You are currently viewing ‎Press Statement: Rights Group, CEHRAWS Demands Immediate Shutdown Of ‘Tiger Base’ Over Systemic, Grave Human Rights Violations; Endorses CAPTI Findings

‎Press Statement: Rights Group, CEHRAWS Demands Immediate Shutdown Of ‘Tiger Base’ Over Systemic, Grave Human Rights Violations; Endorses CAPTI Findings

‎PRESS RELEASE

‎16th December, 2025 | Aba, Abia State

‎CEHRAWS ENDORSES CAPTI FINDINGS, DEMANDS IMMEDIATE SHUTDOWN OF “TIGER BASE” OVER SYSTEMIC, GRAVE HUMAN RIGHTS VIOLATIONS

‎The Centre for Human Rights Advocacy and Wholesome Society (CEHRAWS), a non-governmental civil rights and accountability organisation, expresses grave alarm over the continued operation of the police facility popularly known as “Tiger Base,” following an extensive review of the investigative report titled “Tiger Base Files: Systematic Torture, Extrajudicial Killings, and the Collapse of Police Accountability in Imo State,” published by the Coalition Against Police Tiger Base Impunity (CAPTI).

‎After a careful examination of the report and CAPTI’s accompanying press statement, CEHRAWS finds the documented evidence compelling, disturbing, and consistent with numerous complaints previously received by our organisation. The depth, methodology, and corroboration contained in the CAPTI report have necessitated CEHRAWS’ unequivocal public intervention and solidarity with ongoing calls for accountability.

‎The CAPTI report documents at least 200 deaths in custody between January 2021 and November 2025, alongside systematic torture, enforced disappearances, extortion, hostage-taking of family members, defiance of court orders, and the killing of detainees even after intervention by the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC). Former detainees, families of victims, lawyers, and court records paint a chilling picture of a police unit operating outside the bounds of law, oversight, and humanity.

‎CEHRAWS is particularly disturbed by findings indicating that torture at Tiger Base is not incidental but institutionalised, with designated torture chambers, routine denial of medical care, incommunicado detention, and the obstruction of autopsies and coroner’s inquests. Even more alarming is the documented pattern of promotion and commendation of officers implicated in these violations, reinforcing a culture in which impunity is not merely tolerated but rewarded.

‎These practices constitute grave violations of the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria (as amended), notably the rights to life, dignity of the human person, personal liberty, and fair hearing, as well as breaches of the Anti-Torture Act, 2017; Police Act, 2020; Administration of Criminal Justice Act (ACJA); and Nigeria’s binding obligations under the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights, the UN Convention Against Torture (UNCAT), the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR).

‎CEHRAWS underscores that no police unit, tactical squad, or security formation is above the law. Facilities that function as centres of terror rather than justice have no place in a constitutional democracy. The continued operation of Tiger Base, despite overwhelming and well-documented allegations, represents a clear and present danger to public safety, the rule of law, and Nigeria’s international human rights standing.

‎In alignment with CAPTI’s findings and in furtherance of our mandate, CEHRAWS hereby demands the following:

‎1. The immediate shutdown of Tiger Base pending a thorough, independent, and transparent investigation.

‎2. A comprehensive forensic, judicial, and administrative probe into the facility, its command structure, operational framework, and officers attached to it.

‎3. The identification, suspension, arrest, and prosecution of all officers found culpable of torture, extrajudicial killings, enforced disappearances, extortion, or defiance of court orders.

‎4. Full accountability for all persons who died or disappeared in custody, including disclosure to families and independent autopsies where required.

‎5. Reparations and remedies for victims, survivors, and affected families in accordance with Nigerian and international law.

‎CEHRAWS stands in solidarity with victims, survivors, and civil society partners demanding justice. We reiterate that silence and inaction in the face of such atrocities amount to complicity. Nigeria must choose between the rule of law and the rule of fear.

‎Justice must not only be done, it must be seen to be done.

‎Signed:

‎Okoye, Chuka Peter

‎Executive Director

‎cehraws@gmail.com | +234(0)808-035-1242.

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