By Jonathan Ugbal
The Nigerian government has said there is no evidence that Cameroonian Gendarmes killed 97 Nigerians in Bakassi while fleeing to Ikang in Cross River State.
Premium Times reports that Nigeria’s foreign affairs minister, Geoffery Onyeama said the 97 deaths reported is the accumulation of all the Nigerians that have been killed in previous incidents in Bakassi since 2008.
Mr. Onyeama represented by the Permanent Secretary in the ministry, Olusola Enikanolaye made the claim before the House of Representatives Committee on Foreign Affairs headed by Nnena Elendu-Ukeje. The committee is probing the incident and Olusola said that independent investigation had shown that such killings did not occur.
He explained that the incident started following the deployment in July 2017 of a new Divisional Officer (DO) to Idabato sub- division of Cameroon to administer the Bakassi General Area.
“On assumption of office, the new DO commenced the imposition of new taxes on the residents after a meeting with all the chiefs.
“Accordingly, all men engaged in fishing and other business activities in the area were to pay N55,000, women 30,000 and churches N50,000 per annum.
“Furthermore, taxes on packets of fish were raised from NGN200 to NGN1,000. Butchers were to pay NGN1,000 per head for goats slaughtered by them.
“The sanctions placed on the residents for violation of the tax rules include seizure of their boats and payment of 200 per cent of the initial tax.
“This accounts for the NGN100,000 which was hitherto heralded in the news and initial reports as the amount of the tax to be paid by Nigerians.”
He said by the records of the Nigerian Mission, the deaths recorded were not orchestrated by the Gendarmes and pointed out that some Nigerians fled their homes and headed for the Ikang Jetty when the new DO threatened to use force. It was while they were on their way that some of them reportedly drowned.
“Unfortunately, the leaders who confirmed these assertions to the team had no corpse of persons drowned in the incident as proof of the manner of death,” he said.