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Report: Nigeria reinstates general implicated in mass murder

Amnesty International says Maj. Gen. Ahmadu Mohammed was reinstated at his own request, according to military

Nigeria has reinstated a general implicated in mass murder, underlining the government's "monumental failure" to stamp out impunity for war crimes, Amnesty International said Monday.

The rights group, based in London, last year called for an investigation of nine senior commanders, including Maj. Gen. Ahmadu Mohammed, for possible criminal responsibility for war crimes such as the deaths of more than 8,000 detainees since 2011. Mohammed was commanding officer when soldiers killed about 640 unarmed detainees after Boko Haram’s armed fighters attacked the Giwa barracks in Maiduguri in the country's northeast, according to Amnesty.

President Muhammadu Buhari in June promised to investigate the allegations and deal with all alleged abuses by the military, but nothing has been done.

Mohammed was the commander of the war theater when Boko Haram took control of a swath of Nigeria's northeast, where the armed group declared a caliphate, and when the group kidnapped nearly 300 schoolgirls from Chibok. Dozens of girls escaped on their own, and the army failed to send a rescue mission. More than 200 girls remain missing.

Mohammed was retired in 2014 after mutinying soldiers shot at him, revolting because they said a dozen colleagues killed by Boko Haram in a night ambush on the road from Chibok were unnecessarily sent into danger.

The general was reinstated quietly in January at his own request, according to the military .

"Young men and boys, rounded up by the military, were either shot, starved, suffocated or tortured to death and no one has yet been held to account," Amnesty International said in a statement. "It is unthinkable that Maj. Gen. Mohammed could resume command of troops before an investigation has even begun."

His reinstatement "makes mockery of commitments to end war crimes" and "underlines the monumental failure of the government to stamp out impunity for war crimes at the highest level."

The Associated Press

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