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Nigeria convicts nearly 400 in militant trials

Crime & justiceCrime
Nigeria convicts nearly 400 in militant trials
Key Points
  • Nearly 400 people sentenced in Nigeria for militant links
  • Trials involved over 500 suspects with charges including attack participation and support
  • US airstrikes in Sokoto state followed Trump's persecution claim, denied by Nigerian government

Nearly 400 people have been sentenced in Nigeria for links with militant Islamic groups following mass trials. The convicts were given sentences ranging from five years to life imprisonment after being linked to Boko Haram or a rival splinter group, the Islamic State West Africa Province (Iswap). On Friday, judges convicted 386 of them, while two were acquitted, eight were discharged, and the cases of 112 suspects were adjourned.

More than 500 suspects were put on trial in the federal high court in the capital, Abuja, on charges of either taking part in attacks or supporting the militants through funding, supplying arms, or giving logistical support. Five of the accused had pleaded guilty at the start of the trials to charges that included selling livestock, supplying food and information to the militant groups. The US carried out airstrikes in northern Sokoto state on Christmas Day to target a militant Islamist group known as Lakurawa after President Donald Trump alleged that Christians were being persecuted in Nigeria.

The government denied Trump's claim, saying that people of all faiths and no faith were victims of violence.

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