IMN followers have called for the release of their leader Sheikh Ibraheem Zakzaky. AFP |
Nine people were killed
in clashes between Shi'ite Muslims and police during a religious procession in
the northern Nigerian city of Kano on Monday, the state police commissioner
said.
Reuters
report continues:
The
clashes occurred on the outskirts of Kano, a city in a state of the same name,
as members of the country's largest Shi'ite group, the Islamic Movement in
Nigeria (IMN), conducted an annual procession to Zaria in neighbouring Kaduna
state.
It
was the latest in a series of incidents involving the sect. A judicial inquiry
in August reported that 347 IMN members were killed and buried in mass graves
after clashes with the army in December 2015, and two sect members were killed
in processions in Kaduna state last month.
Kano
state Police Commissioner Rabiu Yusuf told reporters nine people died in
Monday's violence - eight IMN members and a policeman. He said several people
were injured, including four police officers.
"At
first we used tear gas on them. They attacked one of our personnel, who
sustained a fatal injury," he said.
Yusuf
said IMN members used the dead policeman's weapon to fire at officers and they
had "no option" but to use live ammunition in response.
A
spokesman for the IMN, whose 1980s founders were inspired by the Islamic
Revolution in Shi'ite Iran, said police had blocked the path of its members
before unleashing tear gas and live ammunition on them. He said the IMN was a
peaceful group.
"Throughout
the nearly four decades of the existence of the IMN, it has never stockpiled,
carried or used weapons," said spokesman Ibrahim Musa.
Last
month the Kaduna state government declared IMN as an "unlawful
society" on the grounds that its processions were a danger to peace, and
said anyone convicted of being a member of the sect could be imprisoned for up
to seven years.
Human
Rights Watch estimates that IMN has around 3 million members. The sect's
leader, Sheikh Ibrahim Zakzaky, has been held without charge since December
following the clashes with the army in Zaria.
Security
analysts have drawn some parallels between the IMN and Boko Haram, the Sunni
Muslim jihadist group whose insurgency began in 2009 after security forces
killed hundreds of its members and its leader Mohammed Yusuf died in custody.
Nigeria, which has 180 million people and is Africa's most populous nation, combines a predominantly Christian south and mainly Sunni Muslim north. Around 250 ethnic groups have co-existed mostly peacefully in the country.
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