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Media captionIsa Ibrahim says he tried to escape the day before the police raid |
A survivor of the Nigerian "torture
house" raided by police has described being there as "living in
hellfire".
"If you are praying they will beat
you. If you are studying they will beat you," Isa Ibrahim, 29, told the
BBC.
Nearly 500 men and boys were rescued from
the building in Kaduna, which was being used as an Islamic school and
correctional facility.
The police said it was a place of human
slavery, with many detainees found in chains.
Some of the victims had been tortured and
sexually abused, the authorities say.
The BBC's Ishaq Khalid, who visited the
building in northern Nigeria, says there are concerns that similar abuse may be
occurring in other such institutions.
Many families in this mainly Muslim part of
the country can't afford to send their children to school and those that can
often enrol them in poorly regulated institutions like this one, he says.
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Image copyrightREUTERS TVImage captionSome detainees were as young as five years old, police said |
A sign on the front of the building
describes it as the Ahmad bin Hambal Centre for Islamic teachings but it was
also used by some as a place to reform young men with behavioural problems.
Kaduna state police spokesman Yakubu Sabo
said the "dehumanised treatment" they discovered made it impossible
to consider it an Islamic school, Reuters news agency reports. It was not
registered as either a school, or a correctional facility, although it did
charge fees to parents.
Seven people, including some staff, have
been arrested. The government says it will investigate other institutions which
purport to provide Koranic studies.
There have been numerous reports of abuse
at Koranic schools across northern Nigeria, with students sometimes forced to
spend their days begging on the streets.
Isa Ibrahim's ordeal
Mr Ibrahim said he was sent to the centre
two weeks ago by his family, apparently to "correct his behaviour".
He said he had tried to escape the day
before the police arrived.
He described being chained up to an old
generator and also being subjected to a particularly cruel punishment, known as
"Tarkila", where his hands were tied up and he was left hanging from
the ceiling.
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Image captionIsa Ibrahim says he was hung from the ceiling |
"I have many injuries. Almost all
parts of my body have injuries," he said. "Even if you are sleeping -
they'll use [a] cane to wake you up."
He said he had been starved and was only
given plain rice to eat. People kept at the centre "lose all of our
energy", he added.
Children as young as five were among those
rescued from the institution, which is believed to have been operating for
several years. Most of the inmates were from northern Nigeria but two were
reportedly from Burkina Faso.
Abandoned chains at a 'house of torture'
Ishaq Khalid, BBC News, Kaduna
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Image copyrightREUTERS |
The pink two-storey building is a
prison-like structure surrounded by high walls and barbed wire. It has an
imposing gate, with more than a dozen rooms, with small windows for
ventilation.
When I visited, the compound was littered
with abandoned household items like mattresses, buckets, clothes and books -
apparently left in the wake of the police raid.
Kaduna state police spokesperson Yakubu
Sabo told me most of the captives had been rescued with their shackles still on
but I could still see some abandoned chains, as well as car wheels and
petrol-powered generators to which the victims had allegedly been attached.
People living nearby have been left
bewildered - some told me they couldn't believe the shocking discovery.
The "students" did not go to out
to beg on the streets as is the usual practice with traditional Koranic schools
in this region. Nor had they been forced to do hard labour - some said they had
not seen the outside world for years.
Torture was used as a form of discipline -
to correct perceived bad behaviour.

Relatives are being reunited with their
children at a camp in Kaduna where the victims were taken after being rescued.
Some said they had been prevented from
seeing their children at the school.
"If we had known that this thing was
happening in the school, we wouldn't have sent our children. We sent them to be
people but they ended up being maltreated," said a parent named Ibrahim,
who had identified his son.
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Image copyrightREUTERSImage captionThis 15-year-old boy shows the scars from the beatings he received |
The Kaduna state government says it will
now carry out checks on all Koranic schools across the state.
"This is an eye-opener for us,"
said Hafsat Baba, Kaduna State Commissioner of Human Services and Social
Development. She added that if this scale of abuse was happening in the main
city, she didn't know what might be going on in rural areas.
"We have to map all the schools. And
we have to make sure that if they violate the government orders then they have
to be closed down completely," she told the BBC.
"If we find any facility that is
torturing children or is harbouring these kind of horrific situations that we
have just seen, they are going to be prosecuted."
President Muhammadu Buhari has condemned
reports of shocking abuse at the institution.
He also urged religious and traditional
leaders to work with the authorities to "expose and stop all types of
abuse that are widely known but ignored for many years by our
communities".
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