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Showing posts with label Shiite. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Shiite. Show all posts

IMN Shiites: Group Lauds Kaduna State White Paper On Zaria Clashes for Exonerating Nigerian Army

IMN Shiites: Group Lauds Kaduna State White Paper On Zaria Clashes for Exonerating Nigerian Army

Ibrahim El-Zakzaky
The Good Governance Initiative (GGI) has described the release of Kaduna State Government's White Paper on the Judicial Commission of Inquiry that investigated the clash between the Islamic Movement in Nigeria (IMN) and the Nigerian Army as a welcome development.

The group also congratulated the Nigerian Army which was exoneratedby the White paper, saying Nigerians never doubted that it acted within its mandate of protecting the territorial integrity of the country.

According to a statement signed by GGI Co-ordinator, Uche Madu John, Nigerians will continue to support the army in its quest to protect law abiding citizens from any form of aggressor.


He urged the Federal Government to immediately issue a directive for all security and military services to treat the IMN as a terror group while anyone caught committing a crime in its name must be tried under the relevant anti-terror legislations.

The statement reads partly, "We laud the exoneration of the Nigerian Army, which was cleared of any wrongdoing as an institution and we see this as the removal of obstacles that terrorist sponsors had tried to place in the way of the army to reduce its ability to protect NIgerians.

"The White Paper has laid to rest the true nature and status of IMN as an insurgent group whose members bear arms and had refused to evacuate Gyallesu area of Zaria, Kaduna state ahead of the referenced military operation in the report.

"We hope that those that have been mounting propaganda on behalf of IMN, including international contractors like Amnesty International, would now accept the position stated in the document that the Nigerian Army abided by its Rules of Engagement in dealing with the terrorist organisation."

He further urged judicial officers to familiarise themselves with this document especially since more IMN members could soon be charged to court over their role in the group's decades of insurgency against the Nigerian state.

The statement reads further, "GGI urges the Federal Government to immediately implement the aspect of the White Paper that fall within its purview to ensure that the menace of the IMN and any other groups they may mutate into can be holistically dealt with since it is not all the states of the federation that can marshal the political will to tackle insurgency the way Kaduna has done."
Ibrahim El-Zakzaky
The Good Governance Initiative (GGI) has described the release of Kaduna State Government's White Paper on the Judicial Commission of Inquiry that investigated the clash between the Islamic Movement in Nigeria (IMN) and the Nigerian Army as a welcome development.

The group also congratulated the Nigerian Army which was exoneratedby the White paper, saying Nigerians never doubted that it acted within its mandate of protecting the territorial integrity of the country.

According to a statement signed by GGI Co-ordinator, Uche Madu John, Nigerians will continue to support the army in its quest to protect law abiding citizens from any form of aggressor.


He urged the Federal Government to immediately issue a directive for all security and military services to treat the IMN as a terror group while anyone caught committing a crime in its name must be tried under the relevant anti-terror legislations.

The statement reads partly, "We laud the exoneration of the Nigerian Army, which was cleared of any wrongdoing as an institution and we see this as the removal of obstacles that terrorist sponsors had tried to place in the way of the army to reduce its ability to protect NIgerians.

"The White Paper has laid to rest the true nature and status of IMN as an insurgent group whose members bear arms and had refused to evacuate Gyallesu area of Zaria, Kaduna state ahead of the referenced military operation in the report.

"We hope that those that have been mounting propaganda on behalf of IMN, including international contractors like Amnesty International, would now accept the position stated in the document that the Nigerian Army abided by its Rules of Engagement in dealing with the terrorist organisation."

He further urged judicial officers to familiarise themselves with this document especially since more IMN members could soon be charged to court over their role in the group's decades of insurgency against the Nigerian state.

The statement reads further, "GGI urges the Federal Government to immediately implement the aspect of the White Paper that fall within its purview to ensure that the menace of the IMN and any other groups they may mutate into can be holistically dealt with since it is not all the states of the federation that can marshal the political will to tackle insurgency the way Kaduna has done."

US Queries Nigeria Over 300 Shiite Killing As Right Group Asks UN To Designate IMN As Terror Group

US Queries Nigeria Over 300 Shiite Killing As Right Group Asks UN To Designate IMN As Terror Group

 Islamic Movement in Nigeria (IMN)
The killing of over 300 Shiite  Islamic movement has attracted the attention of the United State of America.

The Us according to Punch Newspaper has called on the Federal Government to account for the deaths of 300 Shi’ite members killed last December. 

This is even as a human rights group, Centre for Social Justice, Equity and Transparency (CESJET) has called on the United Nation mission in Nigeria to prevail on the United Nations General Assembly to designate the IMN as a terrorist organization

On December 15, 2015, following clashes between members of the Shia Islamic Movement of Nigeria and security forces in Zaria, Kaduna State, at least 300 Shi’ites were reportedly killed.


In a statement from the US Embassy Information Office on Friday in Abuja, the country expressed deep concern over the latest clash between the police and the Shi’ite members in Kano, describing the security agency’s response to the procession as “disproportionate.”

Hence, it called for calmness, restraint and communication between the Shi’ite members and government authorities.

The US said the Shi’ite group, like other religious groups, had the “right to assemble, peacefully express their religious beliefs, and mark their celebrations.”

The US admonished the Federal Government to protect and defend these rights.

It said, “The US is deeply concerned by the deaths of dozens of Nigerians during clashes between individuals participating in a Shia procession and the Nigerian Police Force in Kano State on November 14.

“While the matter is still under investigation, we are troubled by the apparent disproportionate response by the police.”

The US also called on members of the IMN and all citizens to respect the rule of law and cooperate with the police in their attempt to maintain public order.

“We also call on the Nigerian government to conduct a transparent investigation of the latest incidents and bring to account anyone responsible for violating the law,” the statement added.

Meanwhile, a human rights group, the Centre for Social Justice, Equity and Transparency, CESJET has called on the United Nation mission in Nigeria to prevail on the United Nations General Assembly to designate the IMN as a terrorist organization
 Islamic Movement in Nigeria (IMN)
The killing of over 300 Shiite  Islamic movement has attracted the attention of the United State of America.

The Us according to Punch Newspaper has called on the Federal Government to account for the deaths of 300 Shi’ite members killed last December. 

This is even as a human rights group, Centre for Social Justice, Equity and Transparency (CESJET) has called on the United Nation mission in Nigeria to prevail on the United Nations General Assembly to designate the IMN as a terrorist organization

On December 15, 2015, following clashes between members of the Shia Islamic Movement of Nigeria and security forces in Zaria, Kaduna State, at least 300 Shi’ites were reportedly killed.


In a statement from the US Embassy Information Office on Friday in Abuja, the country expressed deep concern over the latest clash between the police and the Shi’ite members in Kano, describing the security agency’s response to the procession as “disproportionate.”

Hence, it called for calmness, restraint and communication between the Shi’ite members and government authorities.

The US said the Shi’ite group, like other religious groups, had the “right to assemble, peacefully express their religious beliefs, and mark their celebrations.”

The US admonished the Federal Government to protect and defend these rights.

It said, “The US is deeply concerned by the deaths of dozens of Nigerians during clashes between individuals participating in a Shia procession and the Nigerian Police Force in Kano State on November 14.

“While the matter is still under investigation, we are troubled by the apparent disproportionate response by the police.”

The US also called on members of the IMN and all citizens to respect the rule of law and cooperate with the police in their attempt to maintain public order.

“We also call on the Nigerian government to conduct a transparent investigation of the latest incidents and bring to account anyone responsible for violating the law,” the statement added.

Meanwhile, a human rights group, the Centre for Social Justice, Equity and Transparency, CESJET has called on the United Nation mission in Nigeria to prevail on the United Nations General Assembly to designate the IMN as a terrorist organization

Kolawole Anthony: Now That Islamic Movement of Nigeria (IMN) Has Attacked The Police

Kolawole Anthony: Now That Islamic Movement of Nigeria (IMN) Has Attacked The Police

Kolawole Anthony: Now That Islamic Movement of Nigeria (IMN) Has Attacked The Police
Nigeria is in the grip of terrorists' groups. Boko Haram is being degraded in the North-East. Niger-Delta militants could soon be pacified at talks in the South-South. Separatists in the South-East are tending towards intellectual struggle. Only the Shiite Islamic Movement in Nigeria (IMN) is proving recalcitrant.

IMN extremism is spreading. The group is no longer confined to what used to be it's enclave in Zaria, Kaduna state. It is desirous of spreading it's influence – Plateau, Niger, Katsina, Kano, Sokoto, Yobe and other northern states are in it's crosshair for the short term. In the wake of an outright ban of it's activities by the Kaduna State Government it is looking to test the waters in other states. Any willing state becomes the new hub for it's criminal precessions. Governors of neighbouring states to Kaduna must be bold to confront this threat.

IMN is testing the waters elsewhere. It found the Nigerian Army formidable and beat a tactical retreat. It fights the army and wages war against the military in the media and cyberspace. It's experience cannot be disregarded. Iran provides tactical training for fighting on the streets while unleashing propaganda in the media and online. The truth placed the military above IMN.


The Nigeria Police Force (NPF) is IMN's new test case. It appears to want to use it's failed strategy against the army on the NPF. Fanatics attacked policemen on legitimate duty to stop a protest in Kano. They were intent on killing other Nigerians. Previous lies about being the victim instead of the problem was a perfect cover for the sectarian fanatics. They expected the police to stay quiet while officers and men are slaughtered like sacrificial lamb. They have ramped up the propaganda that the police is an execution squad. The lies would be repeated all over again.

The lies were coded by Iran. Proxies in Nigeria would deliver them. Dangerously Iran is sending more than lies to Nigeria. IMN members go to the Islamic Republic to acquire fighting skills. Iran sends in experts to manage propaganda for IMN. We are all reeling from the deluge of misinformation that proceed from this crime.

Iran tramples our sovereignty. IMN is it's fighting force in Nigeria. The Islamic Republic is invading Nigeria by proxy. If the Iranian Revolutionary Guards were to invade our country there would be global outcry. Such invasion would violate all known international conventions. Each country has the right to manage its internal affairs.
But using IMN as it's fighting force in Nigeria is not alarming to the world. The outcry from several concerned Nigerians and patriotic groups are ignored. Iran ensures that, each time IMN attacks state institutions, She is on standby with it's Ambassador to deploy resources to fight for the extremists. The strategy has been consistent, limiting the ability of security agencies to respond to terrorist threats using human rights as the weapon.
The same strategy is being deployed against the police. Iran pretends the police is executing Shiites. No one talks about the men killed in the course of doing their legitimate work. They are seen as not having families. IMN pretends security agencies are on a mission to clamp down on sectarian freedom. They do not highlight how Nigerians rejected Iranian occupation when they were stopped in several cities from hiding under Ashura processions to commit terror acts. Nigerians fought against foreign repression.
Now that IMN has turned its attention to the Nigerian Police we should be worried. It marks a growing boldness on the part of a group positioning to be the next terror group. If the police gets drawn into the IMN quicksand it will cripple its ability to fight crimes. All IMN criminality would be covered with informal immunity that the group desperately seeks. Other Nigerians would be left at the mercy of the extremists group's reign of terror. Zaria would be visited upon all of us. We cannot afford that.
Other nations must rise up to condemn Iran's interference with Nigeria's internal affairs. The Islamic Republic must be told to keep its international export of terror away from Nigeria in the interest of global peace. A destabilisation of Nigeria will have consequences for the entire globe. The entire African continent would be impacted. A global meltdown is the least that will be expected.
The recent IMN clash with Police in Kano is therefore not a headache for the NPF alone. It is not even headache for the Nigerian state alone. It is a concern that the world must tackle with dispatch. The concern should be underscored by the recalcitrance of IMN where other security concerns in Nigeria are tending towards solutions. Global pressure must thus be brought to bear in stopping Iranian support for IMN. Without Iranian support the IMN threat will dissipate. This is the direction the nations of earth should tread. They must also back Nigeria in designating IMN as a terror group.

Kolawole Phd is a University lecturer and contributed this article from Keffi, Nasarawa State.
Kolawole Anthony: Now That Islamic Movement of Nigeria (IMN) Has Attacked The Police
Nigeria is in the grip of terrorists' groups. Boko Haram is being degraded in the North-East. Niger-Delta militants could soon be pacified at talks in the South-South. Separatists in the South-East are tending towards intellectual struggle. Only the Shiite Islamic Movement in Nigeria (IMN) is proving recalcitrant.

IMN extremism is spreading. The group is no longer confined to what used to be it's enclave in Zaria, Kaduna state. It is desirous of spreading it's influence – Plateau, Niger, Katsina, Kano, Sokoto, Yobe and other northern states are in it's crosshair for the short term. In the wake of an outright ban of it's activities by the Kaduna State Government it is looking to test the waters in other states. Any willing state becomes the new hub for it's criminal precessions. Governors of neighbouring states to Kaduna must be bold to confront this threat.

IMN is testing the waters elsewhere. It found the Nigerian Army formidable and beat a tactical retreat. It fights the army and wages war against the military in the media and cyberspace. It's experience cannot be disregarded. Iran provides tactical training for fighting on the streets while unleashing propaganda in the media and online. The truth placed the military above IMN.


The Nigeria Police Force (NPF) is IMN's new test case. It appears to want to use it's failed strategy against the army on the NPF. Fanatics attacked policemen on legitimate duty to stop a protest in Kano. They were intent on killing other Nigerians. Previous lies about being the victim instead of the problem was a perfect cover for the sectarian fanatics. They expected the police to stay quiet while officers and men are slaughtered like sacrificial lamb. They have ramped up the propaganda that the police is an execution squad. The lies would be repeated all over again.

The lies were coded by Iran. Proxies in Nigeria would deliver them. Dangerously Iran is sending more than lies to Nigeria. IMN members go to the Islamic Republic to acquire fighting skills. Iran sends in experts to manage propaganda for IMN. We are all reeling from the deluge of misinformation that proceed from this crime.

Iran tramples our sovereignty. IMN is it's fighting force in Nigeria. The Islamic Republic is invading Nigeria by proxy. If the Iranian Revolutionary Guards were to invade our country there would be global outcry. Such invasion would violate all known international conventions. Each country has the right to manage its internal affairs.
But using IMN as it's fighting force in Nigeria is not alarming to the world. The outcry from several concerned Nigerians and patriotic groups are ignored. Iran ensures that, each time IMN attacks state institutions, She is on standby with it's Ambassador to deploy resources to fight for the extremists. The strategy has been consistent, limiting the ability of security agencies to respond to terrorist threats using human rights as the weapon.
The same strategy is being deployed against the police. Iran pretends the police is executing Shiites. No one talks about the men killed in the course of doing their legitimate work. They are seen as not having families. IMN pretends security agencies are on a mission to clamp down on sectarian freedom. They do not highlight how Nigerians rejected Iranian occupation when they were stopped in several cities from hiding under Ashura processions to commit terror acts. Nigerians fought against foreign repression.
Now that IMN has turned its attention to the Nigerian Police we should be worried. It marks a growing boldness on the part of a group positioning to be the next terror group. If the police gets drawn into the IMN quicksand it will cripple its ability to fight crimes. All IMN criminality would be covered with informal immunity that the group desperately seeks. Other Nigerians would be left at the mercy of the extremists group's reign of terror. Zaria would be visited upon all of us. We cannot afford that.
Other nations must rise up to condemn Iran's interference with Nigeria's internal affairs. The Islamic Republic must be told to keep its international export of terror away from Nigeria in the interest of global peace. A destabilisation of Nigeria will have consequences for the entire globe. The entire African continent would be impacted. A global meltdown is the least that will be expected.
The recent IMN clash with Police in Kano is therefore not a headache for the NPF alone. It is not even headache for the Nigerian state alone. It is a concern that the world must tackle with dispatch. The concern should be underscored by the recalcitrance of IMN where other security concerns in Nigeria are tending towards solutions. Global pressure must thus be brought to bear in stopping Iranian support for IMN. Without Iranian support the IMN threat will dissipate. This is the direction the nations of earth should tread. They must also back Nigeria in designating IMN as a terror group.

Kolawole Phd is a University lecturer and contributed this article from Keffi, Nasarawa State.

The Audacity In Shiites Clash With Nigerian Police, By Ikpa Isaac

The Audacity In Shiites Clash With Nigerian Police, By Ikpa Isaac

The Shiites in Nigeria have a strong affinity with Iran. It is a country regarded as the hub of global terrorism and the Shiites in Nigeria operates under the deceptive tag of the Islamic Movement in Nigeria (IMN).

Over the years, they have remained audacious outlaws. Days back, the sect members again violently clashed with the Nigerian police, which attempted to stop their illegal procession to Zaria from Kano city.

The violent interface with the police occurred despite the ban slammed on the sect both by the Kano state Police and the Kaduna State Government in Nigeria. In all the instances of the loathsome sect’s clashes with security agents in the country, they disguise under the banner of religious processions, weird in its entirety and in dissonance with laws of the country.


Led by an Islamic preacher, Sheik Ibraheem El-Zakzaky, for nearly four decades, Shiites in Nigeria have proved to be a thorn in the flesh of Nigerians, with their irreligious bluster, strange doctrines and easy inclination to violence. Zaria, Shiites or IMN’s host community and precisely, their headquarters in Kaduna state of Nigeria has known no peace since its introduction in Nigeria.

Therefore the sect’s recent clash with the Police and other such violent confrontations with members of the public is just an apt reminder of the adroit disposition of these irreligious miscreants, as above laws of the land, who can even attack law enforcement officers on lawful duty.

In the latest encounter with the Police last Monday, another Shiites leader, Sheik Sanusi Abdulkadir Koki, led the Shiites from Kano city on a procession to Zaria for the annual feast of Ashura or what they also refer to as the Arbaeen Trek to Zaria for mourning martyr Imam Husain (AS). And at Kwanar Dawaki in Dawakin Kudu LGA of Kano state, the police sought to stop the sect’s procession, having received complaints about its illegal procession, with a high tendency to cause its usual public disturbances or breach of peace.

Like in the case of the clash with Nigerian soldiers in December 2015, rather than obey the police order, the Shiites exhumed their inclination to violence by aggressively confronting the police, with dangerous weapons, resulting in deaths on both sides.

Meanwhile, elsewhere in Potiskum, Yobe state, the preceding day, road blocks mounted by Nigerian soldiers on the outskirts of the town tracked down Shiites members in trucks heading to Kano, the first destination of this year’s annual Arbaeen Trek, from where they would move in a procession to Zaria.

Surprisingly, when a check was conducted on them, assorted dangerous weapons, such as guns, knives, cudgels, cutlasses, bows and arrows among others were found in their possession. One would think they were on a hunting expedition; a tale more believable than their claims of journeying for a religious feast. It was testimony to the bizarre doctrines of Shiites as well as the indulgence of body and soul of adherents in violence.

The IGP, Ibrahim Idris Kpotum also testified to the violence-prone nature of the Shiites, who create avoidable upheavals frequently.

Kpotum explained that the Shiites, “Attacked our officers, killed one of our officers, one has sustained an arrow wound on his head.”

This obviously illegal assemblage of Shiites mobilized their members from parts of the North with a mission to congregate in Zaria, the same state; government had declared the sect and its activities illegal. But the most resentful aspect of the entire drama is the Shiites guts to kill and injure state security agents so wantonly.

Had the police reacted to Shiites senseless affront, which was capable of provoking state reprisals, more deaths would have been recorded. And the same sect would have rushed to public domain with all manner of accusations against the Police, including the use of unreasonable force on Shiites.

Like the IGP noted, it is the constitutional duty of the police to stop any aberration on public law and order. The confrontation of the Police and killing of any officer by the sect is condemnable in all ramifications.

Human Rights organizations have again remained mute, because they feel security agents in Nigeria don’t have rights to be protected or deserve to live. And when organizations like Amnesty International or Human Rights Watch eventually break their silence with a report, the security agents would be the first casualty of their songs of human rights violations. This is unacceptable!

Governor el-Rufai revealed while slamming a ban on the provocative sect that IMN in Nigeria is an illegal sect thus:

“The Judicial Commission of Inquiry into the Zaria Clashes of 12-14 December 2015 found that the IMN is not a registered organization, that it has a paramilitary wing and that its members do not recognize or respect the laws of the country and the duly constituted authorities that have the responsibility to secure and administer the country.”

It is difficult to explain why Shiites have failed to appreciate that since it is not a registered organization in Nigeria, the ban by KDSG has proscribed the sect in any other part of the country, hence the headquarters of the sect is in Kaduna.

Additional, what is the rationale behind a religious sect wielding lethal weapons in the guise of observing a religious festival? It is not only criminal, but stretching the patience and hospitality of government to cracking limits. The Shiites members responsible for the clash should immediately be arrested, investigated and prosecuted to serve as deterrence. 

While commending the restraint of the Police to the beastly acts of the Shiites, the Nigerian government must ensure Shiite movement ceases to operate anywhere in the land until they do the needful by giving it a legal status and a defined decent code of operation. 

Finally, the Kano incident has exposed the emergence of another Shiites leader in Nigeria identified as Sheik Sanusi Abdulkadir Koki who led the onslaught on security agents. He should be arrested and charged for murder of security agents and breach of public peace, before he recoups his sect members for reprisal attacks on the state.

Enough of the affront on the Nigerian state, by this decadent Shiite sect. As the sect scouts for paid conmen in the guise of human rights groups or some NGOs to defend their illegality, government should expedite actions for the arrest and trial of the suspected Shiites.

The recurring fact is that Shiites are not the only Muslims in Nigeria. But other Muslims worship in mosques and do not brandish weapons or attack security agents in the course of worship. So, why must Shiites conduct their religious affairs on streets or roads, with lethal weapons? 

The actions of the IMN members in obstinacy demand deeper inquest by security agents. IMN’s links with Iran is suspicious and if taken for granted, Nigeria could be unknowingly breeding another wing of Boko of Haram terrorists with ties and sponsorship from ISIS. But like the sect fruitlessly tried to blackmail the Nigerian Army and the COAS Gen. Tukur Buratai in the Zaria incident; similar such campaigns on the Police in the Kano will also backfire.‎

Ikpa is Executive Secretary, Centre for Social Justice, Equity and Transparency and contributed this piece from Abuja.
The Shiites in Nigeria have a strong affinity with Iran. It is a country regarded as the hub of global terrorism and the Shiites in Nigeria operates under the deceptive tag of the Islamic Movement in Nigeria (IMN).

Over the years, they have remained audacious outlaws. Days back, the sect members again violently clashed with the Nigerian police, which attempted to stop their illegal procession to Zaria from Kano city.

The violent interface with the police occurred despite the ban slammed on the sect both by the Kano state Police and the Kaduna State Government in Nigeria. In all the instances of the loathsome sect’s clashes with security agents in the country, they disguise under the banner of religious processions, weird in its entirety and in dissonance with laws of the country.


Led by an Islamic preacher, Sheik Ibraheem El-Zakzaky, for nearly four decades, Shiites in Nigeria have proved to be a thorn in the flesh of Nigerians, with their irreligious bluster, strange doctrines and easy inclination to violence. Zaria, Shiites or IMN’s host community and precisely, their headquarters in Kaduna state of Nigeria has known no peace since its introduction in Nigeria.

Therefore the sect’s recent clash with the Police and other such violent confrontations with members of the public is just an apt reminder of the adroit disposition of these irreligious miscreants, as above laws of the land, who can even attack law enforcement officers on lawful duty.

In the latest encounter with the Police last Monday, another Shiites leader, Sheik Sanusi Abdulkadir Koki, led the Shiites from Kano city on a procession to Zaria for the annual feast of Ashura or what they also refer to as the Arbaeen Trek to Zaria for mourning martyr Imam Husain (AS). And at Kwanar Dawaki in Dawakin Kudu LGA of Kano state, the police sought to stop the sect’s procession, having received complaints about its illegal procession, with a high tendency to cause its usual public disturbances or breach of peace.

Like in the case of the clash with Nigerian soldiers in December 2015, rather than obey the police order, the Shiites exhumed their inclination to violence by aggressively confronting the police, with dangerous weapons, resulting in deaths on both sides.

Meanwhile, elsewhere in Potiskum, Yobe state, the preceding day, road blocks mounted by Nigerian soldiers on the outskirts of the town tracked down Shiites members in trucks heading to Kano, the first destination of this year’s annual Arbaeen Trek, from where they would move in a procession to Zaria.

Surprisingly, when a check was conducted on them, assorted dangerous weapons, such as guns, knives, cudgels, cutlasses, bows and arrows among others were found in their possession. One would think they were on a hunting expedition; a tale more believable than their claims of journeying for a religious feast. It was testimony to the bizarre doctrines of Shiites as well as the indulgence of body and soul of adherents in violence.

The IGP, Ibrahim Idris Kpotum also testified to the violence-prone nature of the Shiites, who create avoidable upheavals frequently.

Kpotum explained that the Shiites, “Attacked our officers, killed one of our officers, one has sustained an arrow wound on his head.”

This obviously illegal assemblage of Shiites mobilized their members from parts of the North with a mission to congregate in Zaria, the same state; government had declared the sect and its activities illegal. But the most resentful aspect of the entire drama is the Shiites guts to kill and injure state security agents so wantonly.

Had the police reacted to Shiites senseless affront, which was capable of provoking state reprisals, more deaths would have been recorded. And the same sect would have rushed to public domain with all manner of accusations against the Police, including the use of unreasonable force on Shiites.

Like the IGP noted, it is the constitutional duty of the police to stop any aberration on public law and order. The confrontation of the Police and killing of any officer by the sect is condemnable in all ramifications.

Human Rights organizations have again remained mute, because they feel security agents in Nigeria don’t have rights to be protected or deserve to live. And when organizations like Amnesty International or Human Rights Watch eventually break their silence with a report, the security agents would be the first casualty of their songs of human rights violations. This is unacceptable!

Governor el-Rufai revealed while slamming a ban on the provocative sect that IMN in Nigeria is an illegal sect thus:

“The Judicial Commission of Inquiry into the Zaria Clashes of 12-14 December 2015 found that the IMN is not a registered organization, that it has a paramilitary wing and that its members do not recognize or respect the laws of the country and the duly constituted authorities that have the responsibility to secure and administer the country.”

It is difficult to explain why Shiites have failed to appreciate that since it is not a registered organization in Nigeria, the ban by KDSG has proscribed the sect in any other part of the country, hence the headquarters of the sect is in Kaduna.

Additional, what is the rationale behind a religious sect wielding lethal weapons in the guise of observing a religious festival? It is not only criminal, but stretching the patience and hospitality of government to cracking limits. The Shiites members responsible for the clash should immediately be arrested, investigated and prosecuted to serve as deterrence. 

While commending the restraint of the Police to the beastly acts of the Shiites, the Nigerian government must ensure Shiite movement ceases to operate anywhere in the land until they do the needful by giving it a legal status and a defined decent code of operation. 

Finally, the Kano incident has exposed the emergence of another Shiites leader in Nigeria identified as Sheik Sanusi Abdulkadir Koki who led the onslaught on security agents. He should be arrested and charged for murder of security agents and breach of public peace, before he recoups his sect members for reprisal attacks on the state.

Enough of the affront on the Nigerian state, by this decadent Shiite sect. As the sect scouts for paid conmen in the guise of human rights groups or some NGOs to defend their illegality, government should expedite actions for the arrest and trial of the suspected Shiites.

The recurring fact is that Shiites are not the only Muslims in Nigeria. But other Muslims worship in mosques and do not brandish weapons or attack security agents in the course of worship. So, why must Shiites conduct their religious affairs on streets or roads, with lethal weapons? 

The actions of the IMN members in obstinacy demand deeper inquest by security agents. IMN’s links with Iran is suspicious and if taken for granted, Nigeria could be unknowingly breeding another wing of Boko of Haram terrorists with ties and sponsorship from ISIS. But like the sect fruitlessly tried to blackmail the Nigerian Army and the COAS Gen. Tukur Buratai in the Zaria incident; similar such campaigns on the Police in the Kano will also backfire.‎

Ikpa is Executive Secretary, Centre for Social Justice, Equity and Transparency and contributed this piece from Abuja.

BREAKING: BLOODY MONDAY In Kano As Many Feared Dead In Police, Shiites Clash

BREAKING: BLOODY MONDAY In Kano As Many Feared Dead In Police, Shiites Clash

BREAKING: BLOODY MONDAY In Kano As Many Feared Dead In Police, Shiites
It was a bloody Monday morning  in Kano City as members of the Shiite Islamic Movement of Nigeria engaged the men of Nigerian Police in bloody clash that has claimed many lives.

A witness said the clash started around Tamburawa, on the outskirts of Kano city, when the police tried to stop a Shiite protest.

Over a dozen people including a police officer are feared killed from the violent clash.

The police have since deployed heavily armed mobile police officers to the area while the major Kano- Zaria road is completely blocked.'

The IMN had late on Sunday accused Nigerian soldiers of plotting to block its members heading to Kano from Yobe State while also planting weapons on them.

“Soldiers mounted a check point at the outskirts of Potiskum, Yobe state, probably to stop members of the Islamic Movement in Nigeria (IMN) from leaving the town to join others in this year’s annual Arbaeen Trek to Zaria, mourning the martyrdom of Imam Husain (AS) scheduled to commence from Kano this week,” Ibrahim Musa, a spokesperson for the group said in a statement emailed to PREMIUM TIMES.

“The soldiers detained a trailer carrying the personal belongings of those going to Kano for the trek today.

“Apparently, the soldiers have some sinister motives as they were overheard scheming to plant weapons in the luggage and thereafter claim that these bags with the weapons belong to members of the IMN.

“Throughout the nearly four decades of the existence of the IMN, it has never stockpiled, carried or used weapons. It never had any cause to, even in the face of provocation.

“IMN therefore wishes to alert the general public over this evil plot, and categorically reject and disown any attempt by the security services to plant any fake evidence against members of the Islamic Movement (IMN).”

The spokesperson for the army, Sani Usman, could not be reached to comment for this story. Multiple calls to his telephone did not connect

Source: Premium Times

BREAKING: BLOODY MONDAY In Kano As Many Feared Dead In Police, Shiites
It was a bloody Monday morning  in Kano City as members of the Shiite Islamic Movement of Nigeria engaged the men of Nigerian Police in bloody clash that has claimed many lives.

A witness said the clash started around Tamburawa, on the outskirts of Kano city, when the police tried to stop a Shiite protest.

Over a dozen people including a police officer are feared killed from the violent clash.

The police have since deployed heavily armed mobile police officers to the area while the major Kano- Zaria road is completely blocked.'

The IMN had late on Sunday accused Nigerian soldiers of plotting to block its members heading to Kano from Yobe State while also planting weapons on them.

“Soldiers mounted a check point at the outskirts of Potiskum, Yobe state, probably to stop members of the Islamic Movement in Nigeria (IMN) from leaving the town to join others in this year’s annual Arbaeen Trek to Zaria, mourning the martyrdom of Imam Husain (AS) scheduled to commence from Kano this week,” Ibrahim Musa, a spokesperson for the group said in a statement emailed to PREMIUM TIMES.

“The soldiers detained a trailer carrying the personal belongings of those going to Kano for the trek today.

“Apparently, the soldiers have some sinister motives as they were overheard scheming to plant weapons in the luggage and thereafter claim that these bags with the weapons belong to members of the IMN.

“Throughout the nearly four decades of the existence of the IMN, it has never stockpiled, carried or used weapons. It never had any cause to, even in the face of provocation.

“IMN therefore wishes to alert the general public over this evil plot, and categorically reject and disown any attempt by the security services to plant any fake evidence against members of the Islamic Movement (IMN).”

The spokesperson for the army, Sani Usman, could not be reached to comment for this story. Multiple calls to his telephone did not connect

Source: Premium Times

Shiism And the People's Fury, By David Sani

Shiism And the People's Fury, By David Sani

Shiism And the People's Fury, By David Sani
The fear that several persons and organizations had repeatedly expressed over the growing extremism of the Shiite sect in the country was finally proven on Wednesday October 12, 2016 when sectarian violence left as many as dozen persons dead across several cities in the north. Incidents involving an outlawed group of the sect, the Islamic Movement in Nigeria (IMN) stretched from Plateau to Sokoto state with Kaduna, Katsina and Kano recording major confrontations. 

Concerns about IMN's propensity for mindless violence first heightened almost a year ago when the now proscribed group reportedly made an attempt on the life of the Chief of Army Staff (COAS), LT. Gen. TY Buratai. Naturally, the widespread condemnation of the military response to that threat was in favour of IMN. The lone voices that tried pricking the national conscience to take a holistic view of the sect were mostly shouted down. 


The report from the public hearing of the Kaduna State Judicial Commission of Inquiry into the incident and later a report from the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) found that IMN was not what it seemed. Both reports stopped short of naming it as a terror organization – this reluctance to appropriately designate the Shiite radical group is in keeping with the culture of political correctness that allowed Boko Haram to mature into a monster before our very eyes. 

Albeit almost belately, Kaduna State Governor, Mallam Nasir el-Rufai, finally marshalled the political will to rely on existing laws and proscribed the IMN which happened to be operating illegally as it was not duly registered. It was also found, as found in the two reports mentioned above, to be radical, confrontational, abridging others' freedom of movement, substantially militarized as well as recruiting and radicalizing youths. 

Unfortunately, years of infiltrating the system and a deep pocket funded by the Islamic Republic of Iran meant that IMN has been able to mount a campaign of calumny against the military services and the security operatives that should have enforced the ban by Kaduna state government. The resources at its disposal means that all the institutions it perceived as threat in its ascendancy to a global terror brand are constantly blackmailed by international NGOs that pretend to uphold human rights. 

Citizens, many of whom had endured years of growing IMN oppression, were definitely at their wits' end. The proscription order was openly flouted by the Shiite sect members who had prior to the order promised to shut down the country with protest for the release of their detained leader, Sheikh Ibraheem Al Zakyzaky. For a group whose so called peaceful processions heralded hell for other citizens no one was willing to have a taste of their violent protests. The fear, justified or not, was that any protests by a group that has been banned will leave behind too many casualties from adherents of other faiths and sects. 

There was no justification for what happened on that violent Wednesday in Kaduna, Funtua, Kano and Jos but it was a disaster that became inevitable. It was the consequence of an IMN that has placed itself above the law enforcement agents while totally forgetting that the various security apparatus derive their powers from the people as enshrined in the constitution. When the sect members deluded themselves into thinking that they are above state institutions the people that empowered these organs simply took the power back and unleashed their fury on what they now know to be an illegal assembly. This is totally wrong. We should never have gotten to this stage. 

We must thus retrace our steps so that each person begin to recognize their bounds as much as they insist on their rights. The right to choice of religion must be tempered by the knowledge that Nigeria is home to more than just Christians and Muslims. When a faithful of either dominant religions wants to act they must acknowledge that others have the right to worship the arrays of indigenous faiths including atheists and agnostics whose freedom must also not be trampled. For each of the belief systems there are variations sometimes expressed as sects such that even atheism has degrees. 

There will be investigations and probes no doubt but even before their reports come out, which will take time, we must again allow the security and military services begin to fully exercise their statutory roles without let to the extent that they adhere to rules of engagement. The culture of kowtowing to foreign conventions that give more rights to religious and sectarian fanatics while limiting the ability of the state to respond to terrorists' threats must stop forthwith. Nigeria remains a secular state with a secular constitution and the institutions that exist to safeguard this constitution must be allowed to do just that. We must never again allow a repeat of the situation where one sect becomes so powerful to the point that other Nigerians are forced to resort to self help. 

A first step in this direction will include a detailed investigation by security agencies into reports that IMN members had fake military and police uniforms with assorted weapons in their possession during the faceoff. The issue of militarization by the Shiite sect is one that must be treated urgently and should not be left till the investigations that would be launched take place. 

IMN must see the violent response to its threat of violence as a final denouncement by the population. The unified response to its misadvised protests under the cover of the annual Ashura procession is a warning that every other person has decided that enough of its excesses.

Sani writes from Abuja.

Shiism And the People's Fury, By David Sani
The fear that several persons and organizations had repeatedly expressed over the growing extremism of the Shiite sect in the country was finally proven on Wednesday October 12, 2016 when sectarian violence left as many as dozen persons dead across several cities in the north. Incidents involving an outlawed group of the sect, the Islamic Movement in Nigeria (IMN) stretched from Plateau to Sokoto state with Kaduna, Katsina and Kano recording major confrontations. 

Concerns about IMN's propensity for mindless violence first heightened almost a year ago when the now proscribed group reportedly made an attempt on the life of the Chief of Army Staff (COAS), LT. Gen. TY Buratai. Naturally, the widespread condemnation of the military response to that threat was in favour of IMN. The lone voices that tried pricking the national conscience to take a holistic view of the sect were mostly shouted down. 


The report from the public hearing of the Kaduna State Judicial Commission of Inquiry into the incident and later a report from the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) found that IMN was not what it seemed. Both reports stopped short of naming it as a terror organization – this reluctance to appropriately designate the Shiite radical group is in keeping with the culture of political correctness that allowed Boko Haram to mature into a monster before our very eyes. 

Albeit almost belately, Kaduna State Governor, Mallam Nasir el-Rufai, finally marshalled the political will to rely on existing laws and proscribed the IMN which happened to be operating illegally as it was not duly registered. It was also found, as found in the two reports mentioned above, to be radical, confrontational, abridging others' freedom of movement, substantially militarized as well as recruiting and radicalizing youths. 

Unfortunately, years of infiltrating the system and a deep pocket funded by the Islamic Republic of Iran meant that IMN has been able to mount a campaign of calumny against the military services and the security operatives that should have enforced the ban by Kaduna state government. The resources at its disposal means that all the institutions it perceived as threat in its ascendancy to a global terror brand are constantly blackmailed by international NGOs that pretend to uphold human rights. 

Citizens, many of whom had endured years of growing IMN oppression, were definitely at their wits' end. The proscription order was openly flouted by the Shiite sect members who had prior to the order promised to shut down the country with protest for the release of their detained leader, Sheikh Ibraheem Al Zakyzaky. For a group whose so called peaceful processions heralded hell for other citizens no one was willing to have a taste of their violent protests. The fear, justified or not, was that any protests by a group that has been banned will leave behind too many casualties from adherents of other faiths and sects. 

There was no justification for what happened on that violent Wednesday in Kaduna, Funtua, Kano and Jos but it was a disaster that became inevitable. It was the consequence of an IMN that has placed itself above the law enforcement agents while totally forgetting that the various security apparatus derive their powers from the people as enshrined in the constitution. When the sect members deluded themselves into thinking that they are above state institutions the people that empowered these organs simply took the power back and unleashed their fury on what they now know to be an illegal assembly. This is totally wrong. We should never have gotten to this stage. 

We must thus retrace our steps so that each person begin to recognize their bounds as much as they insist on their rights. The right to choice of religion must be tempered by the knowledge that Nigeria is home to more than just Christians and Muslims. When a faithful of either dominant religions wants to act they must acknowledge that others have the right to worship the arrays of indigenous faiths including atheists and agnostics whose freedom must also not be trampled. For each of the belief systems there are variations sometimes expressed as sects such that even atheism has degrees. 

There will be investigations and probes no doubt but even before their reports come out, which will take time, we must again allow the security and military services begin to fully exercise their statutory roles without let to the extent that they adhere to rules of engagement. The culture of kowtowing to foreign conventions that give more rights to religious and sectarian fanatics while limiting the ability of the state to respond to terrorists' threats must stop forthwith. Nigeria remains a secular state with a secular constitution and the institutions that exist to safeguard this constitution must be allowed to do just that. We must never again allow a repeat of the situation where one sect becomes so powerful to the point that other Nigerians are forced to resort to self help. 

A first step in this direction will include a detailed investigation by security agencies into reports that IMN members had fake military and police uniforms with assorted weapons in their possession during the faceoff. The issue of militarization by the Shiite sect is one that must be treated urgently and should not be left till the investigations that would be launched take place. 

IMN must see the violent response to its threat of violence as a final denouncement by the population. The unified response to its misadvised protests under the cover of the annual Ashura procession is a warning that every other person has decided that enough of its excesses.

Sani writes from Abuja.


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