More than 200 inmates were freed in a raid on a prison in Nigeria's troubled
southeastern city of Onitsha, officials and residents said.
Official Nigerian radio reported that suspected "hoodlums" invaded the
Onitsha prison after breaking into it and setting parts of the building on fire.
It was the second time this year that the prison had been attacked and its
inmates released. More than 700 Onitsha prison inmates were liberated last
February during unrest in the city.
A senior official at the prison, who simply gave her name as Ms Okpoko, told
reporters that a total of 204 prison inmates were set free by the "hoodlums" who
invaded the building at around 2:00 am (0100 GMT) on Monday.
One of four prison inmates who later returned, Bright Chukwujekwu, told
journalists that the attackers, armed with guns, machetes, hammers, iron rods
and acid, forced the gate of the prison to open.
They attacked and injured a number of prison officials who were on duty
during the assault, said Chukwujekwu, who alleged that the invaders presented
themselves as members of the recently banned Movement for the Actualisation of
the Sovereign State of Biafra (MASSOB), a separatist group.
MASSOB spokesman David Chinedu denied to AFP any involvement of his group in
the attack on the prison.
The attack on Onitsha prison came less than 24 hours after troops were
deployed and a curfew imposed on the troubled city.
Onitsha, a major commercial centre in Anambra State, and the southeastern
region, has been the scene of violent unrest since Friday.
Clashes between MASSOB members and police were reported to have left several
people dead at the weekend.
The troop deployment and the week-long curfew were measures taken on Sunday
to restore peace to the area.
The deployment, at the request of state governor Peter Obi, was for "security
reasons, the need to protect lives and property," army spokesman Yusuf Mohammed
told AFP earlier Monday.
According to press reports, at least seven people died in Onitsha's Upper
Iweka district in clashes Friday between police and suspected MSSOB supporters.
But Anambra police spokesman Fidelis Agbo denied to AFP by telephone that
anybody was killed in the unrest.
Obi had on Saturday banned MASSOB and two transport unions, widely believed
to be used by opposition politicians to fan the crisis in Onitsha.
He said that the move was taken, "in order to ensure that Onitsha and the
whole of Anambra State continue to enjoy peace."
The governor said then that he had formally requested President Olusegun
Obasanjo to intervene in the crisis, which he said was a potential threat to
national security.
MASSOB is an ethnic Igbo group campaigning for the resuscitation of "Biafra",
which led a secessionist rebellion against the federal government between 1967
and 1970.
The war ended in January 1970 with the surrender of the Biafra warlords.
MASSOB says it is also fighting against an alleged marginalisation of Igbos
since the war. Its founder and leader, Ralph Uwazuruike, and some of his
followers face treason charges in an Abuja court.