Tag: Shiite

  • Seven killed in Shi’ite mosque blast – Police

    A bomb blast killed seven people at a Shi’ite Muslim mosque in eastern Baghdad on Friday and wounded more than 20, police sources said.

    The explosion took place in the Baladiyat neighborhood. A senior police source said that either a suicide belt or improvised explosive device had been used in the attack, for which there was no immediate claim of responsibility.

    The source said the death toll was expected to rise with many of those wounded in serious condition.

    It was a rare attack on a Shi’ite place of worship in the Iraqi capital.

    Sunni extremists carried out high-profile bombings of Iraqi Shi’ite sites during the worst of the country’s sectarian violence after the U.S. invasion that toppled dictator Saddam Hussein in 2003.

    Baghdad’s security improved significantly with the defeat of Islamic State in 2017 and bomb attacks of any kind in the city have been rare since then.

  • Military bullets can’t stop us – Shi’ites

    After several violent clashes with the military and other security agencies in Abuja and Kaduna, members of the Islamic Movement of Nigeria (IMN), also known as the Shi’ites have vowed to continue demanding justice and the release of Shiekh Ibraheem El-Zakzaky, their spiritual leader. The Shi’ites said they were not afraid of soldiers’ bullets and were ready to die for their spiritual leaders.

    The sect has continued street protests since the arrest of El’ Zakzaky in 2015 after its members clashed with soldiers in the convoy of the Chief of Army Staff, Tukur Buratai, in Zaria, Kaduna State. Reports have it that over 300 Shiites were killed by the army in that incident. Against the backdrop of expectation that the recent killings of over 30 members of the sect in Zuba and Nyanya of Federal Capital Territory, was going to discourage their persistent street processions both in Abuja and environs, they have vowed to die for their leader who has been in custody since 2015 against court orders. On Saturday last week, about six members of the sect who were on their religious symbolic trek from Madalla area of Niger State were killed by the military at Zuba, Gwagwalada Area Council of FCT.

    They claimed that the military attacked them with live ammunition. This was, however, debunked by military authorities. The military authorities in trying to justify the killings of the Shi’ites in Zuba, stated that members of the sect attacked their officers who were on escort mission. The military further alleged that for the gallantry of their officers in repelling the attacks, the sect members would have stolen ammunition from the military trucks that were being escorted to Kaduna.

    The loss of lives at the Zuba clash could not deter the sect who continued with their protest the following day. However, more tragedy befell the group at Nyanya with several deaths, when they attempted to pass through a military checkpoint, but were resisted vehemently by fully armed military officers. After burying 23 of their members killed on Monday during a violent clash with the military in Nyanya Abuja, the sect leaders said the excessive force by security agencies, coupled with the live ammunition being used on them cannot stop their protest. Abdullahi Muhammad, one of the sect leaders told Saturday Telegraph that no amount of intimidation from security agencies and not even their bullets could stop them from protesting on the streets until the government of the day respects the law.

    Muhammad noted that since the military has the bullets to waste, their members have the chests to collect bullets. He added that members of IMN were not afraid to die, but were prepared to sacrifice their lives for the course they believe in. He said: “We are not stopping this protest, let them continue to kill us. Since they have the bullets to shoot, we have the chests to collect the bullets. We will not suspend the protest, if they want us to stop, let them do the right thing, and the right thing is to release El-Zakzaky. “It is unfortunate that Nigerian government that has the responsibility to protect her citizens is the one killing them.” Muhammad said their leader had been set free by the court, but the present administration refused to obey orders of the court, adding that he wondered why those in the corridors of power were pretentiously talking about the rule of law which they did not believe in.

    He also noted the only round table discussion opportunity the sect would consider from government would put into consideration the immediate release of El-Zakzaky and address the injustice that members of the sect had suffered in the hands of the Nigerian government. On the allegation that Iran was sponsoring the activities of IMN in Nigeria, Muhammad debunked it, describing it as a fabricated falsehood by haters of the sect. According to him, the fact that IMN shares the same religious ideology and doctrines with the Iranian Muslims did not mean that Iran was sponsoring them. Muhammad said: “Does it mean that President Muhammadu Buhari who is a Sunni Muslim is getting sponsorship from Saudi Arabia? Or does it mean that the activities of Catholic Church in Nigeria are being sponsored by Rome? “Iran is not sponsoring us, whatever we do is from willful contributions from our members. Our members are always willing to contribute to our course.”

    In a related development, IMN has warned of dire consequences for Nigeria and all those involved in the killings. Speaking to Saturday Telegraph on fears that there will be consequences, Mr. Mifthau Zakaria, the Southwest Coordinator of the group, said: “Of course, there are going to be consequences. Nigeria has a law court, Nigeria has a constitution. “So, if a policeman goes out of his way to kill defenceless citizens because he’s the IG of Police today, one day he’ll not be IG and he’ll stand in the court of law to defend why he went beyond the rules of engagement to kill Nigerians.” On whether the group is likely to ignite a theatre of violence either in the FCT of elsewhere, Zakaria said: “As for consequences like us becoming terrorists, am I a stupid person? I am the head of my family, I have 17 siblings, my eldest daughter is out of the university in Cotonou, we are educated people, and we are elites. We know our country and we can’t take the law into our hands.” Speaking further on the protests and how guns were turned on members of the group, the leader of the group in the Southwest part of Nigeria, said: “We are peaceful people and we only come out on peaceful protests that we do legally. “It’s something we’ve been doing since 1978, almost 40 years ago and no one has ever accused us of being a violent group.

    Even though the police will now be proactive in trying to justify whatever crime they have committed, the truth of the matter is that when you ask them to bring forensic evidence to prove that we are terrorists, they cannot do that. “If for example they say that we are terrorists and we come out to kill people, they should come out and mention the number of their men that we have killed. That is the only way to prove that we are terrorists. Let them bring out their evidences. We have buried 48 of our people and we are still counting.” On the rationale behind Federal Government’s alleged engagement of the deadly Boko Haram sect in dialogue and negotiation while refusing to engage the IMN, he said: “We have always been people that are given to dialogue. “The funny thing is this, they say Boko Haram is a terrorist group that has killed thousands of Nigerians and has destroyed facilities.

    “The government is still talking to them, we understand that the government wants to give them N100 billion over Leah Sharibu so that they can buy more weapons and continue to kill people; but at least they talk to them, they speak with them. “Let them tell us why they cannot talk with us. Two, there is a subsisting court order that says Mallam (El Zakzaky) should be released, if they say we are terrorists, take us to court! That is what happens in a society that has laws and order. That is what we are saying.”

  • FG arraigns detained Shiite members

    FG arraigns detained Shiite members

    The federal government has arraigned some Shiite members arrested during one of the the recent clashes with the army in Abuja, the nation’s capital.

    About 400 members of the group were arrested and detained after the group clashed with the officers during an inter-state rally which ended in Abuja on Tuesday.

    Dozens of Shiite members died during the clashes, with the Nigerian Army alleging that the protesters confronted them to provoke a clampdown by soldiers.

    Although the Shiite members denied the allegation, some security vehicles were destroyed during the clampdown.

    A member of the group, Abdullahi Musa said on Thursday that the Shiite Members were arraigned at a Magistrate Court in Wuse district of Abuja.

    Details later…

     

  • Why soldiers opened fire on Shiite protesters — Nigerian Army

    The Nigerian Army on Monday night admitted its personnel fired live ammunition at Shiite protesters on the outskirts of Abuja on Monday afternoon, killing at least three protesters who allegedly tried to breach a security checkpoint.
    The violence that broke out in Karu, a densely populated suburb of the nation’s capital, gripped Abuja and its environs on Monday afternoon, with vehicular and human movements in and out of the axis virtually grounded for the rest of the day.
    It was the second time Nigerian soldiers encountered Shiite protesters in two days. Nigerian soldiers opened fire during a Shiite procession in Zuba, another suburb of Abuja, on Saturday afternoon. The military denied being the aggressor in the violence, which witnesses said left many protesters dead. In that incident, the army also admitted three Shiites were killed.
    The army said its personnel conveying military equipment were waylaid by the Shiites in the Saturday encounter, during which some soldiers were brutalised with stones and sharp objects. No soldier was killed during the encounter.
    In a Facebook post at about 10:40 p.m. on Monday, the army explained similar circumstances played out in the violent encounter with Shiites earlier in the day. The statement said soldiers unleashed their firearms on the protesters after they became violent and started shooting stones with catapult, wounding four soldiers in the process.
    The army said the protesters repeatedly lobbed Molotov cocktails at troops and police officers manning the security checkpoint near the overhead bridge in Karu, and uploaded pictures of wounded soldiers, catapults, stones and Dane guns allegedly recovered from the protesters.
    “The sect in massive numbers forced their way into the troops checkpoint after overrunning the Police Force. The Police withdrew back to own troops position to join efforts to repel them.
    “They fired weapons at own troops, throwing bottle canisters with fuel, large stones, catapults with dangerous objects and other dangerous items at troops causing bodily harm and stopping motorist movement, breaking their windscreen and causing heavy traffic,” the army said of the incident, which it estimated broke out at 3:00 p.m.
    “However, Troops repelled the attack in conjunction with the Nigerian Police Force to stop the situation from further deteriorating.

    “Unfortunately, during the encounter 3 members of the sect were killed while 4 soldiers sustained various degrees of injuries and are being treated at a military medical facility,” the army said.
    The statement said calm has returned to the area and vehicular and human traffic no more hectic as of the time of its statement late Monday.

  • Tension in Abuja as soldiers, police/shiites clash at Nyanya

    There was sporadic gunshots and pandemonium on Monday afternoon at the ever-busy AYA-Nyanya road as soldiers and police personnel stopped members of the Shiites group who had been trying to gain access into Abuja from doing so.
    The Shiite members, in their hundreds, had assembled at Nyanya, where they began a procession and barricaded the road thereby preventing motorists and other road users from accessing the road.
    Their presence naturally raised tension among traders and commercial vehicle operators in the area who abandoned their vehicles and goods and ran for dear life.
    The soldiers were reportedly called in after the police battled unsuccessfully to chase the Shiite members away.
    The Shiites members reportedly threw stones and other dangerous weapons at the policemen injuring some in the process.
    The soldiers shot into the air to disperse the crowd who took to their heels upon sighting the soldiers.
    As at time of filing this report, it was gathered that the popular Abacha Barracks and the Kugbo Furniture Market was like a ghost town as motorists and commercial motorcycle operators abandoned the road while the soldiers were working hard to restore normalcy.
    Meanwhile, residents, especially those living at Kugbo, Nyanya, Karu, Mararaba, Masada and Keffi, have been warned to stay away until normalcy is restored in the area.
    Commander, Guards Brigade, when contacted could not be reached as his phone line was busy.
    Public Relations Officer in charge of the FCT police command could also not be reached as his phone line was also busy.

  • [Photo] Shiite leader, El-Zakzaky appears court, charged with murder

    [Photo] Shiite leader, El-Zakzaky appears court, charged with murder

    The leader of the Islamic Movement in Nigeria, IMN, Ibrahim El-Zakzaky, on Tuesday, appeared before a Kaduna High Court over allegations of murder.

    The appearance marks the first time the Shiite leader would be tried in public since his arrest and detention in December 2015.

    Shiite leader, El-Zakzaky appears court, charged with murder

    The State Security Service, SSS, has held the Shiite leader in detention despite a court order ordering his release.

    He was arrested following a clampdown on his supporters who blocked the army chief, Tukur Buratai, from using a public road.

    Over 340 members of the Shiite group were killed by the soldiers in attacks condemned by local and international rights groups.

    One soldier was also killed.

    The Kaduna State Government is prosecuting El-Zakzaky for the death of the soldier.

    It is for that trial that Mr El-Zakzaky was brought to court on Tuesday.

    According to a report by Premium Times, El-Zakzaky and his wife, Zeenah, were brought to court at about 9:00 a.m.

    They were said to have been brought into Kaduna the previous night from where he was kept.

    Journalists and other members of the IMN that trooped to the court premises were barred from entering as the major road leading to the court was blocked off by armed security officers.

    Counsel to El-Zakzaky, Maxwell Kyom said the cleric is being charged with unlawful gathering, criminal conspiracy and culpable homicide punishable with death.

    Kyom said the case could not continue because two of the defendants were not in court.

    According to him, an oral application was moved for the bail of the cleric and his wife. But the presiding judge, Gideon Kurada, asked him to put his application officially in writing.

    The case was adjourned to June 21 by the presiding judge based on application by the prosecutor for them to properly file their statement of claim.

     

  • El-Zakzaky: Police arrest 60 Islamic Shiite protesters in Abuja

    Following protest by the Islamic Shiite sect on Monday the federal capital territory (FCT) Police Command has arrested 60 members of the Islamic Movement of Nigeria (IMN).

    TheNewsGuru reports the Shiite protesters to the streets of Abuja, defying warning from the police to stage a violent protest demanding release of their leader, Ibrahim El-Zakzaky, who has been detention since 2016.

    The spokesman of the police in the FCT, DSP Anjuguri Manzah confirmed the arrest to newsmen in an interview on Tuesday at the Garki Hospital.

    Manzah was in the hospital to see how the two personnel of the command, who sustained varied degree of injuries while dispersing the protesters were recuperating.

    They are SP Linus Ogah, who had bruises on his face and could hardly speak or open his eyes, and Insp. Mary Ameh, who sustained injury in one of her hands.

    The spokesman said that bullet had been removed from Ameh’s hand, adding that the protesters also destroyed some police operational vehicles.

    “During the Monday protest, members of IMN or otherwise known as Shiites engaged police and haul stones at police personnel deployed to disperse them.

    “They also smashed some vehicle glasses parked around the Federal Secretariat,” he said.

    On April 16, the police had arrested 115 members of the sect when they embarked on a similar violent protest to demand that their leader be freed.

    Manzah, who said that though citizens had right to protest, advised that they should do that in a “civil manner’’ and not disturb public peace.

    He said that the command had taken proactive measures to check violent protest in the territory.

     

  • Breaking: Shiite protesters clash with Police in Abuja [Video]

    Members of the Islamic Shiite sect on Monday shut down the Federal Secretariat complex in Abuja.

    The irate youths were protesting the continued detention of Sheikh Ibraheem El-Zakzaky.

     

    Details shortly…

     

  • BREAKING: FG charges detained Shiite leader, El-Zakzaky with murder

    The federal government has charged the leader of the detained leader of the Shiite group in Nigeria, Ibrahim El-Zakzaky with murder.

    TheNewsGuru.com reports that El-Zakzaky and his wife are currently detained by the federal government.

    Recall that the El-Zakzaky’s supporters have been protesting in demand for his release.

    El-Zakzaky and his wife have been held by the Nigerian government since December 2015 despite court rulings authorising his release.

    The government claims he is held in a “protective custody”, but his supporters have in the last two weeks intensified protests demanding his freedom.

    In what appears to be a response to the protests, the Kaduna state government slammed a fresh eight-count charge on the Shiite leader, his lawyer, Femi Falana, said Thursday.

    The charges include homicide which is punishable by death.

    However, court papers obtained indicate that the charges were filed on April 18.

    According to the charge, the alleged offences took place during the December 2015 clash between the IMN and a convoy of Nigeria’s army chief, Tukur Buratai.

    Details soon…

  • El-Zakzaky: PDP demand probe of Shiite, police clash in Abuja

    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), on Monday called for an immediate inquest into the alleged violent clash between security forces and members of the Shiite movement, in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Abuja.

    The clash, which rendered human and vehicular movement cumbersome, lasted for several hours as men of the Nigeria Police Force struggled to restore order in the affected parts of the city.

    In a statement signed by the PDP National Publicity Secretary, Kola Ologbondiyan, the party said an inquest into what truly led to the crisis would go a long way in determining the causative factors of the chaos, which expectedly grounded business activities in the city centre.

    “Our party is gravely worried over the handling of security in the nation’s capital and the near breakdown of law and order, which resulted in stampede and disruption of public and private businesses in the city centre.

    “The PDP has noted that the development is linked with protests over the continued refusal of the All Progressives Congress (APC)-led federal government to release the leader of the group, Sheik Ibrahim El-Zakzaky, despite being granted bail by courts of competent jurisdiction.

    “The PDP and indeed all lovers of democracy across the country are deeply concerned by the continued erosion of democratic tenets by the APC administration, resulting in avoidable crisis in various parts of the country,” he said.

    The leading opposition party called for immediate solution to prevent the crisis from further escalation.