“Land of the Living Dead”: Heartbroken Lawyer Weeps as Igbo Youths Emerge After 5 Years of Silent Suffering in Wawa Barracks – Families Never Knew They Were Alive
In a moment that shattered the courtroom silence, Barrister Nnaemeka Ejiofor stood at the Federal High Court yesterday, his voice heavy with grief, as he witnessed dozens of young Igbo men, mere shadows of the vibrant sons, brothers, and husbands their families once knew, lined up like forgotten souls finally seeing daylight.
These were not hardened criminals. They were young Igbo youths, many barely out of their teens when they were taken, now pale, broken, and traumatized after spending more than five agonizing years locked away in the notorious Wawa Military Barracks in Kanji, Niger State, without a single phone call, visit, or letter to their loved ones.
“I cried!!! Some dead!! Dead without their families knowing!!” Ejiofor wrote, his words raw with pain.
He described how the young men, accused of IPOB membership or support, had been completely cut off from the world. No one knew if they were alive or dead. Mothers in the South-East continued to light candles and pray for sons who had simply vanished into the darkness of detention. Fathers searched hospitals and mortuaries, never imagining their children were suffering hundreds of kilometres away in a Northern barracks many had never heard of.
The lawyer, visibly moved, managed to collect a few phone numbers from the detainees. When he dialled the families, the reaction was pure heartbreak.
“It was crying and thanking me for making efforts for them,” he recounted. “I was not myself after that.” The lawyer stated.
Some of the young men appeared in court only after security agencies had sworn under oath that they did not exist. They had been arrested from Orifite, from Orlu, Orsu, Onitsha, Enugu, Aba, and other part in South East. Now, standing before the judge, many were ready to plead guilty, not because they believed they had committed any crime, but out of sheer terror.
Terror of being sent back to what Ejiofor called “the land of the living dead.”
“They are pleading guilty for fear of being returned to detention in a strange Northern land called Wawa… What is the justice served???” he asked, his anguish echoing through every word.
Imagine a mother who has mourned her son for years, only to learn he has been alive all this time, starved of love, sunlight, and hope. Imagine a wife raising children alone, believing her husband was gone forever. Imagine young men whose only “crime” may have been their identity or their dreams, now so broken that they would rather accept punishment than return to that place of endless suffering.
This is not abstract justice. This is human pain, raw, deep, and avoidable.
Wawa Barracks has become a symbol of silent agony for many families across the South-East. Reports of deaths from illness, neglect, or despair continue to surface, leaving behind widows, orphans, and parents who may never get the chance to say goodbye or lay their children to rest with dignity.
Barrister Ejiofor has promised to publish the names of those he met so that at least some families can finally breathe again, knowing their sons are alive and fighting for a day in court.
But the bigger question lingers in the hearts of many: How many more are still hidden in those barracks? How many voices have been silenced forever? And how long will Nigeria look away while its young men waste away in the shadows?
In the face of such profound human suffering, one cannot help but feel a deep ache, for the forgotten youths, for their grieving families, and for a country that must do better.
Family Writers Press International.
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