The unfinished building where security
forces killed at least seven squatters Friday, September 20, in the Apo
neighbourhood of Abuja, belongs to Mrs. Adunni Oluwole Salisu, believed
to be the sister to former President Olusegun Obasanjo, a PREMIUM TIMES
investigation has revealed.
Documents from the Abuja Geographical
Information Systems (AGIS) shows that the property, located at No. 8
Bamanga Tukur Street, Gudu District, near the Gudu cemetery, belongs to
Mrs. Salisu.
Ownership details of property OG247326,
point unmistakably to Mrs. Salisu’s land rights, but neither her, nor
the former president, could be reached for comment; although
authoritative family sources confirmed the ownership and the
relationship.
The Gudu killings have pitched the
Nigerian human rights community against anti-terrorist campaigners in a
bitter debate about the threshold of caution that security forces on
anti-terror missions ought to uphold where the insurgency is generally
armed, and have demonstrated maximum capability for ruthless murder and
violence.
Soldiers and SSS officials, spurred by
intelligence reports that a sleeper cell of Boko Haram insurgents,
embedded in the Gudu neighbourhood, were about to strike again in Abuja,
pre-emtorily stormed the building inhabited by squatters, mostly
tricycles drivers, petty traders and artisans, in the early hours of
Friday, killing at least seven and leaving several injured.
A spokesman for the tricycle association
angrily lambasted security officials on Channels TV, in an interview
Monday, claiming that “because two or three Boko Haram people were in
the building offers no excuse to kill innocent people.”
Security forces have been in anxious
alert after the Boko Haram insurgents scored a string of deadly success
in missions that targeted This Day newspaper office, the United Nations
office, the Force Headquarters of the Nigeria Police, and the
Anti-Robbery Squad headquarters of the Police- all in Abuja. The sect
has also visited punishing attacks on neighbourhood churches killing
scores of worshipers.
PREMIUM TIMES gathered, within
intelligence sources, Tuesday, that a mood of panic alert in the
security community was what precipitated the Apo killings also thought
to be “quite frankly an operational failure,” underscoring, top
operatives disclosed to PREMIUM TIMES, “the imperative for deeper and
specialized human rights training for agents on anti-insurgency
mission.”
Residents claim a representative of the owner of the house had given the squatters a week notice to vacate the property.
The squatters were killed before the
expiration of the notice. Most of the dead and wounded were shot in the
back, execution style.
It is not known yet whether Mr. Obasanjo played any role in that tragic eviction operation.
Meanwhile, multiple security sources
have told this paper that the SSS had released most of the squatters
arrested at the building after it was unable to link them to any
terrorist activities.
News of the release of the squatters
came just as the Nigerian Senate, the Police and the National Human
Rights Commission, NHRC, promised to investigate the killings.
Chairman of the NHRC, Chidi Odinkalu, told PREMIUM TIMES it was essential to investigate and verify the death of the squatters.
“The facts of this matter should be
dispassionately verified,” Mr. Odinkalu said. “That is an obligation
everybody must take seriously.”
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