Buhari added that the Nigerian government would make every effort to secure the mortal remains of the deceased and the survivors of the attack.
President Muhammadu Buhari has directed the Federal Ministry of Foreign Affairs through the Nigerian Embassy in Burkina Faso to engage with the Burkina Faso government to make sure that the killers of 16 Nigerian pilgrims in the country are appropriately sanctioned.
The Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity, Garba Shehu, disclosed this in a statement on Monday.
About 16 members of Jam’iyyatu Ansariddeen Attijaniyya of Nigeria who were on a pilgrimage to the home country of their leader, Sheikhul-islam Ibrahim Niasse in Senegal were stopped and shot dead by Burkinabe soldiers on patrol.
According to the national secretary of the Islamic group, Sayyidi Yahaya, the members were “randomly selected and cold-bloodedly shot to death in a most horrendous display of bestiality.”
But reacting to the incident on Monday, Buhari said he “received the tragic news of the murder of a number of Nigerian Muslim pilgrims on their way to Kaolak, Senegal, when the buses conveying them came under gun attack in Burkina Faso.”
The President, who condoled and prayed for the safety of other Nigerians stranded there, added that “the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, through the Nigerian Embassy in Burkina Faso, is engaging with the Burkinabe authorities and awaits the outcome of their investigation of the unfortunate incident, and if necessary, to ensure that all culprits are appropriately sanctioned.”
Buhari added that the Nigerian government would make every effort to secure the mortal remains of the deceased and the survivors of the attack.