
A human rights lawyer says 54 soldiers have been sentenced to death because they embarrassed Nigeria's military by demanding weapons to fight Islamic extremists, and says they were justified in not going on what would have been a suicidal mission.
Defense
attorney Femi Falana said Thursday he will take all legal measures to prevent
authorities from carrying out a "genocidal verdict" of death by
firing squad delivered Wednesday night by a court-martial.
A
statement from Falana describes evidence given during the court-martial that is
an indictment of Nigeria's military establishment and, the lawyer said, the
reason journalists were barred from the trial.
All
the soldiers convicted are aged between 21 and 25 and most joined the army
around 2012, he said.
With
little or no training, they were deployed against Nigeria's home-grown Islamic
extremist group, Boko Haram. The lawyer charged that money for salaries and to
purchase arms is often diverted by corrupt officers.
"Instead
of bringing such unpatriotic officers to book, the military authorities have
engaged in the diversionary tactics of wasting the lives of innocent soldiers
by sentencing them to death without any legal justification," Falana
charged.
He
said Boko Haram on July 9 attacked the soldiers when the battalion of 750
troops was down to just 174. The extremists killed 26 soldiers including three
officers and seriously injured 82. The soldiers demanded to be properly armed
and were assured this would happen, he said.
Instead,
the battalion was ordered Aug. 4 to recapture three towns controlled by Boko
Haram. The few soldiers who deployed were ambushed and kidnapped. When some
weapons were made available Aug. 8, another group of soldiers recaptured the
towns and liberated their colleagues, Falana said.
"They
were commended for their bravery and sacrifice. But for some inexplicable
reasons, the army authorities ordered that the soldiers be charged with mutiny
for allegedly exposing the armed forces to embarrassment by asking for
weapons!" his statement said.
Falana
told The Associated Press another 43 soldiers including a few officers remain
on trial for mutiny and cowardice for refusing to fight the extremists.
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