Dokument #1306778
IRB – Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada (Autor)
Bakassi Boys
The Bakassi Boys were created in 1998 by
traders in the Nigerian city of Aba (Journal of Democracy and
Development 2002, 1) who wanted to protect themselves from
armed robbers (SAS May 2005, 18; WAR 2002, 5) and
"hoodlums" (ibid.). Having had success in reducing crime in Aba,
the Bakassi Boys became "in high demand" (Journal of Democracy
and Development 2002, 4), and their activities spread to other
cities in eastern Nigeria (ibid., 4; HRW and CLEEN May 2002,
9).
According to 2004 and 2005 reports, the vigilante group is active in the southeastern states of Imo, Abia, and Anambra (SAS May 2005, 333; International Alert Mar. 2004, 39; Nigeriaworld 14 Jan. 2005). The Bakassi Boys are officially called the Imo Vigilante Services (IVS), the Abia Vigilante Services (AVS), and the Anambra Vigilante Services (AVS) (HRW and CLEEN May 2002, 8; International Alert Mar. 2004, 39; AI 19 Nov. 2002) in the three states in which they are most active.
Leadership
The Bakassi Boys are described by one
source as a "highly structured organisation with a defined chain of
command" (COAV 30 May 2005, 249). The leader of the vigilante group
is the national chairman (Journal of Democracy and
Development 2002, 5), who in 2002 was also the state chairman
for Abia State. State chapters are autonomous, yet "cooperate with
one another ... and make routine consultations with the national
headquarters" (ibid.). State chairmen coordinate branch activities;
branches are led by branch chairmen (ibid.).
According to a 2005 Children in Organized Armed Violence (COAV) report,
[a]lthough the Chairman may be considered as being in control of every major operation, this can vary in certain situations as some operations may be carried out under the command of youth members (COAV 30 May 2005, 255)
A 2005 news release identified "Kingsley Chimezie" as the leader of the Bakassi Boys (This Day 30 Aug. 2005). In November 2005, Vanguard reported the murder of a "Kingsley Chimeye," along with nineteen other persons, by alleged members of the Bakassi Boys (18 Nov. 2005).
The executive director of the CLEEN Foundation, a Lagos-based (CLEEN n.d.b) non-governmental organization (ibid. n.d.a) that "promote[s] respect for human rights and cooperation between civil society and law enforcement agencies throughout Nigeria" (ibid. n.d.c), was unable to confirm the identity of the leaders of the Bakassi Boys (CLEEN 9 Feb. 2006). In his February 2006 correspondence to the Research Directorate he stated that
[t]he Bakassi Boys were disbanded ... in 2002 though their activities did not completely stop. What they rather did was to go underground with the identities of their leaders difficult to know. So, I am not in a position to say or confirm categorically who are currently in charge of the body at the national, state or local levels (ibid.).
No further information on the leadership of the Bakassi Boys could be found among the sources consulted by the Research Directorate.
Membership and Recruitment
Members of the Bakassi Boys are primarily
of Igbo ethnicity (COAV 30 May 2005, 248). They are generally
"young, able-bodied men in their twenties or thirties" (HRW and
CLEEN May 2002, 11), although there are reportedly some members
under the age of eighteen (COAV May 2005, 251). Members are usually
drawn from traders of various commercial markets; commercial
markets are divided into zones "from which six vigilantes are
selected" (ibid., 249). New members receive two months of training
on the rules of the Bakassi Boys prior to participating in the
group's operations (ibid., 249).
According to research conducted by COAV in 2005, members of the Bakassi Boys join the organization voluntarily (30 May 2005, 254). Formal recruitment generally takes place at the age of seventeen, although many members are involved as informants at around the age of sixteen (ibid., 254).
The Bakassi Boys initially had about 500 members (WAR 2002, 5), but have since grown to approximately 3,500 members (COAV 30 May 2005, 249).
According to Amnesty International, members of the local community believe that members of the Bakassi Boys have "magic" powers (19 Nov. 2002; BBC 20 May 2002) and carry charms that make them "invincible" (Journal of Democracy and Development 2002, 3). Members of the group use "magic" to determine the guilt of alleged criminals (HRW and CLEEN May 2002, 24). The "most infamous" of their techniques involves a machete "imbued with powerful magic charms" (BBC 20 May 2002): the machete is placed on the suspected criminal's body and turns red if the person is guilty (ibid.; AI 19 Nov. 2002, Sec. 3). The Bakassi Boys are known to mutilate (HRW and CLEEN May 2002, 24), dismember (ibid. 24; This Day 3 Feb. 2006) or decapitate (HRW and CLEEN May 2002, 24), and burn their victims (ibid., 24; BBC 20 May 2002; This Day 3 Feb. 2006).
Activities
There have been reports of the Bakassi Boys
carrying out extra-judicial killings (HRW and CLEEN May 2002, 16;
Nigeriaworld 14 Jan. 2005; Journal of Democracy and
Development 2002, 3), arbitrary arrests (HRW and CLEEN May
2002, 16; Nigeriaworld 14 Jan. 2005), and torture of suspected
criminals (HRW and CLEEN May 2002, 16). Country Reports on
Human Rights Practices for 2004 notes that the Bakassi Boys
"sometimes killed suspected criminals rather than turn[ing] them
over to police" (28 Feb. 2005, Sec. 1.a).
In August 2005, the Bakassi Boys allegedly "rounded up" (Global Insight Daily Analysis 19 Aug. 2005) thirty-seven suspected criminals in the city of Aba, Abia State (ibid.; AFP 16 Aug. 2005) and detained them in an "illegal and poorly ventilated cell" (ibid.). Twenty-seven of the detainees reportedly died of suffocation (This Day 30 Aug. 2005; AFP 16 Aug. 2005).
In November 2005, the Bakassi Boys were suspected in the "extra-judicial murder" of twenty people in Aba, Abia State (Vanguard 18 Nov. 2005). The victims were allegedly "butchered to death" by members of the vigilante group (ibid.).
In addition to such vigilante activities as described above, the Bakassi Boys have also reportedly been used by politicians to "target perceived political opponents" (HRW and CLEEN May 2002, 35). The vigilante group has also become involved in the settlement of disputes in civil matters (Journal of Democracy and Development 2002, 9-10; HRW and CLEEN May 2002, 34) as a result of the public's general lack of trust in the court system and law enforcement agents in Nigeria (Journal of Democracy and Development 2002, 9-10). However, members of the general public have "expressed their disappointment over the outcome of disputes, [and] ... have actually accused the Bakassi Boys of killing innocent citizens" (ibid. 10).
Funding for the vigilante group's activities was initially provided by the traders' associations in the states in which the group operates (HRW and CLEEN May 2002, 11; COAV 30 May 2005, 250); however, state governments have "taken over this role" (HRW and CLEEN May 2002, 11). Traders, businesses, local governments and other organizations also continue to contribute towards the funding of the Bakassi Boys, although not always willingly (ibid.; SAS May 2005, 333).
It has been suggested that, while the vigilante group may have the support of some community members, its "arbitrary" and "brutal" methods (HRW and CLEEN May 2002, 15) have resulted in community members' having feelings towards the group that are "characterized by fear and helplessness" (COAV 30 May 2005, 250; HRW and CLEEN May 2002, 15). According to a Human Rights Watch and CLEEN report, the
Bakassi Boys have dealt ruthlessly with individuals who have dared to criticize or denounce their methods, or refused to make financial contributions to them (May 2002, 33).
Country Reports 2004 reported that "[a]lthough some killings continued, the influence of the Bakassi Boys and other vigilante groups in the Southeast diminished" during 2004 (28 Feb. 2005, Sec. 1.a).
Treatment by the Authorities
In 2002, the Bakassi Boys were allegedly
disbanded (CDCMS 2003, 43) following a federal government move to
prohibit vigilante groups (Global Insight Daily Analysis 19 Aug.
2005; AFP 16 Aug. 2005; This Day 2 Feb. 2006). However,
state governments continued to "covertly condone" their existence,
allowing the Bakassi Boys to carry on their operations (Global
Insight Daily Analysis 19 Aug. 2005). In Imo, Abia, and Anambra,
the state government has provided the Bakassi Boys with salaries as
well as offices, uniforms and vehicles, bearing the names of the
vigilante groups (HRW and CLEEN May 2002, 12). In January 2006, the
governor of Abia State passed into law a bill to legally recognize
the operations of the Bakassi Boys, despite the earlier federal
legislation prohibiting such vigilante groups (Vanguard 31
Jan. 2006; This Day 2 Feb. 2006).
The relationship between the Bakassi Boys and the Nigerian Police Force (NPF) has been described as "tense" (HRW and CLEEN May 2002, 36), given the "[c]onflicts of interest" (ibid., 37) and "competition" between the two groups (ibid., 36).
According to a 2002 HRW and CLEEN report, the Nigerian police have also been "almost powerless in curbing the excesses of the Bakassi Boys, [and] even less [effective] in re-asserting their authority over them" (ibid. 38). Nonetheless, there were reports in 2005 and 2006 of members of the Bakassi Boys being arrested (AFP 16 Aug. 2005; Vanguard 3 Dec. 2005) and tried (ibid.; This Day 3 Feb. 2006) for vigilante activities.
In August 2005, the Nigerian police arrested and "put on show" seventeen alleged members of the Bakassi Boys for suspected "vigilante involvement" in the deaths of twenty-seven persons in Abia State earlier in the month (AFP 16 Aug. 2005).
In December 2005, fourteen suspected members of the Bakassi Boys were brought before a federal high court on charges of "unlawful killing" and "illegal possession of firearms" (Vanguard 3 Dec. 2005). The men allegedly killed a trader in Abia State in November 2005 (ibid.).
In February 2006, four members of the Bakassi Boys were sentenced to death by hanging by the Umuahia High Court for the 1999 murder of two persons suspected of being armed robbers (This Day 3 Feb. 2006). The two victims, including a police officer, were dismembered and burnt (ibid.).
According to a November 2005 Vanguard news release, a panel of the Supreme Court was created by the Nigerian federal government in 2005 to investigate the extra-judicial murders of twenty persons in Abia State by suspected members of the Bakassi Boys (18 Nov. 2005). The Attorney-General of the Federation, on behalf of the Federal Government of Nigeria,
disclosed that the Federal Government would henceforth deal ruthlessly with all ethnic militia and lawbreakers, engaging in multifarious human rights abuses in the country, in the name of vigilante groups (Vanguard 18 Nov. 2005).
No further information on the treatment of members of the Bakassi Boys by the Nigerian authorities 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 for refugee protection. Please find below the list of additional sources consulted in researching this Information Request.
References
Agence France-Presse (AFP). 16 August
2005. "Nigerian Police Parade Suspects after 27 Die in Illegal
Custody." (Factiva)
Amnesty International (AI). 19 November
2002. "Nigeria: Vigilante Violence in the South And South-East."
(AFR 44/014/2002) http://web.amnesty.org/library/pdf/AFR440142002ENGLISH/$File/AFR4401402.pdf
[Accessed 27 Jan. 2006]
British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC).
20 May 2002. Dan Isaacs. "Gang Rule in Nigeria." http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/africa/1998624.stm
[Accessed 3 Feb. 2006)
Centre for Development and Conflict
Management Studies (CDCMS). 2003. Ethnic Militias and the
Future of Democracy in Nigeria. Edited by Amadu Sesay et al.
Ile-Ife, Nigeria: Obafemi Awolowo University Press. Heinrich
Böll Foundation Website. http://www.boellnigeria.org/documents/Ethnic%20Militias.pdf
[Accessed 30 Jan. 2006]
Children and Youth in Organized Armed
Violence (COAV). 30 May 2005. Mohammed Ibrahim, Centre for
Democracy and Development. "An Empirical Survey of Children and
Youth in Organised Armed Violence in Nigeria: Egbesu Boys, OPC and
Bakassi Boys as a Case Study." Neither War nor Peace:
International Comparisons of Children and Youth in Organised Armed
Violence. http://www.coav.org.br/publique/medai/05%20luke.pdf
[Accessed 30 Jan. 2006]
CLEEN Foundation. 9 February 2006.
Correspondence from the Executive Director.
_____. N.d.a. "About CLEEN Foundation."
http://www.cleen.org/aboutus.html
[Accessed 9 Feb. 2006]
_____. N.d.b. "Contact Address." http://www.cleen.org/contact.html
[Accessed 9 Feb. 2006]
_____. N.d.c. "Our Mission." http://www.cleen.org/mission.html
[Accessed 9 Feb. 2006]
Country Reports on Human Rights
Practices for 2004. 28 February 2005. "Nigeria." United States
Department of State. Washington, DC. http://www.state.gov/g/drl/rls/hrrpt/2004/41620.htm
[Accessed 3 Feb. 2006]
Global Insight Daily Analysis. 19 August
2005. Olly Owen. "Mass Deaths in Custody of Prisoners Held by
Illegal Nigerian Militia." (Factiva)
Human Rights Watch (HRW) and CLEEN. May
2002. Vol. 14, No. 5. "Nigeria. The Bakassi Boys: The
Legitimization of Murder and Torture." http://hrwatch.org/reports/2002/nigeria2/nigeria0502.pdf
[Accessed 6 Feb. 2006]
International Alert. March 2004. West
Africa Series No. 2. Christiane Agboton-Johnson, Adedeji Ebo, and
Laura Mazal. "Small Arms Control in Ghana, Nigeria and Senegal." http://www.malao.org/documents/pdf/rapport/MISAC_west_africa_II.pdf
[Accessed 6 Feb. 2006]
Journal of Democracy and
Development: A Journal of West African Affairs. 2002. Vol. 3,
No.1. Ukoha Ukiwo. "Dues [sic] ex machina or
Frankenstein Monster? The Changing Roles of Bakassi Boys in Eastern
Nigeria."
Nigeriaworld. 14 January 2005. Roy
Chikwem. "Peace Falls Apart: The Emergence of Self Determination
Groups in Nigeria." http://nigeriaworld.com/articles/2005/jan/142.html
[Accessed 31 Jan. 2006]
Small Arms Survey (SAS). May 2005.
Armed and Aimless: Armed Groups, Guns, and Human Security in
the ECOWAS Region. Edited by Nicolas Florquin and Eric G.
Berman. Geneva, Switzerland: Atar. http://www.smallarmssurvey.org/books.htm
[Accessed 6 Feb. 2006]
This Day [Lagos]. 3 February
2006. "4 Bakassi Boys to Die for Murder." http://allafrica.com/stories/200602030425.html
[Accessed 3 Feb. 2006]
_____. 2 February 2006. Donald Andoor.
"FG Urged to Declare Abia Disaster State." http://allafrica.com/stories/200602020108.html
[Accessed 3 Feb. 2006]
_____. 30 August 2005.
"Bakassi: Self-Help Policing." (Factiva)
Vanguard [Lagos]. 31 January
2006. Andrew Oota. "Rep Calls for State of Emergency in Abia."
(Factiva)
_____. 3 December 2005. Ise-Oluwa Ige.
"FG Arraigns 14 Bakassi Boys for Murder." (Factiva)
_____. 18 November 2005. Ise-Oluwa Ige.
"AAGM: Bakassi Killings: Supreme Court Intervenes in Abia, FG
Feud." (Factiva)
West Africa Review (WAR). 2002.
Vol. 3, No. 1. Tunde Babawale. "The Rise of Ethnic Militias,
De-Legitimisation of the State, and the Threat to Nigerian
Federalism." http://www.westafricareview.com/vol3.1/babawale.pdf
[Accessed 30 Jan. 2006]
Additional Sources Consulted
Oral Sources: The Centre for
Democracy and Development (CDD) did not provide information within
the time constraints of this Response. A professor from the
Department of International Affairs, Obafemi Awolowo University in
Ile-Ife, Nigeria provided the Research Directorate with published
documents.
Internet sites, including:
ECOI.net, Freedom House, International Committee of the Red Cross
(ICRC), United Kingdom Home Office Country Report, United Nations
High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), United Nations - Integrated
Regional Information Network (IRIN), United Nations Office of the
High Commissioner of Human Rights (UNHCHR), U.S. Committee for
Refugees and Immigrants (USCRI).
Bakassi Boys; leadership, membership, activities, and treatment by authorities (January 2005 - February 2006) [NGA101051.E] (Anfragebeantwortung, Französisch)