The United Nations’ top human rights official, Zeid Ra’ad Al-Hussein, yesterday asked President Muhammadu Buhari to investigate reports of horrifying crimes by Boko Haram terrorists and alleged abuses by the military.
Al-Hussein stated he had seen allegations of mass executions, rape and amputations of children by Boko Haram – a day after two blasts killed more than 30 people in Maiduguri and Yola.
Amnesty International (AI) had accused the armed forces of mistreating people detained on suspicion of belonging to the group, he also stated.
“Civilians in northeast Nigeria have been living through horrifying acts of cruelty and violence by Boko Haram. These include wanton killings, summary executions, forced participation in military operations – including the use of children to detonate bombs, forced labour, forced marriage and s3xual violence, including rape,” Zeid stated in a statement.
In reaction to the AI allegation, President Buhari stated the matter would be investigated.
The Defence Headquarters in a separate reaction dismissed the allegations as a blackmail.
Zeid, citing eyewitness testimony gathered by his office on atrocities committed by Boko Haram, said: “We have reports of children who were suspected of theft and had their hands amputated, of a man stoned to death on accusations of fornication, mass executions of captives whose hands and legs were bound and who were dumped into rivers and wells.”
At least 1,000 people, “possibly many more,” were brutally killed by Boko Haram in Mararaba Madagali in Adamawa State in late 2014, the statement stated.
Other witnesses described how insurgents asked villagers in Kwajafa in Borno state in April to gather to hear them preach.
“When the villagers gathered, the insurgents opened fire. The U.N. Human Rights Office has also received a video recording of an execution, allegedly of a girl who refused to convert to Islam.”
Zeid, referring to “extremely worrying reports” that had emerged about the conduct of Nigerian armed forces, stated one man testified about his ordeal when he was mistaken for a Boko Haram member and detained by the military in Yola in Adamawa.
“The man stated he spent five days without food or water, as detainees drank the urine of others to quench their thirst. He claimed that there was an average of five deaths per day in the facility,” he stated.