Soldiers on Friday attacked members of Indigenous People Of Biafra (IPOB) converged in Port Harcourt, Rivers to drum support for Donald Trump’s inauguration.
The group aitating for the creation of a separate country for the people of the Southeast and some states in South south had shut down all commercial activities and creating a gridlock that grounded the state capital for many road users.
Sahara Reporters reports that the procession which went through major streets of Port Harcourt, turned bloody when some Nigerian troops attempted to repel the rally at Garrison, St. John, and artillery axis of Port Harcourt beating and flogging protesters who disobeyed the order that asked them not to pass through the barricaded roads near a military facility.
The newspaper cites Anuken Anthony, a member of IPOB, as narrating how some of their members were arrested during the peaceful procession.
Anthony was quoted as saying, “For now, over 70 supporters of MASSOB and IPOB have been arrested, and about 15 of them are in the extreme pain due to bullet wounds. Our members have taken some of them to the hospital; we are praying that nothing should happen to any of them”.
“I wonder where on earth the soldiers brutalize innocent peaceful protesters; military intimidation and harassment can not deter our support for Donald Trump. We were not violent during today’s rally we are only showing solidarity to an American President who we take as one of our own.”
But Rivers State Police, Command, spokesman, Nnamdi Omoni dismissed the claims saying that details of arrests are still sketchy. “We ensure the protest was peaceful even though they didn’t seek permission nobody was injured as alluded,” he said
Meanwhile, one of the protesters, Mr. Onyema Njoku said troops broke one of his legs with a gun, adding that he will take a legal action against the desperation and maltreatment by the military.
Njoku said: “IPOB followed due process to ensure that this rally takes place today. Some people protested for President Muhammadu Buhari in Abuja yet nobody shoots them. Today, we are carrying out a peaceful rally and the police, and the military are shooting at us, it is bad.
“One of the soldiers caught me while I was trying to run away, he descended on me until he broke my leg, as I’m sitting down here I cannot walk. I’m waiting for my friends to take me to the hospital, I will get better, I know it is part of the sacrifice for freedom.”
Members of the IPOB who participated in the solidarity rally came from several Southeastern states in Nigeria.