SAN rekindles genocide in Nigeria debates, says evidence abound

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A Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN), Dr. Reuben Atabo, has again reignited debates and stories about genocide against Christian’s in the northern parts of the country.

According to him, there is “ample evidence of genocide in Nigeria.

Atabo who spoke to journalists while marking his 36th year at the Bar, lamented, that the scale, pattern and persistence of violence in several North-Central states point to deliberate and systematic attacks on specific communities.

He warned that sustained killings and mass displacement in parts of the country now meet the legal definition of genocide under both Nigerian and international law.

“Genocide is not just mass killing. It is the intentional and systematic destruction of a people because of who they are.”

He cited the 1948 United Nations Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, explaining that genocide includes targeted killings, infliction of serious bodily or mental harm, destruction of livelihoods and forced displacement, indicators, he noted, to him, are increasingly evident in Nigeria.

Atabo said repeated attacks in Plateau, Benue, Kogi, Kwara and neighbouring states are neither random nor accidental.

“These killings are coordinated, repeated and targeted. Entire communities are wiped out, farmlands deliberately destroyed, survivors forced into internally displaced persons’ camps, while others take over their ancestral homes,” he stated.

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The SAN likened the situation to early warning signs that preceded the 1994 Rwandan genocide, warning that identity-based violence, when ignored or downplayed, can escalate rapidly.

“The danger is not only in the killings themselves, but in state inaction, weak accountability and the normalisation of violence against certain communities,” he said.

He clarified that his comments were not directed at any ethnic or religious group, but at armed militias and institutional failures that have left vulnerable Nigerians exposed.

Drawing lessons from Rwanda’s post-genocide justice process, where suspects were investigated and prosecuted across different jurisdictions, Atabo stressed that impunity must not be allowed to persist.

“Core international crimes are not time-barred. Justice delayed must never become justice denied,” he said.

Describing widespread internal displacement as unacceptable in a democratic society, the senior advocate reminded the government of its most fundamental obligation.

“The first duty of any government is the protection of lives and property. That is what distinguishes a state from a state of nature, where life is short and brutish,” he declared.

“Nigeria cannot claim stability while segments of its population face existential threats. For too long, impunity has replaced accountability. This must end.”

The post SAN rekindles genocide in Nigeria debates, says evidence abound appeared first on Latest Nigeria News | Top Stories from Ripples Nigeria.

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