Friday 19 September 2014

'Welcome to Hell Fire' Report Accuses Nigerian Security Personnels of Routinely Using Torture!

In a new report that documents horrifying acts of brutality which largely go unpunished, Amnesty International reveals that torture is routinely used by Nigeria's Police and soldiers. 
"We have seen various forms of torture being used, one of the most gruesome is nail extraction," Netsanet Belay, Amnesty's Africa Director, told DW.
Stating how he was beaten with iron bars, machetes and wooden rods but the worse part of what he experienced was being hung up by his feet for more than an hour, 33-year-old Onyekachi one of the many victims of Police brutality: "My hands were tied behind my back, together with my legs," he told DW.
During research carried out over seven years, the organization collected more than 500 statements from former detainees. Amnesty viewed evidence held by lawyers and sent its own observers into prisons - with horrifying results. 
The methods of torture used are many and various. Prisoners are beaten with whips, rifle butts or rubber batons, are forced to walk over broken glass or to sit on benches of nails. "Electric shocks, hanging people upside down and beating them," is also commonplace, Belay said.
Women were subjected to particularly brutal forms of sexual violence. "There were women who had fire extinguishers fired into their vaginas in order to extract information,
The perpetrators often go unpunished, says Netsanet Belay, while the victims receive no compensation. 
"The Nigerian government systematically neglects to investigate allegations of torture. Particularly within the military we have not seen any evidence of prosecutions or investigations into such allegations." 
Stating further Belay says this culture of impunity must end, . "There is a pending bill in parliament that aims to criminalize torture that has been debated but not adopted." This bill is urgently needed "so the courts can hold the perpetrators to account."Belay said.
Mamman Lawal Yusufari, a Lawyer and head of the Faculty of Law at Bayero University in the northern state of Kano, who have worked for years to strengthen the legal rights of detainees and spends much time trying to get bail for detainees says the situation has worsened since the government imposed a state of emergency in several northern states in the battle against Islamist militant group Boko Haram. There, people are arrested on suspicion of being Boko Haram members "and taken to detention bases which are known as Guantanamo Bay. They keep them there without trial or proper investigation. Some of them die there. The situation is alarming," Yusufari said.
Torture is used as punishment, to extract money or in order to "solve" cases more quickly. Prisoners are forbidden to see their families. Few have the opportunity to consult a lawyer who can provide legal support. 

Thousands of people - estimates speak of up to 10,000 - have been arrested in the military operations against Boko Haram. Often all is needed is an unconfirmed allegation and people can disappear behind bars for years, says Amnesty International.




Minister for Police Affairs, Abdul Jelili Desiyan

On his part, Nigeria's Minister for Police AffairsAbdul Jelili Desiyan allegedly denied the allegations, saying "Amnesty International has consistently in the course of this [Boko Haram] insurgency sought to tarnish the image of Nigeria and its armed forces."

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