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Amnesty International calls for probe into Nigerian military killings of Shias

Amnesty International is calling for an investigation of military killings of Nigeria's minority Shia Muslims following revelations of hundreds buried in a mass grave.

Mass grave discovery prompts rights group to decry 'horrific revelations of the slaughter and secret burial'

A woman walks past a sign reading 'Stop killing Muslims Army' on the walls in Kano, Nigeria, Friday, April. 8, 2016. Amnesty International is calling for for an investigation in to military killings of the country's minority Shia Muslims. (Sunday Alamba/Associated Press)

Nigeria's Kaduna state government has said it secretly buried hundreds of minority ShiaMuslims in a mass grave, after the victims were killed in army raids that underline ongoing impunity despite President Muhammadu Buhari's promises to end military abuses.

Amnesty International is calling for an investigation following what it called "horrific revelations of the slaughter and secret burial."

Kadunastategovernment secretary Balarabe Lawal told a commission of inquiry on Monday that dozens of soldiers and state officials transported 347 bodies from a mortuary and an army base to a bush site where they were buried after the Dec. 12-14 military raids on Shiacompounds in northern Zaria town. The Shias say those killed number closer to 1,000.

The military said it ordered the mid-December raids after Shias attempted to assassinate Nigeria's army chief charges the Shiite Islamic Movement in Nigeria denies.

The killing only stopped when the military captured and then shot several times Shialeader Ibraheem Zakzaky, leaving him near-blind, human rights lawyer Femi Falana said this week after finally being allowed to see his client.

Nigeria's Shia Muslims took to the street to protest and demand the release of leader Ibraheem Zakzaky in Kano, Nigeria, on Dec. 21, 2015. The previous week, hundreds of Shias were killed in military raids on compounds in the northern town of Zaria. (Muhammed Giginyu/Associated Press)

Nearly 1,000 Shiites are missing, including scores held in illegal detention along with Zakzaky, said Shiaspokesman Ibrahim Musa. None has been brought to court though the law requires that those arrested be charged within 48 hours. Some wounded Shias have died in detention for lack of medical care, according to Musa, who is in hiding, saying he is fearful he will be killed if caught.

'Stop killingShia!'

"The horrific revelation by the Kaduna state government that hundreds of [Shias]were gunned down and dumped in mass graves is an important first step to bringing all those suspected of criminal responsibility for this atrocity to trial," the Nigeria director of London-based Amnesty International, M.K. Ibrahim, said in a statement on Tuesday.

Iran, considered the international protector of Shiites, has protested the killings and demanded compensation for victims and for bulldozed properties including Zakzaky's home and a school.

"Kill Boko Haram! Stop killing Shia!" says graffiti on a hospital wall in northern Kano city, referring to the northeastern Islamic extremist insurgency that has killed some 20,000 people.

Amnesty has charged that the military are responsible for the deaths of about 8,000 of the deaths, all detainees killed extra-judicially or through torture, starvation and asphyxiation in overcrowded cells.