudicial killings in the South East, stressing that the regime’s belated reaction shows that for the Buhari government, Igbo lives do not matter.

HURIWA expressed shock that the regime was just reacting to the report nearly a month after Amnesty International released its report on extra legal killings allegedly carried out by security forces and even listed out the police victims of the attacks by unknown gunmen in the South East.

“Thereby telling whoever is rational enough to decipher the body language of the president that he cares just a little about Igbo lives,” it said in a statement by its director, Emmanuel Onwubiko.

HURIWA argued that previously, the Federal Government had always responded to Amnesty International’s numerous reports on killings in the North with absolute rapidity and precise speed.

The human rights advocacy group further carpeted the presidency for allegedly making largely pre-fabricated allegations against the already banned Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) just so that it can hold on to something as a justification for the atrocities unleashed in the South East by security forces.

“Proscription of an organization does not justify the reckless killings of suspected members of such a group especially when most of those killed were never armed,” HURIWA said.

The statement totally absolves Amnesty International of any sort of collusion with IPOB, insisting that the president rather than castigate AI should be thankful that the organisation is helping Nigeria to sanitize the standards of policing and to expose rogue armed security forces committing atrocities against citizens.

“The president’s people should cover their faces in shame for making spurious, jaundiced and irresponsible allegations against the banned Indigenous Peoples of Biafra just for political propaganda.

“The government has not legally established any nexus between the embattled IPOB and those sensational allegations.

“What a responsible government ought to have done was to understudy the Amnesty International report and prosecute armed security operatives identified to have applied extralegal killings as a tactic of law enforcement and not to make a generalized and fallacious allegation”.

HURIWA is therefore challenging Amnesty International to sue the Federal government of Nigeria before the International Criminal Court in The Hague Netherlands.