Biafra: US probes agitators’ killing, Nigeria
Biafra: US probes agitators’ killing
• American attorneys to storm Nigeria
From Aloysius Attah, Onitsha
Two United
 States Attorneys,  Bruce Fein and Bruce DelValle of  Fein& DelValle
 PPLC  have met with ten Nigerian witnesses on the suit filed in the 
United States District court of Columbia against 14 Nigerian defendants 
for their complicity in the 2016 torture and extra-judicial killings of 
pro Biafran agitators during their peaceful protests.
The two attorneys who arrived Nigeria 
three days ago met with the families of the victims at an undisclosed 
location and also extracted various statements from them which were 
deposed as affidavits of facts to the suit.
Ten Biafran plaintiffs are seeking millions of dollars  as
 damages to compensate for their grievous losses and suffering following
 the alleged gruesome killings of pro Biafra agitators in Nkpor and 
Onitsha , Anambra State and Aba, Abia State in 2016 during the peaceful 
demonstration for the release of the detained leader of the Indigenous 
People of Biafra, IPOB, Nnamdi Kanu.
The identities of the plaintiffs are 
hidden for security reasons while the case name is John Doe , etal vs 
Tukur Yusuf Buratai etal  civil action No. 1:17-cv-01033. The case has 
been assigned to United States District Judge Ellen S. Huvelle, 
appointed by President William Jefferson Clinton.
Speaking to Daily Sun in an exclusive 
chat, Attorney Bruce Fein said they were in Nigeria as a follow up to 
the suit already in court because of Biafra agitators who were murdered 
as a result of high level military and security agencies infringement of
 their rights to freedom of assembly and expression while the state 
governors could not also protect the demonstrators.
He explained that under the United States
 law, those human rights crimes are prosecutable in the United States 
courts even though the plaintiffs and defendants are citizens of the 
country, Nigeria.
Fein said after filing the case in the US
 court, they were able to convince the judge that revealing the 
identities of the complainants /plaintiffs in the suit could result in 
retaliations and danger against their families,  hence the reason the court settled for the name John Doe etal so that it can proceed anonymously.
He confirmed that 13 defendants out of 16
 have been effectively served with the court summons and noted that the 
Igbos and Christians have the  right to live in the country and enjoy 
their full rights as citizens of Nigeria.
The Nigerian facilitators, Emeka 
Umeagbalasi , board chairman, International Society for Civil Liberties 
and Rule of Law and Okpalaezenri  Emeka Onyeso of the Forum for the 
Promotion of National Ethos and Values,  in
 their separate remarks noted that the struggle to ensure justice for 
the victims and families of those who died through the use of state 
power of coercion while engaging in peaceful protest  is a noble cause 
that must be pursued to a logical conclusion.
They thanked the Ekwenche Organisation of
 Chicago, USA for their role in the suit, noting that the capability of 
countries to set up laws that regulate and protect all fundamental 
rights of man within the context of the United Nations Declarations, 
Covenants, Conventions and other multilateral treaties, and punish 
offenders, to a very large extent, influence the level of human 
development in most countries of the world.
Other defendants in the suit included 
former Inspector General of Police, Solomon Arase, former Commander 302 
Artillery Regiment, Onitsha,  Col Ibrahim Maigeri and Governors Willie 
Obiano and Okezie Ikpeazu of Anambra and Abia States among others.
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