Earlier report on Nigeria soldiers involved in genocide can be found here. The Defence Headquarters has denied any involvement in alleged mass murder of civilians in Borno state.
A statement by the Director Defence Information, Major General Chris Olukolade dissociated the military from involvement in the genocide depicted in graphic pictures on the front page of a Nigerian daily newspaper and on blogs.
According to him, “the Defence Headquarters has found the latest allegation of genocide against the Nigerian military by a Kaduna based cleric as not only diversionary but unfortunate.”
“The DHQ wishes to unequivocally dissociate the Nigerian military from any involvement in the alleged genocide as depicted in the graphic pictures which appeared in the front page of Blueprint newspapers of 22 May 2014 edition entitled, ‘Alleged Killing field in Borno’,” General Olukolade stated.
“The individual holding a stick which the paper mischievously described as “a soldier stand(ing) guard…” is certainly not a Nigerian soldier neither is any of those captured in the pictures,” the DHQ statement said.
Olukolade added that while the military will continue to respect freedom of expression of Nigerians, it will not submit to desperate blackmail and propaganda aimed at diverting attention and pitching public opinion against the armed forces.
“Although the real motive of the report and presentation with the apparent intention to impute military complicity in the event depicted in the pictures is yet to unfold, the DHQ sees this allegation as the manifestation of yet another grand design to tarnish and denigrate the image of Nigerian Armed Forces,” he said.
He further emphasized that at no time or event in the course of the counter-insurgency operation have the troops embarked on the extra-judicial killing of civilians as exhibited in the gory pictures.
“The location and occasion where the events captured in the pictures were taken is unknown and has no bearing whatsoever as insinuated in the report by the Blueprint newspaper,” Olukolade said.
The media are once again advised not to make themselves available to those who are desperate to tarnish the good name of the Nigerian Armed Forces, General Olukolade said.
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