The ruling Peoples Democratic Party in Nigeria has called on
the International Criminal Court (ICC) to try the presidential
candidate of the All Progressives Congress, General Muhammadu Buhari, for the post-election violence of 2011.
Disclosing the likely trial of Buhari at the ICC at a news briefing
in Abuja on Sunday, the Director of Media and Publicity of the Peoples
Democratic Party (PDP) Presidential Campaign Organisation, Mr Femi
Fani-Kayode, said international focus was on General Buhari for the 2011
post-election violence.
He expressed hopes that General Buhari would be brought to justice
“for the violence unleashed on innocent Nigerians by his supporters”.
Dutch lawyers with the ICC are also pushing the trial of General Buhari.
Mr Fani-kayode also said that General Buhari’s appearance at the Chatham House in London on Thursday was a last minute decoy.
“Some Relative Peace”
The PDP presidential campaign spokesman said General Buhari hurriedly
arranged the Chatham House lectures to divert the attention of
Nigerians and the whole world from the fact that his trip to London was
mainly to seek medical attention and care.
General Buhari had told Channels Television that he traveled to the
European City to find “some relative peace”, debunked claims that he was
in London for a medical trip.
“After visiting 35 states and holding town hall meetings in Lagos,
Kano and Abuja and having forced on me six weeks of holidays, I have to
come away from Nigeria to get some relative peace” insisting that “that
is what brought me here”, he said, in an exclusive interview with
Channels Television in London.
“Nigerians have been seeing me on the television, hearing me on the
radio, visiting the whole; I never had any health problem,” he said.
The Sokoto-born politician, who spoke during a lecture in London
think-tank, Chatham House, said “the forthcoming general elections in
Nigeria is crucial, as it is expected to further democratic
consolidation on the African continent in general.
In January, a Dutch lawyer at the International Criminal Court said
he had “evidence showing General Buhari instigating and inciting
violence that led to the killings of some 800 people after he lost 2011
elections.
“There are references to lynching, there’s a reference to killing,”
Goran Sluiter, a human rights lawyer who represents complaints to the
ICC, said of video recordings of General Buhari
Buhari’s campaign group denied the allegations saying: “This is all part of the campaign to stop Buhari at all cost.”
It said the violence was “a spontaneous reaction to perceived electoral shenanigans”.
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