Nigeria arrests 200 after attacks, mostly Chadians

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Nigeria has arrested 200 people, mostly Chadian “mercenaries,” after last week’s attacks in the north, a police source said Thursday, as pressure mounts on the security forces to stem the violence. Coordinated gun and bomb attacks in the northern city of Kano last Friday killed at least 185 people, the deadliest ever assault claimed by the shadowy Islamist sect Boko Haram. “Many arrests have been made since the attacks,” the police source said on condition of anonymity. “We have arrested around 200 attackers and 80 percent of them are Chadians. They came in as mercenaries.”
There were indications the Chadians had been paid to participate in the recent attacks attributed to Boko Haram, the source added. Boko Haram has been blamed for scores of other attacks in Nigeria, mainly in the north, and security forces have long suspected it of smuggling arms into the country through the porous northeastern borders with Chad and Niger. A UN report on regional security released on Wednesday said there was evidence suggesting the Nigerian group had Chadian members who had received training from Al-Qaeda’s north Africa affiliate.
Boko Haram may also have secured some of the weapons that flowed out of Libya during the conflict that toppled Moamer Kadhafi, the UN report said. While some have been eager to emphasise the Islamists’ external ties, others say the group is a problem born and bred in Nigeria. Nigerian authorities have come under immense pressure over the spiralling violence blamed on the Islamists and have in the past been accused of rounding up innocent civilians in response to attacks.
“Following previous attacks by Boko Haram, the security forces have often resorted to dragnet arrests, rather than arresting people on the basis of a reasonable suspicion that they committed an offence,” Amnesty International said earlier this week.
The police faced intense criticism after suspected Boko Haram member Kabiru Sokoto, linked to a Christmas attack that killed at least 44 people, escaped police custody last week in mysterious circumstances. Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan on Wednesday fired the country’s police chief and six of his deputies. It was the first step in a complete overhaul of the force that was suffering from a “collapse in public confidence,” a presidential statement said.

3 COMMENTS

  1. Am Michael odoko a nigeria born, living in ghana .i believe that the nigeria government knows those that are behind all these mess.why can,t JONATHAIN make a sacriface to restore peace to nigeria by arresting people like Obasanjo,Babanginda,Atiku presecute and propably jail or kill them like what J J Rollings did in ghana

  2. IAM A NIGERIAN RESIDING IN CHINA OUR PROBLEM IS FROM OUR PAST EVIL LEADERS , SO CALLED BABANGIDA , ATIKU, EVEN OBASANJO THE PRETENDER

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