Group dismisses Amnesty International report on alleged killing of IPOB members



A civil society organisation, Stand Up Nigeria (SUN) has dismissed recent report by Amnesty International where it alleged the killing of 150 IPOB members.
The CSO accused the organisation of doctoring the report in a bid to destabilise Nigeria, just like it did in Libya, Iran and Syria.
Addressing a press conference in Abuja, SUN Director of Public Affairs, Rev. Christie Amor, described Amnesty International as “agent of destabilisation” and “merchant of war”
Amor said Amnesty International has lost credibility as its reports over the years have proved to be false alarm and bias.
She said, “In early 2011, Amnesty International gave the world a bogus report on whose strength a no-fly zone was imposed on Libya. The sequence of event after this led to the ouster and eventual murder of Muammar Gaddafi. By June of the same year the same Amnesty International’s investigation admitted that the international NGO cannot prove that Gaddaffi’s troops committed the rights violations as it previously claimed.
“Instead, AI found that the so called rebels made false claims and manufactured evidence.
“In 1990, Amnesty International was pivotal to the decision by members of a western coalition to invade Iraq and consequently spark off the chain of events that produced today’s basket case called Iraq.”
According to her, the lesson from these two major catastrophic outings did nothing to dissuade Amnesty International from meddling in the affairs of nations, saying the organisation has persisted in disregarding the sovereignty of countries in which it interferes so long as there is a war to be started.
The group accused the organisation of also having a hand in the ongoing Syrian war, saying “the foreign interventions provoked on the strength of its fantasy reports has eroded the ability of the Syrian military forces to decisively clear out the foreign terrorists that overran their country since attacks on ISIS are inevitably researched as massacre of civilians.”

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