Thursday, May 16, 2013

State of Emergency: Protect the rights of civilians – US warns Nigerian government

A top United States official had on Wednesday said that Nigeria must protect the rights of civilians and avoid any "heavy-handed" response as it moves against Islamist sect to enforce a state of emergency.

State Department spokesman, Patrick Ventrell said, "We call on Nigerian officials to ensure that Nigeria's security forces protect civilians in any security response in a way that respects human rights and the rule of law."

He also urged Nigerian authorities to investigate clashes between soldiers and Islamist gunmen last month in the town of Baga on Lake Chad where over 200 lives were lost to ensure that "those responsible are held accountable."

It would be recalled that President Goodluck Jonathan issued an emergency decree late Tuesday, acknowledging for the first time that Boko Haram militants had "taken over" parts of northern Borno state, the insurgents' stronghold.



The Military then announced Wednesday that a "massive" troop deployment was under way.

"Washington is watching how the Nigerian authorities will handle the state of emergency", Ventrell said.

"We have made it clear to the Nigerian government that its heavy-handed response to insecurity in northern Nigeria and the failure to address human rights violations will potentially affect our ability to provide security assistance going forward," he added.

Jonathan said the Boko Haram violence, which has left thousands dead since 2009, can no longer be treated as "militancy or criminality." The latest violence, including the brazen attacks in the northeast, amounted to "a declaration of war," he said.

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