Hundreds freed after Kaduna police raid from Nigeria ‘torture house’
Nigerian police say they have safeguarded almost 500 individuals from a structure in the northern city of Kaduna where they were confined and purportedly tortured.
Those held were all men and young men - some were discovered tied up.
Kaduna state’s police boss Ali Janga told that the enormous house was struck after a tip-off about suspicious movement.
He said it was a “place of torment” and portrayed it as a case including human bondage.
The prisoners, not all Nigerian, said they had been tormented, explicitly manhandled, starved and kept from leaving - sometimes for quite a while.
It isn’t clear how they got there. A portion of the youngsters told the police that their relatives had taken them there accepting the structure to be a Koranic school.
Yet, the police say there is no solid proof to recommend that the structure was ever a school.
Eight suspects have been captured.
The police boss said the prisoners - some with wounds and kept from nourishment - were thrilled to be liberated.
They were taken to an arena in Kaduna medium-term to be thought about while courses of action are made to discover their families.
Nigerian specialists state the about 500 liberated hostages will be given restorative and mental assessments.
(Source)