Dokument #1284137
IRB – Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada (Autor)
No reports of a demonstration which took
place in Akure, Nigeria on 3 August 1993 could be found among the
sources consulted by the Research Directorate.
This Response was prepared after
researching publicly accessible information currently available to
the Research Directorate within time constraints. This Response is
not, and does not purport to be, conclusive as to the merit of any
particular claim to refugee status or asylum.
Sources Consulted
Africa Confidential [London].
August 1993. Vol. 34. Nos. 16-17.
Amnesty International. 1993. Amnesty
International Report 1993. New York: Amnesty International
USA.
Africa Research Bulletin: Political,
Social and Cultural Series. August - September 1993. Vol. 30.
Nos. 8-9.
Country Reports on Human Rights
Practices for 1993. 1994. United States Department of State.
Washington, DC: United States Government Printing Office.
Keesing's Record of World
Events [Cambridge]. September 1993. Vol. 39. No. 9.
Resource Centre Country File. Nigeria.
August 1993.
West Africa [London]. August
1993. Nos. 3958 - 3962.
Electronic sources: IRB Databases,
LEXIS/NEXIS, Internet, REFWORLD, World News Connection (WNC).
On 21 December 1997 the government arrested
top army officials including the Deputy Head of State, Lieutenant
General Oladipo Diya, Major General Tunji Olanrewaju, Major General
Abdulkarim Adisa, and eight others for allegedly plotting to
"violently" overthrow the government of General Sani Abacha
(AC 23 Jan. 1998, 1-2; ibid., 9 Jan. 1998, 8; AFP 14 Feb.
1998; NA Feb. 1998; WA 12 - 18 Jan. 1998). The
eight others included colonels Daniel Akintonde, Edwin Jando,
Peters Alinyode, Emmanuel Shode, Major Olusegun Fadipe, and Diya's
political advisor, professor Femi Odekunle (AC 9 Jan.
1998, 8).
The reasons for the alleged coup plot are
obsure. Although Diya was reportedly known for his "quiet"
opposition to Abacha's presidential aspirations, Olanrewaju and
Adisa were regarded "as ultra-loyalists who enthusiastically
endorsed an extension of Abacha's presidential tenure" (AC
9 Jan. 1998, 8). Only one week before his arrest, Diya had
allegedly narrowly missed becoming the victim of a bomb explosion
at Abuja Airport when he was on his way to represent President
Abacha at the funeral of the mother of Major-General Lawrence Onoja
in Benue state (ibid.). Diya's personal guards had also been
gradually reduced and replaced by Special Bodyguards (SB),
described as members of a "carefully selected" private army of
3,000 men trained in Libya and North Korea. The SB is reputed for
its "quiet efficiency and brutality;" they are personally loyal to
the president and take "orders from the presidential security
chief, Maj. Hamza al-Mustapha" (AC 23 Jan. 1998, 1).
A 12-person military board was established
and charged with questioning the suspects and making
recommendations to the government within four weeks as to which
suspects should be charged (AP 21 Jan. 1998). The board was headed
by Major-General Chris Abutu Garuba, a well respected officer, who
played "an assertive" role in the UN peacekeeping to Angola
(AC 23 Jan. 1998, 1; ibid., 9 Jan. 1998, 8). By
mid-January more than 60 people had been arrested (AP 21 Jan. 1998;
AC 23 Jan. 1998, ibid., 1 May 1998). AP speculated that
the arraigned suspects would be tried before a secret military
tribunal and that the death penalty was often imposed in such
circumstances ( 21 Jan. 1998).
Abacha's critics dismissed the coup plot as part of his
machinations to marginalize and crack-down on potential challengers
to his presidential ambitions (AC 23 Jan. 1998, 1, ibid.,
9 Jan. 1998; AP 21 Jan. 1998; NA Feb. 1998). The National
Democratic Coalition (NADECO), particularly, claimed that the coup
plot and subsequent arrests were a "stratagem" by the government
designed to divert "attention from the recent death of former
vice-president Musa Yar'Adua" (ibid.). The death of this eminent
northerner had embarrassed Abacha, angered the northerners, and
reportedly split the northern solidarity. There is speculation that
Abacha, himself a northerner, may have used the alleged coup plot
as a ploy to regain the support of northerners: ten of the original
twelve persons arrested were Yoruba (AC 9 Jan. 1998, 8).
The New African Magazine reports the insiders as saying
that "Abacha had to concoct a coup attempt led by 'Southern' Yoruba
officers to make it appear as if the South was out to get the north
... out of power" (Feb. 1998).
In order to counteract critics' claims that
the plot was a hoax, and to demonstrate the seriousness of the coup
plot allegation, the government played video and audio tapes,
allegedly made while suspected coup plotters were under
surveillance and also during interviews with them after their
arrests, to
carefully selected retired military
officers, traditional rulers, journalists and other prominent
figures ... the regime has also orchestrated mobs of demonstrators
to march singing Abacha's praises and heap abuse on the 'coup
plotters'. All this seems to be intended to portray Abacha as a
national saviour who must stand (probably) alone in August's
scheduled presidential election. But the evidence of plot disclosed
so far remains highly ambiguous ... [and] are among the most
controversial revelations (AC 23 Jan. 1998, 1).
The Nigerian Bar Association asked the
government to stop showing the tapes but the Minister of the
Federal Capital Territory, Lt. Gen. Jeremiah Useni, refused and
added that the tapes would eventually be aired on state television
(ibid.). Although the videos showed the suspects begging for mercy,
a February 1998 New African report claims that the videos
prejudiced "any prospect of a fair trial" because they were shown
before giving the accused an opportunity to defend themselves.
The trials began on the weekend of 14
February 1998 in the central city of Jos; and they were conducted
by "a seven-member panel headed by Major-General Victor Malu,
ex-commander of a West African peacekeeping force in Liberia and
Sierra Leone" (AFP 14 Feb. 1998; AI 20 Feb. 1998; IPS 19 Feb. 1998;
WA 16-22 Feb. 1998, 214 ). 26 civilians and soldiers were
accused of treason and faced the death penalty if found guilty (AFP
14 Feb. 1998; IPS19 Feb. 1998; WA 16-22 Feb. 1998, 214)
"No appeal will be allowed once the verdicts and sentences are
announced" and the only recourse left to the accused would be to
seek clemency from the Provisional Council, the regime's highest
court composed of army officers (AFP 14 Feb. 1998). The accused
were allocated defence lawyers provided by the state (ibid.;
WA 16 - 22 Feb. 1998, 214).
The trial drew condemnation from various
human rights groups, and Nigeria's renowned human rights activist
and lawyer, Femi Falana, who claimed that the fairness of the trial
had already been prejudiced by the showing of the video clips (IPS
19 Feb. 1998). Both Femi Falana and the Committee for the Defence
of Human Rights (CDHR) called for an open-court trial for the
accused suspects. Throughout the trial, Gen. Oladipo Diya
maintained that he had been framed (IPS 19 Feb. 1998; WA
16 - 22 Feb. 1998, 214).
At the end of the two-month trial, the
military tribunal gave the death sentence to six including Lt. Gen.
Oladipo Diya, Maj. Gen. Tajudeen Olanrewaju and Maj. Gen.
Adulkareem Adisa, and a civilian (The Washington Post 29
Apr. 1998, AC 1 May 1998, 3). Five of the 20 other accused
reportedly received prison sentences from 2 to 14 years while 15
others were set free (The Washington Post 29 Apr. 1998).
Africa Confidential reports that 14 were released and the
remaining 6 sentenced to prison for two years to life (1 May 1998,
3). The six persons sentenced to death, and most of the 20 others,
are Yorubas. The situation has reportedly to increased tension
within the Yoruba community (Washington Post 29 Apr. 1998;
AC 1 May 1998, 3). For additional information, please
consult the attached dccuments
This Response was prepared after
researching publicly accessible information currently available to
the Research Directorate within time constraints. This Response is
not, and does not purport to be, conclusive as to the merit of any
particular claim to refugee status or asylum.
References
Africa Confidential [London]. 1
May 1998. Vol. 39, No. 9. "Nigeria: Army Arguments: The Coup Plot
Trial Has Brought Some Military Divisions to the Surface."
_____. 23 January 1998. Vol. 39. No. 2.
"Plots, Lies and Videos."
_____. 9 January 1998. Vol. 39. No. 1.
"Nigeria: Rotters or Plotters?"
Agence France Presse (AFP). 14 February
1998. "Nigerian Coup Defendants Face Death Penalty." (NEXIS)
Amnesty International. 20 February 1998.
"Nigeria: Government Should Not Impose Death Sentences." (AI Index:
AFR 44/03/98).
Associated Press (AP). 21 January 1998.
"Nigeria Says 60 have Been Arrested Since Alleged Plot Thwarted."
(NEXIS)
Inter Press Service (IPS). 19 February
1998. Remi Oyo. "Nigeria-Politics: Alleged Coup Suspects on Trial."
(NEXIS)
New African. February 1998.
"Nigeria: Coups and Mayhem." (NEXIS)
The Washington Post. 29 April
1998. "Six Nigerians to Die for Alleged Coup Plot; Trial Said to
Widen Rifts Within Military." (NEXIS)
West Africa [London]. 16 - 22
February 1998. "Nigeria: Coup Trial Begins."
_____. 12 - 18 January 1998. "Nigeria:
Of Plots and the Day After."
Attachments
Africa Confidential [London]. 1
May 1998. Vol. 39, No. 9. "Nigeria: Army Arguments: The Coup Plot
Trial Has Brought Some Military Divisions to the Surface,"
pp. 3-4.
_____. 23 January 1998. Vol. 39. No. 2.
" Nigeria: Plots, Lies and Videos Tapes,"
pp. 1-2.
West Africa [London]. 16 - 22
February 1998. "Nigeria: Coup Trial Begins," p. 214.
_____. 12 - 18 January 1998. "Nigeria:
Of Plots and the Day After," pp. 20-21