29th July, 2014
PRESS
RELEASE:
MASSACRE
OF SHIITE PROTESTERS: FG MUST PUNISH PERPETRATORS
About
thirty five (35) Shiites peacefully protesting against Israelli belligerence were
shot dead in Zaria, Kaduna State on Friday 25th July, 2014. Three
sons of Shiite leader, Shaykh Ibrahim Al-Zakzaky (Mahmud, Ahmad and Hamid who
were all studying outside Nigeria) were among the victims.
Soldiering
is a noble profession reserved for heroes and chivalrous citizens. The Nigerian
Army is blessed with disciplined officers and men of high integrity but the
soldiers involved in this massacre are bad examples who are out to smear the
image of our military.
The
Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC) is shocked by the manifestation of barbarism and
excessive use of force by the black sheep among the Nigerian military in this
deadly operation. We strongly
condemn this unprovoked aggression. It is callous, cowardly and inhuman. It is
appalling. It is crime against humanity to mow down unarmed civilians.
Shiite
procession in Zaria is an annual routine known to all and sundry and they have
not been known to turn violent. It appears to us that the Nigerian military is
seeking to gain by the bends what they fail to gain at the straights. The
military is still interested in power but having realized that military
dictatorship has become unpopular all over the world, it seeks to retain power
via crude relevance by deliberately creating perpetual turmoil.
We
posit that the attack on the Shiites is an indirect invitation to the evolution
of another guerilla group. Today
was born from the wombs of yesterday. We only need to look back and trace the
history of Boko Haram. It was the extra-judicial killing of Boko Haram leader
24 hours after he was arrested and shown alive on television which started what
has now become a national gangrene, a regional cancerous tumor and a universal
cankerworm.
MURIC
is therefore constrained to ask the military to stop plotting the gradual
destabilization of Nigeria.
The Federal Government (FG) must confront this challenge now and find a lasting
solution to it. FG must desist from pampering the military. Instead, the
military must be retrained and re-engineered to evolve a culture of respect for
civilian authority. FG must be firm this time around and the first step in this direction is to stop involving the
military in civil matters like elections and confronting peaceful protesters.
We
are aware that FG has promised investigation into the killings. MURIC warns
against failed promises. We
demand thorough investigation.
The panel of inquiry must include civilians and retired judges. Nigerians have
no confidence in soldiers investigating themselves in issues involving soldiers
and civilians. Soldiers who fail to imbibe the culture of submission to civil
norms in a democratic dispensation are potent threats to the survival of our
nascent democracy. Those found culpable must be dismissed and tried in civil
courts for mass murder.
MURIC
will take the case to the international arena if the authorities fail to
uncover and punish the perpetrators. Somebody gave the order to open fire. Who was it? Who led
the troops from the barracks? The records must be there. This must not be
handled in-house by the military. These reckless elements within the military
have committed a crime capable of instigating the formation of another
‘terrorist’ group.
Nigerian
authorities cannot be unaware of the cause-effect theory of terrorism. This
theory posits that what we call ‘terrorism’ is mere smoke. If it is true that
there is no smoke without fire, we must look beyond the terrorists if we really
want to stop terrorism. Those who started the fire which produced the smoke of
terrorism must be checked. In short, if we really want to defeat Boko Haram, we
must punish those who engage in extra-judicial killing. They are the military
‘extremists’ and extremists have the propensity either to fuel terrorism or to
become terrorists themselves..
Finally,
MURIC demands adequate compensation for the injured and families of the dead
victims of this military misadventure and unreserve apology from the topmost
echelon of the Nigerian military. Our demands can therefore be summarized: one,
full investigation and due punishment for the perpetrators, two, adequate
compensation for the victims and three, unreserved apology.
These
three steps are necessary in order to deprive Boko Haram of potential
sympathizers and to forestall the emergence of another guerrilla group.
Professor
Ishaq Akintola,
Director,
Muslim
Rights Concern (MURIC)
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