An Igbo
group, Nzuko Umunna has cautioned security agencies against arbitrary killings
in the South East region, saying that state actors might be prosecuted at
domestic and international fora if they fail to end the killings in the zone.
In an
open letter to the Chief of Army Staff, Lt.-Gen. Ibrahim Attahiru, endorsed by
its Executive Secretary, Ngozi Odumuko, it noted that President Muhammadu
Buhari’s shoot-on-sight order “has been roundly criticised as
unconstitutional,” adding that the Military High Command had not refuted
alleged execution of the directive in the South East.
Titled:
Shoot-on-Sight Order And Ongoing Extra-judicial Killings In The South East
Zone, the open letter stated that the group, which is made of the cream of Igbo
intellectuals, technocrats and professionals, was concerned about the directive
to troops in the South East.
“The
directive has caused severe panic and commotion among residents of the zone and
had led to some residents especially in the Orlu axis fleeing their homes. More
worrisome is the fact that several days after the directive, the military has
failed to refute the report to reassure Ndigbo of their safety. This has tended
to validate the veracity of the directive.
“Also,
reports of several killings by state actors in Orlu, Owerri and environs
further validate the veracity of the shoot-on-sight order,” the letter reads.
The
Igbo think-tank argued that besides the criticism that had trailed the
shoot-on-sight order, killings arising from such directive were not only
arbitrary and unconstitutional, but a breach of United Nations conventions and
international instruments, which Nigeria signed, especially the Rome Statute.
It,
therefore, warned that state actors, who ordered or facilitated such killings
might be prosecuted at domestic and global fora adding: “Such killings are
termed genocide and crime against humanity, for which those directly and
remotely involved may be prosecuted even after decades. The directive and the
resultant killings are a declaration of war on the zone.”
It
further noted that the South East was the most peaceful zone in the country,
adding that besides the pockets of security challenges in the region, which
could be handled by the Nigeria Police Force, there was no justification for
the current militarisation and arbitrary killings in the zone, following the
shoot-on-sight order.
The
group urged the Military High Command to clarify what it described as
“troubling directive;, as that would go a long way to reassure the South East
people of their safety.
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