The trio narrated their ordeal in the hands of SSS, claiming their human rights as well as international conventions were violated.
The State Security Service (SSS) has released the three Israeli filmmakers in its custody, after they spent 20 days in detention without being charged to court by the Nigerian government.
A Zionist activist, Rudy Rochman, filmmaker Noam Leibman and French-Israeli Journalist E. David Benaym were arrested on July 9, by the secret police over allegations that they supported the activities of outlawed Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB).
The trio were arrested during a visit to Ogidi village, Idemili North Local Government Area of Anambra State to shoot a documentary, âWe Were Never Lostâ, which explores Jewish communities in African countries such as Kenya, Madagascar, Uganda, and Nigeria.
However, they were released from prison on Tuesday night and boarded a flight back to Israel on Wednesday evening. Their flight was scheduled to land in Israel at 09:00 a.m. (Israel time) on Thursday, a statement jointly signed by the filmmakers and shared on their Instagram page read.
Narrating their ordeal, they claimed that they were taken to the SSS facility in Anambra where they spent 24 hours before being transported to the its headquarters in Abuja, âwith dangerous transport.â
According to them, Nigerian bloggers hijacked images from the social media pages of âWe Were Never Lostâ and âfabricated an association between the Israeli crew to separatist movements in Southern Nigeria likely in order to gain more publicity.
âNigerian government âsuspectedâ the team and took them into custody by over a dozen DSS men with black ski masks at gun point. From the moment they were taken their phones and passports were stripped from them. and they were at no point of their detainment able to contact anyone,â they continued.
The Israelis said they were locked in a small cell with no access to showers or clean clothes, and âwere interrogated and mistreated without ever officially being arrested or accused of anything. There were countless human and international violations that occurred, which can and will be discussed in depth at a later time.
âThe three weeks in captivity has only fueled the teamâs desire to tell the stories of the Igbo Jews and will continue working for them to get mainstream reception,â they noted.
Also, an elderly Igbo woman âIma Lisbonâ who is a leader of the Jewish community in Ogidi, was arrested by the secret police âand is still being detained in inhumane conditions.
âWhen they all arrived in Abuja she was separated from the team and kept in a different building,â they added.
One of the men entered Nigeria on a French passport, and the other two on American passports.
Their arrest came on the heels of the repatriation of IPOB leader, Nnamdi Kanu, who in 2018 publicly declared that he âowed his survival to the state of Israel.â