Seven years later, the scars remain — and Bashir Ahmad wants the world to know what happened behind closed doors.
Bashir Ahmad, a former aide to ex-Kaduna Central Senator Shehu Sani, has opened up about a harrowing detention experience in December 2017 that he says left him with lasting physical and emotional trauma — including partial hearing loss and memories that still haunt him today.
Speaking in a recent interview reported by Punch, Ahmad painted a chilling picture of what he endured: taken into custody without clear explanation, moved to an unfamiliar location, and subjected to interrogations he describes as brutal, degrading, and designed to break him.
"I was dumped in a room with more than 30 other detainees. I was blindfolded and handcuffed," he recounted, describing the cold, overcrowded conditions that amplified his fear and sense of helplessness.
But the physical discomfort was only part of the story. Ahmad alleges he was beaten, chained, and pressured to implicate his former boss, Shehu Sani, in an alleged assassination plot — claims he insists were fabricated and extracted through intimidation and force.
The psychological toll, he said, was immense. Living in constant uncertainty, not knowing when — or if — he would regain his freedom, Ahmad described the experience as a complete loss of dignity and safety. The presence of so many other detainees in similar conditions, he added, suggested this wasn't an isolated incident but rather a systematic practice.
Years later, the effects linger. Ahmad says the trauma still impacts his health and wellbeing, marking that period as a dark turning point in his life. But he's speaking out now not just for himself — but to shine a light on detention practices that he believes violated basic human rights and due process.
His account adds a deeply personal dimension to ongoing conversations about detainee welfare, accountability, and reform within Nigeria's security and justice system.
💬 Bashir Ahmad's story raises serious questions about how detainees are treated in Nigeria. Should there be stronger oversight and accountability for detention practices? What reforms do you think are needed? Let's talk about it. 👇🔗


0 Comments