Nigeria's government will not release two prominent detainees despite
several court orders for their release and will not comment on the
situation of a third, wounded detainee, says President Muhammadu Buhari.
Buhari, a former military dictator who calls himself a
born-again democrat, did not discuss the propriety of defying court
orders when he spoke on national TV.
"If you see the atrocities
these people committed against this country!" Buhari said in
justification. "We can't allow them to jump bail."
A Federal High
Court set no bail conditions and ordered the unconditional release of
Biafra separatist leader Nnamdi Kanu on December 17.
Kanu was detained
on October 17 on charges recently escalated to terrorism and financing
terrorism.
His cause led to a civil war that killed 1 million people in
the 1960s. Former
national security adviser Sambo Dasuki was detained on November 4 after
intelligence agents surrounded his home for days to prevent him from
leaving the country after a court allowed him bail to seek medical care
abroad.
Raid unprovoked
Dasuki is accused,
among other things, of diverting $2.2bn meant to buy arms to fight the
Boko Haram Islamic uprising. Three courts have ordered his release on
bail. "What of the over two million people displaced, most of them
orphans whose fathers have been killed?" Buhari asked. "We cannot allow
that."
He refused to discuss the situation of Shi'ite leader
Ibraheem Zakzaky, who was detained on December 14 with four bullet
wounds in military raids that allegedly killed hundreds of his
followers. The army said the raids and bulldozing of Zakzaky's
home and Shi'ite spiritual centres was a response to an alleged Shi'ite
attempt to assassinate Nigeria's army chief.
Human Rights Watch has said the raid was unprovoked. Authorities have refused to allow anyone to see Zakzaky. Buhari said he would not comment until an investigation is complete.

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