Nigeria Denies Human Rights Watch Child Detention Report
Nigeria has
denied allegations it has detained thousands of children for suspected links to
Islamist militant group Boko Haram.
A report
released by US-based group Human Rights Watch says children have been held for
years in "horrific conditions".
The group
has urged the country to release the children.
But the
military said the report was "false", saying they were treated as
"victims of war and not as suspects".
While the
army does detain women and children they say have been indoctrinated by Boko
Haram, the children are "adequately fed, profiled and de-radicalised
before their release".
Boko Haram
militants have been waging an insurgency in north-east Nigeria since 2009.
More than
30,000 people have died in the uprising, which has now crossed borders into
Cameroon, Chad and Niger.
Human Rights
Watch (HRW) released their report on Tuesday. It claims the military has been
arresting and detaining children as young as five "with little or no
evidence". Most are then reportedly transferred to Giwa military barracks
in the town of Maiduguri.
Children
interviewed by HRW who spent time in the camp described "squalid, severely
overcrowded conditions". None of those 32 children said they had been
taken before a court or a judge, and none knew what they had been charged with.
None, moreover, said they had had contact with family outside their detention
centre.
Detainees
were threatened or even beaten by soldiers, some children said, while soldiers
reportedly made advances to female soldiers or took them out of their cells for
extended periods. One girl in the report says females in her cell became
pregnant during their imprisonment.
HRW says it
does not know the total number currently in detention. According to UN figures
cited in the report, the military took more than 3,600 children between January
2013 and March 2019.
The report
praises the release of at least 2,200 children so far, and acknowledges the
"important steps" the government has taken to protect children's
rights.
But HRW
calls on the authorities to immediately release all the detained minors and to
implement a UN protocol ensuring the rapid handover of detained children to
protection services, so they can return to their families.
Nigeria's
Defence Headquarters insisted that "no children are kept and tortured in
any detention facility".
"The
children caught in the act of terrorism are moved to safe facilities... where
they are de-radicalised, rehabilitated and reintegrated into the society,"
a statement said.
It described
the Nigerian military as "professional", insisted the arrests were
not arbitrary but "intelligence driven", and said the military is
engaged in a war in the north-east with terrorists "globally recognised
for the most inhuman and callous attacks on humanity".
Such
"poorly researched and shallow reports" could undermine that fight,
the statement added.
The militant
group promotes a version of Islam which bans Muslims from taking part in any
political or social activity associated with Western society.
Voting, a
secular education and even shirts and trousers are deemed "haram", or
forbidden.
Boko Haram's
official name is Jama'atu Ahlis Sunna Lidda'awati wal-Jihad, which in Arabic
means "People Committed to the Propagation of the Prophet's Teachings and
Jihad".
Founded in
2002, it launched its uprising against the Nigerian government in 2009
following the death of their leader in captivity. Boko Haram has since
conducted a wave of abductions, assassinations and bombings.
The US
declared it a terror organisation in 2013, a year before it proclaimed a
caliphate in areas it controlled. Nigeria has since recaptured most of that
territory.
Boko Haram
was ranked the world's deadliest terror group in 2015.
FROM bbc.com/news/world-africa
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