Two policemen and some members of the Islamic
Movement in Nigeria (IMN) were on Wednesday injured in Kaduna during a clash.
The IMN members, also known as Shiites, were protesting the
continuous detention of their leader, Shiekh Ibraheem Zakzaky, and his wife,
Zeenat, when the police and other security operatives went in to disperse them.
The Shiite leader and his wife had been in detention since December 2015 following a
clash between his members and the Nigerian Army in Zaria, Kaduna State.
Members of the Islamic group have been staging several
protests in some northern cities and Abuja to demand the release of their
leader.
The Shiites members, mostly women and children, in their
numbers, stormed the busy Ahmadu Bello Way and Lagos Street Roundabout in the
heart of Kaduna city, carrying placards, demanding the release of Zakzaky.
Business and commercial activities in the city centre were
grounded as traders and shop owners closed their shops and offices and deserted
the area for fear of any outbreak of violence.
Vehicular movements through those areas were disrupted as the
Shiite members took over the roads, forcing motorists to divert to alternative
routes.
However, the protest became violent when the police and other
security operatives were deployed in the area to disperse them.
The police were said to have fired teargas to disperse them,
but the Shiite allegedly responded by attacking the police.
The two policemen were said to have been injured during the
fracas.
Some of the protesting members of the group were
said to have been arrested by the police.
The spokesman of the state police command, Aliyu
Muktar, who spoke on the incident, said the police
men sustained various degree of injuries and were taken to the hospital.
Mukhtar said: "The Shiites in their usual procession
came with many women and children and blocked the major road in the city and
denying other citizens their right to use the road.
"But this time around, they came fully armed. Two of our
men were critically injured and they are now receiving treatment at a hospital
here in Kaduna. But I don't know if there is any causality on their part.
"As I speak with you, we have been able to disperse them
and brought the situation under control. The police will not condone any form
of lawlessness in the state,” Mukhtar warned.
However, the spokesman of the IMN, Ibrahim Musa,
dismissed allegations by the police that the Shiites were armed.
He also said many Shiite members were injured by the
police who swooped on them while they were on a peaceful protest to demand the
release of their leader.
"It is actually not a clash. We were on our
peaceful ‘Free Zakzaky’ protest today from Leventis Roundabout to
Oriapkpata, where the police fired at us,
injuring many with gunshots.
"They also arrested many, though we're yet to
have any specific figure.
"We condemned what the police did to us, firing
at a peaceful protesters as if we are not in a democratic government. This will
not deter us from seeking the freedom of our leader," Musa said.
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