The Kaduna State Government on Monday
said that 347 corpses were given a mass burial at the Mando cemetery
after a clash between soldiers and members of the Shiite’s sect in
Kaduna last year.
The Secretary to the Kaduna State
Government, Mallam Balarabe Lawal, who said this when he appeared
before the Judicial Commission of Inquiry, said the corpses were given a
mass burial in a grave on
December 14, 2015 in a cemetery along Mando/
Zaria Road.
According to the SSG, a total of 191
unknown corpses were recovered from the Army Depot in Zaria and another
batch of 156 corpses were recovered from the Ahmadu Bello University
Teaching Hospital, Shika.
Corroborating the SSG, the
Director-General of Interfaith, Muhammad Namadi Musa, who claimed he
supervised the burial, said the corpses were interred between 12
midnight and 5am.
Musa said, “On December 13, 2015, I
received a phone call from the SSG to come to the Government House after
which I was directed to go to Zaria to find out the number of corpses
and how they would be buried.
“I moved in company of the state
Commissioner of Police straight to ABUTH, Zaria to ascertain the number
of corpses. There we counted 156 corpses.
“At the Nigerian Depot, the SSG directed
me to meet with one Maj. Ogundare regarding the corpses there. After
introducing myself, he refused to let me know the number; but later on,
the SSG called me and told me the number.
“He also confirmed the number while they
were being buried; as he counted them one after the other as they were
laid in one grave.
“We left the Nigerian Army Depot with
three heavy-duty trucks and 60 young officers who escorted us to assist
in offloading the corpses. From ABUTH, Zaria, five small trucks carried
the 196 corpses. Most corpses were covered with black materials and they
included women and children.”
On why the state government demolished
the Gyelasu resident of the Shiite leader, the Hussainiyya Centre,
Dembo centre, Jushi and two other buildings belonging to Alhaji Aminu
Idris and Alhaji Tijjani Mohammed, the SSG said they were pulled down
because they did not meet the safety standards set by the state
government.
Lawal added that a report from a team of
engineers who carried out inspection on the houses said the buildings
were failed structures.
“So, they were demolished in the interest of safety,” he said.
Also, the General Manager of Kaduna
State Public Works Agency, Tanimu Abubakar and the Deputy Director,
Ministry of Works and Transport, Muhammad Lawal Magaji, said in the
course of carrying out inspection on the structures, it was observed
that the buildings had structural defects.
Also, the elder brother to the embattled
leader of the Islamic Movement in Nigeria, Sheikh Ibrahim El-Zakzaky,
Mohammed Sani Yaqoob, told the panel that he was happy with what the
soldiers did to the sect members.
He said the sect was being funded by the Iranian government.
Yaqoob, a step brother to the Shiite
leader, said the soldiers would have been regarded as cowards if
they had retreated from the spot where the members of the sect
blocked the convoy of the Chief of Army Staff, Lt. Gen. Tukur Buratai.
Muhammad, who spoke in Hausa, told the
panel that as a child, El-Zakzaky, the fourth child in the family of
16, was “very sharp and intelligent.”
Yaqoob, who is also the Chairman of
Jama’atu Izalatil Bid’ah Wa’iqamatis Sunnah, JIBWIS Zaria chapter,
insisted that the Shiite group were funded by Iran.
0 on: "347 corpses buried after Shiites, soldiers clash –Kaduna SSG"