According to a report by Sahara Reporters, soldiers who were sentenced to
death for mutiny last year are allegedly being starved to death. The report
below...
Sahara Reporters has learnt of a
covert plan to ‘kill’ a group of soldiers who were arrested late last year on
charges of mutiny and attempted murder. The soldiers who have been held since
September last year managed to reach out to the outside world via text
messages, using the opportunity to reveal the conditions they are being held
in.
In an initial message, they sent
this text to our reporter: “Greetings sir, we are the 12 soldiers sentenced to
death \others detained at CIC Apapa, Lagos. We are to inform you that following
our denial of access to our families, councils & even access to fund [sic]
to feed our families\pay our legal fees, that as you know, we had been
concealing our cell phone to help us hear from counsels.
The phone was collected on 6\5\15,
in view of this, we have not been fed, We are on hand-cuff & leg chain, we
are kept naked [sic] & deprived of even drinking water. As it stands now
sir, our lives are at stake. We, therefore, plead with due respect that
you intervene”. Our reporter then followed up trying to call the number
but met with no success.
After a while, one of the accused
reached our reporter again, this time in a voice call with a frantic message.
“They are trying to kill us. They want to kill us” the voice said. He went on
to inform our reporter that the authorities have noticed that they have access
to a cell phone and have therefore resorted to using starving techniques as a
form of punishment. He said they had not been fed nor given any water for about
five days.
Last year the story broke of some 12
soldiers who were reined in by the military authorities for allegedly refusing
to confront Boko Haram militants and firing at their commanding officer in the
northeastern city of Maiduguri in May. The soldiers were reportedly angry after
a convoy was ambushed on a road frequently targeted by Islamist Boko Haram
militants and decided to protest to the authorities who they blamed for
underequipped and underpaying them.
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