Officials of the Nigerian Army have illegally detained four
brothers since 2013 at a detention center at Dodan Barracks in Ikoyi,
Lagos. The army has held the siblings on the allegation that were Boko
Haram insurgents.
The men, Haroon Abdullahi, 21 years old, A
hmed Abdullahi, 17,
Mohammed Abdullahi, 14, and Yahaya Abdullahi, 9, have been in detention
since March 2013.A human rights activist who brought the disturbing
situation to the attention of a correspondent of SaharaReporters said
“It’s a grave injustice that these four brothers, the youngest
only nine years old, have been held by the Nigerian Army without trial
for more than two years,”
The four brothers were arrested in the Mafoluku area of Lagos State in March 2013 and accused of being members of Boko Haram.
“The Nigerian authorities alleged that the four boys were part of
an insurgent cell planning to bomb the Third Mainland Bridge in Lagos,”
our source said.
The detainees’ father, who hails from Borno State Nigeria, is a
retired soldier of the Nigerian Army. “Malam Abdullahi relocated his
family to Lagos in 2012 after life became unbearable for them in
Maiduguri,” said our human rights source. According to him, the retired
soldier enrolled his children in a school in Lagos to enable them to
continue their education.
“Due to inadequate accommodation, the children stayed in an
abandoned, defunct Concord newspaper warehouse in Aviation Estate, in
Mafoluku. Also in the compound were others, mostly of Northern origin,
trapped in the makeshift shelters.
“In March 2013, the Nigerian Army carried out a joint operation
with the police and agents of the Department of State Security. They
raided the compound in the night, arresting many, including the four
brothers.” “The brothers have been detained since in a facility at the
Dodan Barracks. It has been 32 months now. No formal charges, no trial.
And their father, Malam Abdullahi, has been fighting a lost cause in
court to secure his children’s release. At every hearing, the case for
his sons’ release is adjourned for months.” According to the source, the
fate of the four detained male youngsters “is troubling because any
Nigerian could find himself or herself in the same situation, held by
the military for close to thirty-six months on the basis of a mere
allegation.”
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