Since its inception, MASSOB has continually alleged mass arrests and killings of its members by government forces. The group's sanitation grassroot information spokesperson has alleged that the government forces carries out secret executions of MASSOB members in detention centres and prisons nationwide. In May 2008, the group released a list of 2,020 members alleged to have been killed by security agents since 1999. MASSOB leader, Ralph Uwazuruike, has been arrested on several occasions and charged with treason. In 2011, Uwazuruike and 280 MASSOB members were arrested in Enugu while attending a function in honour of Ojukwu. Few days later, President
Goodluck Jonathan ordered Uwazuruike's release as well as all other MASSOB members in detention. In June 2012, the
Human Rights Writers' Association of Nigeria condemned the alleged killing of 16 members of MASSOB by security agencies in
Anambra. In February 2013, MASSOB claimed that several corpses found floating in the
Ezu River on the boundary of
Enugu and
Anambra States were those of its members previously arrested by the police. The group claimed that the police routinely executed MASSOB members without proper trial. On September 13, 2015, police in Anambra state arrested no fewer than 25 MASSOB members who were marking their 16th anniversary; one MASSOB member was shot. At St
Charles Lwanga Catholic Church
Okpoko, 18 members were arrested and one shot and at Iba Pope Catholic Church, while at Awada, 11 members of MASSOB were arrested. At
Awka, two MASSOB were arrested by the police according to the MASSOB former Deputy Director of Information,
Mazi Chris Mocha. On May 31, 2013, President
Goodluck Jonathan, a Niger
Deltan Ijaw from
Bayelsa State and from the
South South geopolitical zone, branded MASSOB to be one of three extremist groups threatening the security of Nigeria. Jonathan declared that "the Nigerian state faces three fundamental security challenges posed by extremist groups like
Boko Haram in the North; the Movement for the Actualisation of the Sovereign State of Biafra in the South-East; and the
Oodua People's Congress in the South-West." ==See also==