By Onyiorah
P. Chiduluemije
Since President Muhammdu
Buhari assumed the mantle of leadership of Nigeria on May 29, 2015, the
country has witnessed incessant killing of the members of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) for obviously no
cause by security agents. More often, if the killing was not based on the
falsehood that the IPOB members were the first to attack members of the
Nigerian armed forces and as such had to be killed in return, it would be
predicated on the spurious grounds that the hapless victims were obstructing the free flow of traffic and thus needed to be
dealt with (which for the military entailed killing them) in order to clear the
way for motorists and other road users.
Meanwhile, in all
of these series of killings of peaceful protesters, the Buhari-led government
is yet to come out with a single video record showing members of the Nigerian
armed forces being killed by the pro-Biafra agitators.
But thus far, the
reverse has always been the case in the aftermath of every peaceful protest
duly organized by pro-Biafra agitators in Nigeria ,
all in pursuit of their legitimate demand for a sovereign state of Biafra . And besides the fact that thousands of members of
this separatist group have been mowed down in their prime for merely thronging
the streets of Nigeria in demand for self-determination as adequately
guaranteed by international laws and practices, the Amnesty International
recently had to lend its strong voice in total condemnation of the Nigerian
government’s persistent and cruel clampdown and massacre of these unarmed and
peaceful protesters.
According to this
highly esteemed international body, no less than a hundred and fifty unarmed
civilians belonging to the separatist group, the Indigenous People of Biafra,
were brutally murdered in cold blood using torture, live bullets and other
weaponry by members of the Nigerian armed forces – during the Biafra
Remembrance Day of May 30, 2016. And further to its graphic report titled
Bullets
Were Raining Everywhere, the Amnesty International’s findings clearly
showed that the assertion that the peaceful protesters were the first to court
the trouble and/or attack members of the Nigerian armed forces was neither here
nor there. Strangely, as if the killing was not provoking enough, the same security forces had to even go extra miles invading churches at
Onitsha and its environs in Anambra State of Nigeria in furtherance of their
killing spree and the hacking of peaceful protesters who happened to be in or
had sought refuge in these hallowed places of worship.