Document #1193040
IRB – Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada (Author)
According to an Amnesty International
report entitled Nigeria: A Travesty of Justice: Secret Treason
Trials and Other Concerns, unidentified friends and relatives
of the persons involved in the above-mentioned coup attempt, as
well as journalists and human rights activists who exposed "the
injustices" of the arrests and trials of the alleged coup plotters,
were arrested and "secretly convicted by the Special Military
Tribunal on charges of concealment treason or being accessories to
treason, and sentenced to long prisons terms as prisoners of
conscience" (26 Oct. 1995, 2).
According to Human Rights
Watch/Africa, John Paul Mokuolu, a son of an unidentified
brother of General Obasanjo, was detained for 31 days in April and
May 1996 and subsequently released under diplomatic pressure from
the British government (Sept. 1996, 23).
This Response was prepared after
researching publicly accessible information currently available to
the DIRB 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. Please find below the list of
additional sources consulted in researching this Information
Request.
References
Amnesty International. 26 October 1995.
Nigeria: A Travesty of Justice: Secret Treason Trials and Other
Concerns. (AI Index: AFR 44/23/95). London: Amnesty
International.
Human Rights Watch (HRW)/Africa.
September 1996. Vol. 8, No. 3. Nigeria: "Permanent Transition":
Current Violations of Human Rights in Nigeria. New York: Human
Rights Watch/Africa.
Attachments
Amnesty International. 26 October 1995.
Nigeria: A Travesty of Justice: Secret Treason Trials and Other
Concerns. (AI Index: AFR 44/23/95). London: Amnesty
International, pp. 1-2.
Human Rights Watch (HRW). December 1995.
Human Rights Watch World Report 1996. New York: Human
Rights Watch, pp. 34-35.
Human Rights Watch (HRW)/Africa.
September 1996. Vol. 8, No. 3. Nigeria: "Permanent Transition":
Current Violations of Human Rights in Nigeria. New York: Human
Rights Watch/Africa, p. 23.
The Independent [London]. 27
June 1995. "Britain Protests to Nigeria over Secret Trial."
(NEXIS)
Additional Sources Consulted
Africa Confidential [London].
1995-96.
Africa Research Bulletin
[Oxford]. 1995-96.
Amnesty International country file
(Nigeria). 1995-96.
Keesing's Record of World
Events [Cambridge]. 1995-96.
News from Africa Watch.
1995-96.
On-line search of news articles.