Shia movement withdraws from Zaria massacre probe
An umbrella organization representing Shia Muslims in Nigeria has decided not to appear before a tribunal looking into the army's December massacre in Zaria.
According to Press TV, The decision, announced during a Tuesday press conference by the Islamic Movement of Nigeria (IMN), came after Nigerian authorities did not allow IMN's legal team to meet with detained leader Sheikh Ibrahim al-Zakzaky.
The legal team said it was "unethical and unprofessional" to represent a client whom it has not seen.
The Nigerian army attacked Shia Muslims attending a religious ceremony in Zaria on December 12, touching off several days of a crackdown in which hundreds of people were killed.
The army accused participants in the ceremony of blocking the convoy of its chief of staff and attempting to assassinate him, a charge which they have categorically denied.
In a Tuesday interview with PressTV, Zakzaky’s daughter, Suhaila, gave an eyewitness account of the army’s attack on their house.
“Unexpectedly, we just heard gunshots in the area of the house, and that went on for the whole night, for half the next day. As it was going on, people were being killed in the morning … They (troops) killed as many people they found in our house, probably everyone,” she said.
She made the remarks as a large number of people took the streets in the Nigerian state of Kaduna to demand the release of Sheikh Zakzaky.
SS