Nigeria blames Biafra group after dozens found in shallow graves
![]() |
| Hundreds of pro-Biafra supporters wave flags and chant songs as they march through the streets of Aba, southeastern Nigeria, to call for the release of a key activist on November 18, 2015 (AFP Photo/Pius Utomi Ekpei) |
Lagos
(AFP) - Nigerian secret police have accused a Biafra separatist group
of killing 55 people after discovering their bodies in shallow graves in
a thick forest in the country's southeast.
The
Department of State Service (DSS), Nigeria's domestic spy agency, said
the graves were found in Umuanyi forest in Abia state, home to the
Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) movement.
It
issued a statemant late Saturday accusing IPOB members of playing a
"heinous role" in the abduction of five Hausa-Fulani residents, although
the claims were dismissed by another Biafran group.
"The
abducted men were later discovered at the Umuanyi forest, Abia state,
where they were suspected to have been killed by their abductors and
buried in shallow graves, amidst 50 other shallow graves of unidentified
persons," spokesman Tony Opuiyo said in the statement.
"Arrests and investigation conducted so far revealed that elements within the IPOB carried out this dastardly action," he said.
IPOB was founded by Nnamdi Kanu, who is currently on trial for treason in a high-profile case in Abuja.
He
was arrested in October for operating pirate Radio Biafra where he was
alleged to be broadcasting "seditious messages" against Nigeria.
Kanu
has emerged as the new face of the campaign for a separate Biafran
state, nearly 50 years after a previous unilateral declaration of
independence sparked a brutal civil war.
The
conflict from 1967 to 1970 left about one million people dead, many
from starvation and disease, as Nigerian troops blockaded the fledgling
Republic of Biafra.
IPOB
supporters have staged a series of protests across the country in
recent months to demand his release and call for a breakaway state for
the Igbo people, one of the largest ethnic groups in Africa.
The
leader of the Movement for the Actualisation of the Sovereign State of
Biafra (MASSOB), another pro-Biafra group defended the IPOB against the
latest charges.
"The
DSS allegation against the pro-Biafra agitators lacks merit and
evidence because MASSOB and IPOB are non-violent organisations," Uchenna
Madu told AFP.
"They want to blackmail us as violent or terrorist group in order to get evidence against Nnamdi Kanu," he said.
He
vowed that action by pro-Biafran groups would continue until their
objective of a sparate homeland for the Igbo people is achieved.
Source:yahoo

Comments
Post a Comment