Tag: abuses

  • Women lawyers, Lagos monarch join forces against right abuses

    The Ojora of Ijora Kingdom, King Abdul-Fatai Aremu Aromire has agreed to partner the International Federation of Women Lawyers (FIDA) to empower women, girl child, fight domestic violence and all forms of abuses to attain peace in the society.

    The agreement was sealed when members of the association led by the secretary, Mrs Phil Nneji, visited the monarch in Ijora as part of their activities for community outreach.

    Others in the team were Mrs Abimbola Badia Jack Oladugba, Mrs Aramide Keshinro and Mrs Adero Fadahunsi.

    King Aromire promised to pave the way for a forum where women in the community would interact with FIDA on issues affecting them and in particular, marital issues.

    He also promised to assist them to realise their objectives and goals of ensuring the protection of the women, children and the indigent in the community.

    Earlier, Nneji told the king that FIDA was very passionate about women and children and that this explained why they were seeking to protect and empower them.

    Nneji said in furtherance of the association’s objectives, its members carry out pro-bono services which involves free legal representation for indigent litigants.

    She said they also hold legal clinics where they listen to problems of the people and use Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR) to mediate and resolve such problems.

    “Because we have culture, we preach peace. We use the slogan, ‘Orange the World’. Through this platform, we preach peace all over the world. Starting from November 25, as decided by the United Nations, we have been preaching peace and against gender violence.

    “We reach out to community leaders like you, in their capacity as the King, for impact and for there to be peace in every community. Because there is so much poverty around, we have had to reach out to ensure peace at home”, Nneji said.

    She explained that the Child Rights Act was put in place by government to protect children and that the law was translated to so many languages for mothers to be able to read and create awareness in them.

    She lamented that so many things were happening which were unheard of in the past like “husbands killing wives, child defilement, rape, violence at home.

    “We have this culture of keeping quiet which has caused the death of many and this is why we are reaching out to people to break the culture of silence and ‘shout and speak out’ wherever they occur.”

    According to her, because unemployment is high, particularly amongst women, “FIDA carries out a lot of empowerment programmes. “We do this because we believe when you empower a woman, you have empowered the family and there would be less problems at home”, Nneji explained.

    Another member of the team, Mrs Abimbola, told the Ojora of Ijora Kingdom, Oba Aromire, that when they go out on community outreach and for impact, they invite women and children and educate them.

    “We create awareness in them and they open up to us and we take up their matter with the police up to the court and get the offender prosecuted”.

    Mrs Abimbola urged the monarch to create the opportunity for FIDA to move its legal clinic to Ijora Badia to speak with the women and their children, some of whom may be suffereing violations and defilements, while discouraging women to respect their husbands to ensure peace at home.

    Mrs Fadahunsi said not all cases are taken up to the court explaining that through mediation, a number of cases have been resolved and peace restored to most homes.

  • Facebook plans crack down on abuses

    SOCIAL media platform Facebook has said it had taken steps to crack down on abuses to ensure safety of data on its platform.

    Its founder, Mark Zuckerberg, said in a statement that the step was also to ensure that people’s trust was gained.

    “We are announcing some important steps for the future of our platform.

    “These steps involve taking action on potential past abuse and putting stronger protections in place to prevent future abuse.

    “Protecting people’s information is the most important thing we do at Facebook.

    “What happened with Cambridge Analytica was a breach of Facebook’s trust.

    “More importantly, it was a breach of the trust people place in Facebook to protect their data when they share it,” Zuckerberg said

    He said people use Facebook to connect with friends and others, using all kinds of apps.

    Zuckerberg said Facebook’s platform helped make apps social; so one’s calendar could show ones friends’ birthdays, for instance.

    He added that to do this, Facebook allowed people to log into apps and share who their friends were and some information about them.

    “Henceforth, Facebook will require that developers get people’s permission before they access the data needed to run their apps.

    “For instance, a photo-sharing app has to get specific permission from the owner to access one’s photos.

    “Over the years, we have introduced more guardrails, including in 2014, when we began reviewing apps that request certain data before they could launch.

    “We are also introducing more granular controls for people to decide what information to share with apps.

    “These actions will prevent any app like Aleksandr Kogan’s from being able to access so much data today.

    “But even with these changes, abuses of our platform and the misuse of people’s data still occur and we know we need to do more,” the founder of the platform said.

    He explained that Facebook would set a higher standard on how developers build on the platform; what people should expect from them and from the Facebook itself.

    The Facebook founder said that the company had reviewed the platform, investigate all apps that had access to large amounts of information to reduce data access.

    “Facebook will be making the choices of users managing their apps more prominent and easier.

    “In the coming weeks, we will expand Facebook’s bug bounty programme so that people can also report to us if they find misuses of data by app developers,” Zuckerberg said.

     

     

     

     

  • How we survived abuses, by victims

    How we survived abuses, by victims

    The human rights community joined others to mark the Human Rights Day on December 10. Victims of rights abuses shared their experiences at a forum organised by the Women Empowerment and Legal Aid (WELA). ADEBISI ONANUGA reports

    December 10 is celebrated yearly across the world as the Human Rights Day.

    The  date was chosen to honour the United Nations (UN) General Assembly’s adoption and proclamation, on December 10, 1948, of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

    At a forum organised by the Women Empowerment and Legal Aid (WELA), founded by Mrs Funmi Falana, victims of rights abuses shared their experiences.

     

    ‘How I lost my son

    Balikis Bankole (20) was yet to recover from the trauma arising from abuses she suffered when her husband and mother in-law, a herbalist, forcefully took her five month old son away  and sent her out of her matrimonial home. The incident happened in Lafenwa, Aiyetoro, Ogun State.

    Weeping profusely, Bankole said she lost her father in 2012 while she was in senior secondary three.  She learnt a trade as she could not continue with her education.

    She got pregnant for Kassim Adeyeye, moved in with him and subsequently became his wife.

    Five months after the birth of her son, Bankole had a disagreement with  Adeyeye, which resulted into a fight. She claimed that both her husband and mother in-law allegedly beat her and tore her dress to shreds.

    Her baby was taken from her back while she was told never to set foot in their matrimonial home again or she would die. She said it was her neighbours who gave her clothes to wear to cover her nakedness.

    Bankole stayed with friends in Aiyetoro and waited in vain to be reunited with her five month-old boy and husband.

    With her life being threatend, she left the town for Iyana Ipaya, Lagos, to stay with a relative. Few days later, she received a phone call from her mother in-law informing her that her son was dead.

    She rushed back to Aiyetoro, asked to see the corpse or where her son was buried. She was again warned never to return.

    Bankole was introduced to Jashabel Touch-a-Heart Foundation, founded by Mrs Favour Benson, who brought her to WELA, which is fighting for justice for Bankole.

     

    ‘I was thrown out with my kids’

    Mrs Pascaline Chigbogu had a happy marriage with her husband, Uchechukwu, before problems arose.

    Chigbogu was into packaging and marketing of anointing oil before she met her husband, who sold fairly used clothes (okrika).

    They got married and had six children. She introduced her  husband  to the anointing oil business and both deployed their resources into it. The business grew and they added herbal mixtures production to it. They employed workers.

    They bought properties around Sango and Ota areas of Ogun State, and acquired five buses for distribution and marketing of their products. They also acquired personal cars.

    Mrs Chigbogu said she suffered domestic violence through constant beating from her husband. She chose to endure because she loved her husband and for the sake of her children.

    One day, her husband walked in to inform her that he was tired of the marriage.

    He asked her to move out of their home and to give him space. Before she knew what was happening, she was thrown out of the house located around Obasanjo bus stop, Sango, with her six children.

    When her family came from Anambra to settle the dispute, the husband allegedly refused to allow them in.

    While the going was good, she never bothered to find out about their finances and properties because she trusted her husband. All along, she thought they were jointly owned.

    Chigbogu said she discovered too late that all the properties and company documents were all in her husband’s name. She was sent out of her matrimonial home with nothing. The car she was using was taken away from her.  She had no personal bank account.

    With WELA’s assistance, Chigbogu now lives with her six children around Toll Gate area in Sango. WELA is presently in court fighting to get justice for her.

     

    ‘How I was forced into early marriage’

    Mrs Rhoda Ogunenika said she was forced to marry Francis, a man old enough to be her father, by her elder sister.  She was living with her aunt when her sister came to take her to Lagos, promising her a better life.

    She said she moved in with her sister but lamented that it was the beginning of her nightmares.

    Ogunenika said Francis had several wives and kept them all in his house located around Allen junction, Ikeja.

    She said her husband was so mean to the extent that their freedom was restricted except when going to the market. She also claimed to have suffered domestic violence in the hand of her husband.

    Ogunenika said her case was reported to WELA through Jashabel Touch-a-Heart Foundation.

    Mrs Falana said the house where Francis kept all his wives was like a dungeon.

    She said Francis was very hostile when they first visited to secure Ogunenika’s release.

    According to Mrs Falana, it took a team of Policemen to break down the door before the group could secure Ogunenika’s freedom.

    She now lives around Yaya-Abatan in Ogba with her four children. She was married to Francis for 12 years, during which she suffered and endured several abuses.

    WELA is presently in court seeking to get compensation for her.

     

    ‘Jobless women suffer

    most abuse’

    Fifteen students from various universities and polytechnics were inducted as WELA Ambassadors against Domestic Violence and Gender-based Violence. They also got funds to assist in their education.

    Four women who have suffered domestic violence were also issued with cheques to start small businesses; two other women were empowered with grinding machines.

    Mrs Falana said the women needed to be empowered because most them suffer violence from their husbands because they had no jobs.

    “We believe that economic empowerment is what we need to get out of domestic violence,” she said.

    She said WELA would provide them with more funds to expand their businesses if they show commitment.

    Mrs Falana she said the fight against domestic violence was a collective one.

    She deplored the rising incidences of defilement of underage girls and rape by men.

    Mrs Flana urged victims to speak up rather than covering up such incidents for fear of stigmatisation.

    According to her, unless perpetrators are exposed, the problem would persist.

    “We need to expose them, get them arrested and prosecuted and ensure  justice is done,” she said.

  • Turkish tales of right abuses

    For every advocate of good governance and true democracy, the events and developments in Turkey would be of serious concern. Revelations on the happenings in that country indicated that Turkey has finally become a recluse state, where rights of individuals are not regarded.

    As a keen follower of activities in Turkey, I realized that the people of Turkey have found themselves under a government that has a penchant for abuse of fundamental human rights. It has become a recurrent occurrence. The Justice Development Party-led government has proven beyond doubt its likeness for suppressing opposing views.

    For instance, a recent report by the United States of America on rights abuses perpetrated in Turkey under the Justice Development Party (AKP) revealed that the media, the judiciary and other business interests owned by perceived enemies of the government were targeted.

    The last November election in Turkey saw the height of human right abuses. It was an event that saw the biggest clampdown on the press through forceful takeover of privately-owned media by government forces. It was a sour taste for those who chose to be in the opposition parties.  It is on record that opposition parties were denied level playing grounds as their campaign were grounded by government forces. It was not different for the judiciary; judges were coerced to do government biddings. Justice became expensive as access was denied citizens because of government’s insistence on compromising the course of justice in Turkey.

    Turks continued to lament under the draconian rule of the AKP. It was a challenging security environment as captured by the US reports on the rights abuses in Turkey. The election that produced the present government of Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu was, to say the least, a terror of sorts meted on the opposition. For example, reports have it that during the build-up to the election, attacks on opposition party officials and campaign staffers in some cases “hindered contestants’ ability to campaign freely”. A number of Turks expressed concern that media restrictions during the campaign period “reduced voters’ access to a plurality of views and information during the election process on November 1, which led to the formation of a government on November 24 by Prime Minister Davutoglu, even though it was considered a generally free election”.

    Another disturbing experience was that prior to the November election in Turkey, the authorities had arrested estimated 30 journalists, most charged under anti-terror laws or for alleged association with an illegal organization. What is more, Turkish government also exerted pressure on the media through security force raids on media companies; confiscation of publications with allegedly objectionable materials; criminal investigation of journalists and editors for alleged terrorism links or for insulting the president and other senior government officials; reprisals against the business interests of owners of some media conglomerates; fines; and internet blocking.

    I read with displease the reports that revealed that pressure on Kurdish-language and opposition media outlets in the Southeast reduced vulnerable populations’ access to information about the conflict with the PKK. A number of media outlets affiliated with the Fethullah Gulen movement were dropped from digital media platforms (cable providers) and five outlets were taken under the control of government-appointed trustees. Representatives of Gulenist and some liberal media outlets were denied access to official events and in some cases, denied press accreditation.

    It was obvious that the AKP led government is fighting a perceived enemy when their action led to most Gulen-affiliated television channels to lose a significant portion of their audience after the pay-television platforms dropped them, beginning with Tivibu on September 27. By October 15, four (out of six) digital pay-television platforms had dropped the channels. The government’s media regulatory institution, RTUK, had warned the operators that the removal violated broadcasting requirements for platform operators to be fair and impartial and was inconsistent with standard legal procedure. Despite the RTUK warning, a fifth pay-television platform, Turksat, dropped Gulen-affiliated channels on November 16.

    Turkish government has the culture of manipulating the legal system to get at opponent. It was emphasized in a report that Turkish authorities used the anti-terror laws during the year to detain individuals and seize assets, including media companies, of individuals alleged to be associated with the Gulen movement, designated by the government during the year as the Fethullah Gulen terrorist organization. For instance, on October 28, police used teargas and water cannons to disperse crowds of supporters in front of the office building housing the Kanalturk and Bugun TV television stations, then forced their way into the building and shut down the two channels during a live broadcast. The police action was the result of a court ruling creating a board of trustees to manage the stations’ parent company, Koza Ipek Holding. Critics of the takeover cited procedural irregularities and asserted that the media outlets were targeted for criticizing the government. Government officials denied any political motives, stating the connection between Koza Ipek Holding and Gulen justified the action.

    In the report, it was also noted that writers and publishers were subject to prosecution on grounds of defamation, denigration, obscenity, separatism, terrorism, subversion, fundamentalism, and insulting religious values. It said authorities investigated or continued court cases against myriad publications and publishers during the year. On December 15, a Gaziantep court ruled that the books of three authors, Hasan Cemal, Tugce Tatri, and Muslum Yucel, would be pulled from bookstores because the books were found among the possessions of two persons arrested for PKK membership.

    The report said that with the consolidation of media outlets under a few conglomerates that had other business interests, media entities increasingly practiced self-censorship to remain eligible for government contracts.

    Human rights organizations such as Freedom House noted that certain companies with media outlets critical of the government were targeted in tax investigations and forced to pay fines.

    The State Department report also stated that several organisations, including the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) and Freedom House, reported authorities’ increased abuse of the anti-terror law and criminal code to prosecute journalists, writers, editors, publishers, translators, rights activists, lawyers, elected officials, and students for exercising their right to free expression.

  • Abuses of birthday celebrations

    Since time immemorial, the celebration of birthday brings its own thrills and frills to friends, acquaintances, relatives among other people that form an integral part of the society. To many, it is a period to celebrate their achievements made all year while others see it as a moment to reflect and offer thanks to God for sustaining their life. Thus, it is not unusual to see celebrants and their guests trooping into eateries, amusement parks, exclusive resorts, churches and other places of interests all in a bid to celebrate. However, as casual as the practice may appear, the dimensions birthday celebrations take on campuses are, particularly, disturbing.

    I had a remarkable encounter. It was on a weekend when the sun was still blaring in its ferocious rage. I was passing through a major street at Tanke, the large community that hosts the University of Ilorin(UNILORIN) permanent campus. I was going about my own business when I ran into a scene that gave me more than my bargain. A female student was half-naked while about seven fellow students, including males, were bathing her with muddy water. I became so baffled as to why such a young woman would subjet herself to such untoward ordeal all in the guise of a birthday celebration.  While I kept fuming deep within myself over the barbarity, a group of her supposed friends were screaming the traditional happy birthday wishes.

    The above episode is just a tip of an iceberg of the many abuses that follow birthday celebrations among students. While being drunk with the euphoria of its celebration, students are being hoodwinked into believing that throwing lavish parties will reinforce their social credibility or make them more popular among their friends. For instance, there happened a time when youthful exuberances occasioned by a birthday celebration led to the death of a final year student of Ladoke Akintola University of Technology (LAUTECH) in Ogbomoso. He was reported to have engaged in a fight with a hostel guard that led to his death. He allegedly instigated the fight when the guard accused and denied him entry into the hostel at midnight. He was reportedly returning in the midnight after attending a birthday night party. Is this not a hard price for frivolity?

    As a matter of fact, the new dimension it now assumed transcends what is expected of any reasonable celebration. The financial net worth of the potential celebrators goes a long way in determining how the bash turns out. This often results in high indulgence in wide-scaled smoking, consumption of alcoholic drinks, and sometimes illicit sexual activities. We have also had many cases of campus birthday celebrations that later ended in commission of varying degree of crime, such as gang rape of unsuspecting female students. In extension, night party, in general, is a veritable ground for all sort of youth-related violence. Is this not an outward transition from mere fun to criminality?

    Let me digress a bit. It is often believed the education of both the mind and body is essential for every youth. However, the storyline is somewhat contrasting as most  students cherish ultimately the beautification of the body rather than educating the minds. This is grossly a clear departure from the founding ideologies of our past heroes who used education as a tool to fight against oppression and achieved freedom which we all enjoy today.

    Our campuses have been turned into breeding grounds for cultism, indecent dressing among female students, financial shenanigans at the students’ union level, examination malpractices among other vices that keep betraying the values and purpose of education.The situation is really monstrous as it is apparently affecting the employability of the teeming youth population.

    The bottom line of the discourse is that immorality is fast gaining consciousness among the youth of today, particularly the students. Taking a critical assessment of the quality of graduates

    that are being churned out of the  institutions, it wouldn’t take a second to conclude that our education system is in the doldrums, and of course the situation needs a special emergency intervention to redeem its lost glory.

    In a nutshell, this writer is not out to condemn the celebration of birthday and its associated vanities. This article seeks to put caution on the excesses and the likely consequences its abuse might have on our primary assignment on campus. Therefore, it becomes imperative that an end should be put to all form of youthful exuberances that have hitherto jeopardised the future of many students.

     

     

  • CPC vows to curb consumer rights abuses

    CPC vows to curb consumer rights abuses

    The Director General, Consumer Protection Council Nigeria (CPC), Dr. Dupe Atoki, has declared that the council will curb consumer rights abuses in the country by forcing the major companies to comply with international standards.

    Noting that the telecoms, aviation, banking and power sectors have the highest level of consumer rights abuses, she said the CPC has adopted major strategies of enforcing consumer rights and ensuring company’s compliance with the council’s enabling laws.

    These strategies, she said, are sectoral intervention, litigation and improving the visibility of the council by using new methods and the redress of consumer complaints. These strategies, she said, are already yielding positive results.

    Speaking at a public lecture organised by the Centre for Human Rights, Faculty of Law, University of Lagos, the CPC boss said that a successful intervention in the activities of usually the dominant player in a given sector resonates into a bandwagon compliance and block adherence to regulation and best practice.

    Atoki explained that “Sectoral intervention was identified as a major strategy for the evaluation of business operations under the various sectors in order to arrest identified adverse trends and thereby resolve individual complaints in the long run.”

    She explained that this strategy is intended to focus on a sector by undertaking in-depth analysis of consumer complaints and total evaluation of business practices to identify systemic irregularities.

    She noted, albeit happily, at the lecture entitled “The state of consumer rights protection in Nigeria”, that the council has already carried out successful major interventions in the food and beverage and aviation sectors which modified the behaviours of all the other players in those sectors for best practices.

    In order to enforce consumer rights, she said that CPC also has the strategy of criminal prosecution of recalcitrant businesses or litigation to achieve satisfactory redress, which is already paying dividends.

    Acknowledging the low awareness of consumer rights in the country, Mrs. Atoki said that the council was undertaking different measures to ensure increased knowledge of consumer rights and responsibilities.

    These measures, she noted, are hosting of consumer roundtable on phone rights, publication of a compendium of the rights of telecom subscribers, launch of ‘Check the Best Before Date’ campaign.

    Other measures, according to her, are revamping and updating the council’s website on a regular basis, using of social media to interact with consumers and establishing a strong media presence with a view to remaining in the consciousness of consumers.

    Lamenting the wanton gross consumer rights abuses also in sectors such as satellite television, land transport, property, hospitality, food and beverage, home appliances, automobile and electronic commerce, the council’s boss regretted that “while free market is currently operational in Nigeria, all forms of consumer abuse still pervade virtually every sector of the economy denying consumers their rights.

    Highlighting the abuses, she said that in the telecom sector, for instance, “consumers still contend with drop calls, unsolicited texts, calls, poor network, credit wipe off, amongst others, while consumers in the aviation sector experience regular delays and cancellation of flights without notice, damage and loss of baggage without compensation etcetera.”

    In the banking sector, she said consumers experience ATM dispense error cases with prolonged resolution period, POS terminal issues, unexplained debit on consumer accounts. Equally, in the power sector, “consumers complain of outrageous estimated billings, non-provision of transformers, metres, wrongful disconnections and inadequate electricity supply.”

    In the satellite television sector, she regretted that consumers were also struggling with regular disruptions, wrongful connections, poor service delivery and lack of redress for complaints. “Overloading, non refund of money when vehicles breakdown and use of dilapidated vehicles add to the burden of consumers of public transport services,” noted Atoki.

    Similarly, Dr. Dupe Atoki lamented that “In the property sector, developers fail to keep to agreement terms, tie down consumers’ deposits for prolonged period and sometimes deliver substandard houses to consumers.”

    Consumers under the hospitality sector were identified as not free from the abuses as “many hotels fail to live up to their claims/required standard, while vendors of holiday packages do not deliver on promises made.” Food and beverages industry are also guilty, said the DG, as foreign substances in drinks, sale of expired products, adulteration, improper storage, short measure, etcetera are rampant in the sector.

    “Undiscerning consumers go home with substandard home appliances while non adherence to warranty by car dealers, sale of substandard spare parts, unqualified mechanics and ill-equipped workshops result in safety issues and loss of consumers hard earned money,” bemoaned the DG.

    In the electronic commerce, the council’s DG lamented that the infringements of consumers’ rights here were completely unfair and potentially dangerous to the consumer. She said some of these abuses in this sector were unsolicited commercial communications and unfair use of personal information.

    However, while the agency is cognisant of its challenges and having evolved some strategies to deliver on its mandate within available means, Mrs. Atoki still stressed that several factors were militating against the council’s bid to effectively protect the over 160 million consumers across all sectors of the economy whose rights are wantonly abused.

    According to the DG, these factors are “perceived overlapping duties of regulatory agencies, impunity of business-peddling of influence, protection of self-interest by trade associations, lack of consumer awareness and apathy, inadequate funding, inadequate spread, understaffing and dearth of specialised staff, gaps in the CPC Act.”

    Underscoring the point, Atoki said “Market failures violate consumer’s rights and inhibit their welfare in the marketplace. Impunity of businesses, rivalry among regulatory bodies due to seeming overlapping functions and protection of self interest by trade associations are part of the challenges inhibiting the effective protection of Nigerian consumers.”

    Nonetheless, she asserted that genuine businesses must comply with regulations and specified standards for goods and services in the country adding that the political might of the federal government must be available to support the council at all times to put recalcitrant businesses in check.

    She urged regulatory agencies to collaborate with each other in order to foster seamless relationship in the regulation of businesses to ensure effective protection of consumers.

    “The council recognises the need for aggressive consumer awareness campaign. However, consumers should be more aggressive, proactive and disposed to complaining when dissatisfied with a product or service,” adding that mere grumble is not an option.

  • Army faults Amnesty report on rights abuses

    Army faults Amnesty report on rights abuses

    The Army has condemned the recent Amnesty International reports which accused the Joint Task Force (JTF) of gross human rights violations in some parts of the North.

    The Chief of Army Staff (COAS), Lt-Gen. Azubuike Ihejirika, told reporters in Abuja yesterday that the methodology used by the International Human Rights Group was faulty.

    Represented by the Chief of Civil Military Affairs, Maj.-Gen Bitrus Kwaji, he described the report as unbalanced and highly subjective in favour of the aspirations of Boko Haram.

    He said the military was never contacted or consulted when the Amnesty International was gathering information and conducting interviews from members of the sect from which they concluded their report.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) recalled that Amnesty International last week in a report entitled: “Nigeria: Trapped in the Circle of Violence’’, highlighted the nation’s security challenges, oil spills and demolition of houses.

    “The serious human rights violations carried out by the security forces include; enforced disappearance, torture, extrajudicial executions, the torching of homes and detention without trial,’’ the report said.

    Gen. Ihejirika, however, debunked such allegations as biased and ill-conceived with the intention of rubbishing the efforts which the military had been making to restore peace, protect lives and properties, law and order.

    According to him, I am happy to observe that Amnesty International recognised that all the acts of Boko Haram are against Nigerian laws.

    “They also recognised the fact that Boko Haram attacks were against civilians, this was a crime against humanity.

    “We, however, disagreed with the mythology used to get the reports which did not give the military fair hearing.

    “In their report regarding the methodology used, it admitted it spoke with affected members of the public in Borno, Bauchi, Kano and Federal Capital Territory (FCT)

    “The Amnesty International also read newspaper reports and statements from Boko Haram.

    “No where did they state that they got in touch with us. They never made any effort to reach us. We have our modes of operation, which were being complied with by our officers.”

    “There have not been any reports of violation or our officers going outside their rules of engagement,” he noted.

    He said, “we want to say that we have not been contacted by Amnesty International on any act of high-handedness by our soldiers, of which their commander is a battle tested professional.’’

    He emphasised that the Amnesty International should have felt the pulse of the military.

    The Army Chief said that Amnesty International report was skewed in favour of Boko Haram, not taking into cognisance of military efforts to ensure peace and security of law abiding citizens.

    He debunked the allegations that JTF was in anyway involved in the killing of the civil war hero, Gen. Mohammed Shuwa.

    Gen. Ihejirika said, “such allegations casts doubt on military patriotism and that they (JTF) cannot kill one of their own

     

  • Human Rights Watch accuses Govt, Boko Haram of abuses

    Human Rights Watch accuses Govt, Boko Haram of abuses

    Islamist sect Boko Haram and Nigerian security forces might have committed crimes against humanity during three years of conflict that has killed at least 2,800 people, Human Rights Watch (HRW) said yesterday.

    Crimes against humanity are offences that can lead to prosecution by the International Criminal Court (ICC).

    Boko Haram says it is fighting to create an Islamic state in Nigeria, and its fighters have killed hundreds in bomb and gun attacks since launching an uprising in 2009. The sect has become the No. 1 security threat to Africa’s top energy producer.

    The report documents multiple cases of abuses by Islamists, including brutal killings of Christian civilians and the assassination of Muslim clerics who criticise them.

    Some of these attacks were “deliberate acts leading to population ‘cleansing’ based on religion or ethnicity”. The ICC defines crimes against humanity as grave offences that are “widespread or systematic”.

    There was no immediate reaction from Boko Haram.

    The report also accused Nigeria’s joint military and police joint taskforce (JTF) of “physical abuse, secret detentions, extortion, burning of houses, stealing money during raids, and extrajudicial killings of suspects”.

    “Despite allegations of widespread security force abuses, the Nigerian authorities have rarely held anyone accountable … further solidifying the culture of impunity for violence.”

    The study came as Nigeria’s military tried to fend off accusations of a shooting spree in the insurgent stronghold of Maiduguri on Monday that residents say killed at least 30 civilians.

    Asked about the report, JTF spokesman for Borno state, of which Maiduguri is the capital, reiterated a statement on Wednesday that there was no evidence of such abuses.

    “There is no established or recorded case of extrajudicial killing, torture, arson or arbitrary arrest by the JTF in Borno state”, where most of the violence has occurred, he said.

    “It is important to state that terrorists killed were during gun battles with the JTF troops”, not executions, he said.

    The military campaign against Boko Haram has had some success – limiting Boko Haram’s ability to carry out large scale attacks, but the heavy-handedness has angered locals.

    “These killings, and clashes with the group, have raised the death toll of those killed by Boko Haram or security forces to more than 2,800 people since 2009,” the HRW report said.