![]() |
| Before Monday's case in Ibadan, Nigeria police rescued 300 young men from an Islamic boarding school, seen here, in the north in September (AFP Photo/STR) |
Lagos (AFP) - Police in southwest Nigeria have rescued 259 "hostages" from another Islamic correctional centre, police said Tuesday, in the latest raid on religious institutes accused of abuse.
Police have
cracked down on several Islamic boarding schools and centres over the past
month, often in mainly Muslim northern Nigeria, freeing hundreds of inmates who
were tortured and kept in inhumane conditions.
"We
discovered on Monday young men, women and children who were held hostage in an
illegal detention centre at a mosque in the Ojoo area of Ibadan," police
spokesman Fadeyi Olugbenga told AFP, after the rescue in the country's
southwest.
"259
people were locked up there and crying for help," he said.
The owner
of the centre and eight others were arrested by police, who were alerted by an
18-year-old who had escaped conditions that officials described as
"dungeon-like".
Pictures
carried by local media showed emaciated young men and boys, with their skin
stretched against their ribs, sitting outside the centre in the city of Ibadan.
"Some
had been there for years and had health challenges. They're currently receiving
medical attention," Olugbenga said.
"The
ones we interviewed told us they were fed once every three days, sometimes even
less."
The spate
of police raids since late September has shone a spotlight the widespread
system of unregulated Islamic institutes across the country.
In each
case, similar horrific revelations have come to light of adults and young
children, some suffering from mental illnesses or drug abuse, detained in
chains, starved of food, and physically or sexually abused.
Lacking
facilities
The centres
are common in Africa's most populous country due to a chronic lack of government
services.
They are
touted as a means to help parents cure their children of drug abuse and other
behavioural problems in the absence of support from the state.
President
Muhammadu Buhari, who hails from the majority Muslim north of the country, in
October condemned the abuse.
"No
responsible democratic government would tolerate the existence of the torture
chambers and physical abuses of inmates in the name of rehabilitation," he
said in a statement.
In June the
president said he planned to ban private Islamic schools -- known locally as
Almajiri schools -- widespread across the country, yet has given no further
plans.
According
to Hassan Idayat, director of the Centre for Democracy and Development, the
government is partially responsible for the proliferation of these
institutions.
"It is
widespread because of the dearth of mental health institutions," she said.
"The government needs to urgently invest in mental health."

No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.