According to Amnesty International: "On the night of 29 May, soldiers and police stormed the compound of St Edmunds Catholic church in the Nkpor area of Onithsa, where hundreds of people who had come from neighbouring states were staying for the night ahead of the Remembrance rally. A 32-year-old hair-dresser who was in the church compound told Amnesty International: “At about midnight we heard someone banging the door. We refused to open the door but they [the soldiers and police] forced the door open and started throwing tear gas. They also started shooting inside the compound. People were running to escape. I saw one guy shot in the stomach. He fell down but the tear gas could not allow people to help him.” Amnesty International interviewed seven people who stayed in the church that night. They all said that at least one person died and four were injured during this incident. One of the injured men later died of his injuries in hospital. The soldiers and police left without making any arrests. Witnesses told Amnesty International that later that night the soldiers and police also shot at people who were spending the night at Nkpor Motor Park. One eyewitness told Amnesty International: “In the night, soldiers came to the park and started shooting. We all ran away. Nobody was killed but six people sustained injuries." [+]
Publication Date | Publisher | Publication Title | Access Date | Archive Link |
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24 November 2016 | Amnesty International | Nigeria: 'Bullets Were Flying Everywhere' - Deadly Repression of Pro-Biafra Activists | 27 September 2018 |