At least three people were killed when police opened fire on
supporters of a pro-Iranian Shiite Muslim group during an annual
religious procession in Kano State, locals said on Monday.
Awwalu Ismail, a trader in the Dengi roundabout area of
Kano, said the shooting happened on Sunday, as members of the Islamic
Movement of Nigeria marked Ashura.
Ashura commemorates the death of Hussein, the grandson of the Prophet Mohammed.
IMN members from across the mainly Sunni Muslim north
typically converge on Kano to walk to Zaria in neighbouring Kaduna
state, where their leader Sheikh Ibrahim Zakzaky has his headquarters.
“When the procession by the IMN adherents moved towards
Zaria Road, the police began firing tear gas followed by live bullets,”
Ismail told AFP.
“Many people were hit and at least three people were believed to have been killed.”
Abdurrahman Usman, a civil engineering student at Bayero
University Kano, said: “I was shown the picture of one of the victims
whom I recognised as my course mate, Husaina.
“Her father is a lecturer at the university.”
Kano police strongly denied using live bullets and killing any protesters.
IMN leader Zakzaky has been at loggerheads with Nigeria’s
secular authorities over the years because of his call for an
Iranian-style Islamic revolution.
He has been in custody since troops clashed with his
followers in Zaria in December 2015. Troops allegedly killed more than
300 IMN supporters and buried them in mass graves to hide their crimes,
rights groups say.
IMN spokesman Yosuf Abdullahi also said three people — “a
brother and two sisters” — were killed in Sunday’s procession, “by those
constitutionally mandated to protect them”, calling it an “unprovoked
attack”.
He also identified Husaina as one of the victims, alongside a
father of one and a mother of four children, and said there were a
“high number” of injured and arrested, without specifying numbers.
– Police denial –
Kano police said the IMN statement was “baseless, mischievous and aimed
at diverting the attention of the populace (to) gain cheap sympathy”.
Spokesman Magaji Musa Majia said the IMN had been told not
to hold the march but they ignored the warning. He accused members of
the group of “molesting motorists and pelting innocent members of the
public with stones”.
“The command dispersed them by using minimum force, no live
ammunition was used. Ten members of the group comprising five male and
five female suspects were so far arrested,” he added.
Weapons allegedly confiscated included eight catapults, stones, and one poison arrow.
“Any attempt by the IMN (Shiites) to make Kano State hub of
their illegal activities will be vehemently resisted by the Kano State
Police Command,” he said.
The Ashura procession in Kano has been a regular flashpoint
before. Last year the IMN claimed police had opened fire on thousands of
people without provocation, killing at least 30, including a baby.
Abdullahi said this year’s shooting was “yet another
atrocity against peaceful and defenceless citizens who used their
fundamental freedom of religion and association violating no law”.
Kaduna state governor Nasir El-Rufai has banned the IMN as
an “unlawful society” and a security threat. Kano police have followed
suit, prohibiting street processions before Ashura.
AFP
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