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| Victims of Extra-Judicial Killing In Potiskum | 
Sixteen men who were arrested by Nigerian soldiers in Potiskum, Yobe 
state in the country’s northeast on Wednesday  were found dead just 
hours later with bullet wounds.
According to community leaders who are demanding an inquiry, Nigerian
 soldiers  rounded up 17 people, including an imam, from the Dogo Tebo 
area of Potiskum in Yobe state as they left a mosque after morning 
prayers on Wednesday.
Residents and hospital staff said the bodies of all but the imam were
 later found in the morgue at the Potiskum General Hospital.
“All the bodies have gunshot wounds on them,” said a nurse, who asked
 not to be identified because he was not authorised to speak to the 
media.
The bodies had been brought in by soldiers and were formally 
identified by community leaders and residents from Dogo Tegbo, he told 
AFP.
One resident, Tukur Danu, said the cleric was not among the dead and added: “We are worried about what they could do to him.”
Potiskum is the commercial hub of Yobe state, which with neighbouring
 Borno and Adamawa state has been under emergency rule since May last 
year because of the Boko Haram insurgency.
On Monday, at least 15 people were killed and some 50 others were 
injured in a suicide bombing targeting a major Shia Muslim festival in 
Potiskum.
The head of the Shia community in the city, Mustapha Lawan Nasidi, 
said at the time that several other people died when troops who deployed
 to the scene opened fire.
Community leaders believed the 16 men were picked up and killed 
because all of them were from the Kanuri ethnic group that forms the 
bulk of Boko Haram’s membership.
“We demand a probe into this unjustifiable murder,” said one 
community leader in Dogo Tebo, who asked not to be identified for his 
personal safety.
“We believe they were killed on suspicion of being Boko Haram because they were Kanuris.”
All those seized were related either by blood or marriage, according to another leader.
“The government should look into this cold-blooded murder and ensure 
justice is done because being a soldier is not a licence to kill at will
 on mere suspicion,” he added.
“Our fear is we don’t know what they will do next,” he said, adding 
that three more people were arrested late on Wednesday in the same area.
Dogo Tebo resident Maigana Kalli said that ordinarily, anyone 
arrested on suspicion of belonging to Boko Haram is taken to the 
regional army base in the state capital, Damaturu.
AFP contacted the army in Damaturu and the capital Abuja by phone and by text message but there was no immediate response.
Human rights groups in Nigeria and abroad have previously accused 
Nigeria’s military of carrying out extra-judicial killings in the 
five-year fight against Boko Haram.
Amnesty International said in March that there was “credible 
evidence” that more than 600 people were summarily executed in the Borno
 state capital, Maiduguri, after a Boko Haram jail break.
Source:
TheNews 
 
 
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