The Nigerian military are unlawfully detaining boys and men at a rehabilitation centre for captured members of the radical Islamist terrorist group Boko Haram, according to a report released on Wednesday by Amnesty International.
Amnesty criticised Operation Safe Corridor, a programme that receives financial and technical support from the European Union, Britain, the United States and the U.N. International Organization for Migration, in the latest allegations of rights abuses since Boko Haram began its insurgency in Nigeria’s northeast
Although, Nigeria’s military did not immediately respond to requests for comment, it has, however, repeatedly denied any wrongdoing in response to such accusations during a decade of conflict.
“For almost everyone held (at Safe Corridor) to date, it amounts to unlawful detention,” Amnesty said of the programme which is based in Gombe state and aims at reintegrating captured terrorists into their communities.
“Many people there are not former fighters who committed crimes, much less were charged or convicted of any crime,” it said in a report that also listed alleged rights abuses by Boko Haram and criticised conditions at other military detention centres.
Amnesty said Safe Corridor “includes positive elements”, including adult education and psychosocial counselling described favourably by people formerly held there.
But at least seven men, including two who were boys when in Boko Haram territory, have died in military custody at Safe Corridor between July 2017 and July 2019, Amnesty said.
It said the rehabilitation, meant to last six months, can go on for over three times longer.
Amnesty said conditions at Safe Corridor were “significantly better than at other military-run detention facilities,” where the report said security forces beat and torture children and adults they suspect of being Boko Haram members.
Boko Haram continues to abduct children to become fighters and child brides, and that some are raped, the report said.