Tag: Amnesty International

  • Amnesty International report on northern killings slammed for ‘fictional fatalities’, ‘skewed data’

    Amnesty International report on northern killings slammed for ‘fictional fatalities’, ‘skewed data’

    The recent Amnesty International report alleging a soaring death toll in the country’s northern region, has been branded as exaggerated, misleading and potentially inflammatory.

    The report titled: “Nigeria: Mounting death toll and looming humanitarian crisis amid unchecked attacks by armed groups,” claims that more than 10,000 people have been killed by bandits and armed groups in Northern Nigeria since President Bola Ahmed Tinubu took office in 2023. 

    Amnesty further claimed that 672 villages were sacked during this period, painting a grim picture of government inaction and deepening humanitarian despair.

    But in a rebuttal, a public commentator and policy observer based in Gboko, Tersoo Chiahemen, dismissed the report as a “hatchet job” devoid of empirical grounding or methodological rigor. 

    In a strongly worded statement titled: “Amnesty’s Nigeria Report: Fictional Fatalities, Factual Failures,” Chiahemen accused the rights organization of abandoning its professional ethos and peddling unverified figures that “risk exacerbating tensions” in an already fragile security environment.

    “Amnesty has once again set off alarm bells with a sensationalist report… What an armchair report with concocted tissues of lies and skewed narrative,” Chiahemen wrote.

    At the heart of the controversy is Amnesty’s claim that 6,896 deaths occurred in Benue State and 2,630 in Plateau State, making up more than 98% of the fatalities it ascribes to the entire country. 

    Chiahemen called these numbers not just implausible, but dangerous, especially given the ethnic and religious sensitivities in the affected states.

    In contrast, data from the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project (ACLED), a respected international conflict-monitoring organization, presents a markedly different picture. 

    He noted that according to ACLED’s records from 2023 to 2025: Benue recorded 497 deaths (2023), 650 (2024), and 155 (2025).

    Plateau saw 401 deaths (2023), 320 (2024), and 109 (2025).

    These figures put the combined total at 2,132 fatalities, which he said is a far cry from the over 9,500 deaths attributed to the two states by Amnesty.

    “How did Amnesty arrive at its own numbers that indicated nearly five times higher than those from ACLED? Were those sources independently verified? Were the deaths categorized properly?” he queried. 

    Chiahemen also accused Amnesty of cherry-picking conflict zones and sensationalizing tragedies for media attention, without offering practical recommendations or meaningful solutions.

    “It has become clear that Amnesty is ill-equipped to grasp the complexity of local dynamics. Instead, we see politically charged headlines, armchair activism, and shallow statistics,” he said. 

    He suggested that the organization’s operations in Nigeria have morphed from rigorous rights monitoring to “soft-power coercion,” serving external interests and undermining efforts toward stability and peacebuilding.

    Read Also: Amnesty International’s Nigeria Report: Fictional Fatalities, Factual Failures

    Chiahemen also took aim at Amnesty’s assertion that the Nigerian government is “doing little beyond media statements,” calling it an unfair and baseless smear.

    “The Tinubu administration has deployed strategic military operations, invested in community-led security architecture, and prioritized peacebuilding efforts. Yes, challenges persist, but to claim state inaction is both inaccurate and unfair,” he said.

    Chiahemen urged Amnesty to submit its report for independent auditing, release its sources and data collection methods, or collaborate with trusted institutions like ACLED and credible Nigerian civil society organizations to produce more balanced and factual reporting.

    “Until then, we are left with a troubling truth: Amnesty’s report is not a wake-up call, but clearly a work of fiction, and one that does more harm than good,” he said. 

  • Amnesty International’s Nigeria Report: Fictional Fatalities, Factual Failures

    Amnesty International’s Nigeria Report: Fictional Fatalities, Factual Failures

    • A Response to ‘Nigeria: Mounting Death Toll and Looming Humanitarian Crisis,’ 
    • By Tersoo Chiahemen

    Amid Unchecked Attacks by Armed Groups’

    Amnesty International has once again set off alarm bells with a sensationalist report claiming that over 10,000 people have been killed by bandits and armed groups in Northern Nigeria since President Bola Ahmed Tinubu assumed office two years ago. With dramatic headlines like “Bandits Sacked 672 Villages and Killed Over 10,000 under Tinubu,” Amnesty has managed to attract widespread media attention but very little scrutiny. And, scrutiny is what this report sorely needs.

    The report purports that 6,896 people were killed in Benue and 2,630 in Plateau, representing over 98% of the deaths it attributes to the entire country. This is not just improbable—it is inflammatory and potentially dangerous. By exaggerating fatalities in two ethnically and religiously sensitive states, the report risks exacerbating tensions and deepening divisions.

    This kind of data distortion is not merely sloppy, it is reckless.

    Contrary to Amnesty’s inflated and unverified claims, data from the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project (ACLED), a globally respected and methodologically sound organization tells a starkly different story. ACLED, which uses daily, source-based data collection methods and maintains onground presence, reports that total fatalities in Benue and

    Plateau from 2023 to 2025 stand at 2,132:

    – Benue: 497 (2023), 650 (2024), 155 (2025)

    – Plateau: 401 (2023), 320 (2024), 109 (2025)

    (Source: ACLED Data for Nigeria, 2023–2025)

    These figures show a downward trend, not a bloodbath. One must ask: how did Amnesty arrive at numbers nearly five times higher than those from ACLED? What sources did it use? Were those sources independently verified? Were the deaths categorized by cause criminality, conflict, accidents, or natural causes? The report answers none of these vital questions, revealing a glaring lack of transparency and rigour.

    Read Also: Tinubu to inaugurate Lagos-Calabar Coastal Highway, other landmark projects

    Amnesty International was once a beacon of rigorous research and moral clarity in the fight for global human rights. But if this report is any indication, the organization has traded professionalism for propaganda. In Nigeria, Amnesty now increasingly appears ill-equipped to grasp the complexity of local dynamics. Instead of nuanced analysis, it offers politically charged headlines, armchair activism, and shallow statistics.

    To suggest that the Nigerian government is “doing little beyond media statements” is a baseless smear. The Tinubu administration has deployed strategic military operations, invested in community-led security architecture, and prioritized disarmament and peacebuilding in volatile regions.

    Yes, challenges persist, especially in rural and border areas, but the blanket assertion of state inaction is both inaccurate and unfair.

    The question must now be asked: Is Amnesty International still committed to truth and justice in Nigeria, or has it become a tool for sensationalism and soft-power coercion? Its latest report bereft of methodological clarity, inflated in its numbers, and dangerously divisive in its conclusions demands a response not just from the Nigerian government but from the international community and Amnesty’s own leadership.

    Amnesty should immediately subject this report to independent audit and publicly release its sources and methodologies. It should engage with credible data institutions like ACLED and Nigerian civil society actors to support it in doing a proper and professionally grounded job. More importantly, it must ask itself whether it still has the moral and analytical capacity to do the work it claims to champion.

    Until then, we are left with a troubling truth: Amnesty’s report is not a wake-up call—it is a work of fiction. And one that does more harm than good.

    * Chiahemen lives in Gboko

  • CSO faults Amnesty International over ‘Inflated’ death toll, defends FG’s response to Plateau attack

    CSO faults Amnesty International over ‘Inflated’ death toll, defends FG’s response to Plateau attack

    A civil society organisation based in Jos, Coalition for Peace and Security Monitoring in Nigeria (CPSMN), has condemned the latest report by Amnesty International on the recent attack in Zikke village, Bassa LGA of Plateau State, describing it as “grossly exaggerated, misleading, and detached from reality.”

    In a statement released on Monday and signed by its Executive Director, Pastor John Bulus, the group accused Amnesty of fanning the flames of fear and tension with “fabricated figures and alarmist claims” that do not reflect the true situation on ground.

    “We strongly reject the distorted narrative pushed by Amnesty International. Their claim that 1,336 people were killed in just three months in Plateau State is not only outrageous but completely unverified. Where is their evidence? Who gave them these numbers?” Bulus queried.

    According to the group, CPSMN has been on ground in Zikke and other affected communities, assessing the situation, supporting survivors, and working closely with local leaders and security agencies.

    “While we acknowledge the attack in Zikke and mourn the lives lost, we will not sit back and allow a foreign NGO with no presence here to weaponise our pain for global headlines,” the statement said.

    Pastor Bulus maintained that the federal and Plateau State governments have continued to intensify security operations in volatile areas, adding that collaborative efforts between the military, police, and local vigilante groups have significantly reduced the scale of violence in recent months.

    Read Also: Police may sue Amnesty International over publication

    “It is irresponsible and dangerous for Amnesty International to overlook these efforts and spread narratives that only embolden criminals and discourage citizens. Our communities are not abandoned — they are being protected.”

    He also criticised Amnesty’s call for independent investigations, saying the group has no credibility to make such demands when it has consistently ignored government responses and local efforts at peacebuilding.

    “We challenge Amnesty International to provide a list of the names, dates, and locations of the so-called 1,336 victims. Until then, we consider their report nothing more than a sensational, data-free attack on the Nigerian state,” the CPSMN declared.

    The group further urged the international community to disregard Amnesty’s “reckless propaganda” and instead support homegrown solutions being championed by civil society, religious leaders, and security stakeholders on the Plateau.

    “Nigeria needs partners, not provokers. The people of Plateau State need healing and unity — not global organisations stoking division from a distance,” Bulus added.

  • Police may sue Amnesty International over publication

    Police may sue Amnesty International over publication

    The police have vowed to take legal actions against Amnesty International on what it described as false publication over the bad governance protest if there is no retraction.

    NPF demanded an immediate retraction and public apology concerning a publication titled: “Bloody August: Nigeria government’s violent crackdown on and bad governance protests” via a letter dated January 6, 2025 to Amnesty International. 

    According to a statement on Tuesday by the Force Public Relations Officer, ACP Olumuyiwa Adejobi, the Police said: “The publication in question, which includes numerous unsubstantiated claims, falsely accuses the Nigeria Police of human rights violations, police brutality, and excessive violence during the August 2024 End Bad Governance protests. Upon careful review and investigation, the NPF categorically rejects these baseless allegations, affirming that the claims are entirely false and without foundation.

    “The NPF emphasises that during the protests, the Police acted with restraint and professionalism, even at the highest point of provocation and violent  attacks, adhering to global best practices and using minimal force where necessary. Evidence, including national media coverage, demonstrates the Police’s efforts to maintain law and order while safeguarding peaceful protesters. Criminal elements attempting to exploit the protests were however arrested and dealt with according to law.

    Read Also: Police burst Cabbie ‘killers’, arrest seven suspects

    “The Nigeria Police Force strongly believes that this misleading publication undermines the trust and confidence it has worked diligently to build with Nigerian citizens and residents. The Force further underscores that such false claims harm the reputation of the organization and demoralize its officers who risk their lives to protect the public.

    “In light of these falsehoods, the NPF has demanded that Amnesty International issues a formal retraction and public apology within seven days. Failure to comply will prompt the NPF to consider legal actions to protect its reputation”.

    Adejobi said the NPF remains committed to its duty of safeguarding the lives and property of Nigerians, upholding the law, and earning the trust of the people it serves.

  • DHQ dismisses Amnesty International’s claim of 10,000 civilian deaths in Military detention

    DHQ dismisses Amnesty International’s claim of 10,000 civilian deaths in Military detention

    ….as agency to provide proof

    The Defence Headquarters (DHQ) has described “as shocking and mischievous allegations” an allegation by Amnesty International (AI) that 10 thousand civilians died in Nigerian Military detention facilities in 14 years of counter-insurgency operations.

    The military high command refuted the allegations in a statement by the Director of Defence Media Operations, Maj-Gen Edward Buba, on Friday.

    The Amnesty International at a press conference on Thursday, December 5, had among other spurious allegations, alleged that, since the onset of Boko Haram insurgency in the North East of Nigeria (NE) over 10 thousand civilians died in Nigerian Military detention facilities 

    But the defence spokesman said the allegations lacked merit “particularly as it coming at this ending cycle stage of the counter terrorism war in the North East. 

    He said: “Though the Armed Forces is not willing to join words with Amnesty International, it is of utmost necessity to set the records straight. The Nigerian military is a professional forces which conducts its operations within the dictates of international humanitarian law and the laws of armed conflicts.

    “Though the operational environment has been complex and challenging, troop have painstakingly abide by the rules of engagement to extensively avoided civilian casualties in whatever shape or form. Additionally, whenever arrest are made, suspects are profiled, afterwhich the suspects are handed over to the appropriate agency for release or prosecution. 

    “As a deterence to unethical conducts, there are standing court martials within the operational theatres to ensure justice is immediately administered to any erring personnel during operations. Overall, It is necessary to reiterate that the armed forces under the able leadership of the Chief of Defence Staff, General Christopher Musa, remains professional in carrying out its constitutional mandates in line with global best practices.”

    The military high command, however , urged the Amnesty International to substantiate the details of the allegations to “enable the military conduct an inquiry in order to determine the authencity or otherwise of the made allegations.”

  • Police knock Amnesty International over claims on #EndBadGovernance protests

    Police knock Amnesty International over claims on #EndBadGovernance protests

    …as IGP orders investigation

    The Nigeria Police Force (NPF) on Monday, December 2, expressed displeasure over claims on #EndBadGovernance protests by the Amnesty International. 

    The police said the recent 34-page report released by Amnesty International, which alleges police culpability in the deaths and arrests of protesters, and the use of excessive force during the #EndBadGovernance protests in August 2024 are false.

    The Force refuted the allegations as unfounded, misleading, and inconsistent with incident reports submitted to the office of the Inspector-General of Police by affected Commands.

    Police reiterated that throughout the protests, it operated in compliance with established rules of engagement, including providing security for peaceful protesters. 

    Recall the Inspector-General of Police (IGP), Kayode Egbetokun, issued directives to all Commissioners of Police on managing the protests, emphasizing that officers should not deploy arms to manage protests. 

    He said that arms were only to be used when protests escalated into riots involving loss of lives and damage to property. 

    According to a statement issued by the Force Public Relations Officer, ACP Olumuyiwa Adejobi: “Even then, engagement with armed protesters was limited strictly to specialised armed units to restore order.

    “The Nigeria Police Force recorded several unpalatable incidents during the protests, which were accurately documented and publicly shared. For example, in Borno State, 4 individuals tragically lost their lives, and 34 others sustained severe injuries following an attack by suspected Boko Haram/ISWAP operatives who infiltrated the protest and detonated an Improvised Explosive Device (IED).

    “Similarly, in another isolated incident, an unregistered vehicle rammed into protesters, resulting in 2 fatalities. These events, which accounted for the total of 7 recorded deaths during the protests, were not caused by police actions.

    Read Also: Sokoto State, Hamdiyya Sidi and Amnesty International propaganda

    “Furthermore, in Kano, Kaduna, Jigawa, Nasarawa, and Niger States, some protesters displayed foreign flags, destroyed public and private property, and attacked police personnel deployed to ensure their safety. The Police Force had to employ strategic measures, including the lawful use of tear gas, to prevent further escalation and ensure public safety. 

    “The use of tear gas is a globally accepted practice for dispersing unruly crowds and was applied judiciously without recourse to live ammunition.

    “It is important to state that the police did not fire live ammunition nor cause the death of any protester. Officers demonstrated professionalism, restraint, and adherence to constitutional and international standards, even when subjected to attacks and injuries”.

    Adejobi said the arrests made during the protests targeted individuals engaging in criminal acts such as treason, vandalism, robbery, arson, and looting. 

    He said the arrests were conducted lawfully, and those detained were treated within the ambit of the law.

    “In a gesture of magnanimity, the Federal Government has since granted pardon to the individuals arrested during the protests despite the severity of their offenses, evidencing its commitment to reconciliation and national unity”, Adejobi added.

    In response to Amnesty International’s allegations, the IGP has directed a comprehensive investigation into the claims. 

    Egbetokun has also directed Commissioners of Police in the affected states to submit further detailed reports on the incidents within one week. 

    This directive, he said aims to identify any deviation from the Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs) and rules of engagement, irrespective of the security agencies involved.

    “The Nigeria Police Force remains committed to safeguarding the fundamental rights of all citizens, promoting the rule of law, and improving its operational standards based on constructive and objective feedback”, he added.

  • Sokoto State, Hamdiyya Sidi and Amnesty International propaganda

    Sokoto State, Hamdiyya Sidi and Amnesty International propaganda

    • By Abubakar Dan Bala.

    The Amnesty International(AI) that we have known for many years  use to be a a credible, independent, global non-profit organization dedicated to the promotion of human rights, justice, and equality. Founded in London in 1961, and now supported by over 10 million volunteers in 150 countries, AI is often praised for speaking up against the violation of people’s rights, regardless of race, nationality, language, religion, or any other status.

    But it has caught the virus of the very objective it set out to fight. It has become the hallmark of AI to reach far reaching conclusions without painstaking investigation and fair hearing,leading to factually wrong and misleading reports.

    AI, can in fact be described as a propaganda organization for their notoriety in raising false alarms. Amnesty International has promoted an intense anti-Sokoto State campaign with one sided reports based on heresy and unsubstantiated statements from the Tureta Shafi’u to Hamdiyya Sidi matter it has been convicted without fair trial.

    The recent incident in Sokoto State, involving the police and a young woman known as Hamdiyya Sidi, shows very clearly that even a reputable organization can be guilty of distortion of facts and misinformation. This could be the result of inexperience, non adherence to the rules of engagement, or the sheer mischief of a compromised individual operative. For whatever reason, our beloved Amnesty International evidently misfired by backing the wrong horse in the Nigerian Police Force versus Hamdiyya legal tussle, and going on to tarnish the shining image of Governor Ahmad Aliyu Sokoto who was in no way connected with the matter.

    Indeed,human rights activists like AI frequently get carried away by their sense of messianic role,such that they begin to breach the very principles they seek to protect.  Uncanny activists sometimes become guns for hire, by allowing themselves  to be bought and used as pawns in the chessboard of dirty politics, social intrigues, or economic conflicts.

    No one doubts the fact that Amnesty International continues to enjoy a measure of respect, even admiration, for its principled opposition against discrimination, torture, executions, human trafficking, and all sorts of mistreatments of persons in all countries. Tyrants ban their operation, as we see in places ruled by maximum leaders who abhor democracy and the freedom of the human soul.

    All the same, the Sokoto experience has shown that Amnesty International’s field operatives can become turncoats and work against the rule of law, the very foundation of all human rights and a free society. When human rights advocates goof, or unwittingly become propagandists they act in a way that contradicts the lofty objectives and noble mission of their organisation.

    Let us take a closer look at the Hamdiyya Sidi Sharif episode. This young woman is standing trial before a sharia court in Achida town, Wurno Local Government Area of Sokoto for alleged attempt to breach public peace. The police prosecutor said Hamdiyya was arrested for “inciting women against the government by telling them to forcefully take over government properties.”

    According to the police, the village head of Sabon Birnin Daji, in the Wurno area council, reported that Hamdiyya had sought his permission to speak to the women in the town about a matter of urgent importance to their welfare. She had claimed to represent a charity organization that supports women and youths. Upon gathering the women together, Hamdiyya according to the Village Head proceeded to make inflammatory and uncomplimentary statements about the government of Sokoto State, claiming, among other, falsehoods, that Governor Ahmad Aliyu Sokoto was negligent and totally unconcerned about the insecurity in some parts of the state. She allegedly proposed that the governor would have showed more seriousness to provide security if his wife and children were kidnapped, violated or killed.

    Read Also: Sokoto State discharges 22 COVID-19 patients

    According to the police, the irate Hamdiyya strayed to the point of instigating the women to invade and forcefully occupy government properties in the area, insisting that such properties belonged to them by right. She proceeded to post her inciting speeches on social media for more effect and to further the demonization of the governor for which she was handsomely paid by the opposition.

    Alarmed by the turn of events, and desiring to prevent the breakdown of law and order in the area, the Village Head of Sabon Birnin Daji reported the disruptive conduct of Hamdiyya Sidi to the nearest police station. She was subsequently arrested and charged to court within 24 hours, according to a press statement by the Police Public Relations Officer (PPRO) Sokoto Police Command, ASP Ahmad Rufai.

    From the foregoing factual and verifiable account of what transpired at the village it is very regrettable and highly uncharitable that a reputable organization like Amnesty International could be misled into viewing the lawful arrest and due prosecution of Hamdiyya Sidi as a case of gross violation of human right. Nothing could be further from the truth. The suspect duly confessed to the offence of inciting the public to violence and instigating the people against constituted authorities, offences that are known to law and punishable by it. She was neither tortured by the police, nor unduly held in detention. It would, therefore, amount to gross distortion of facts, and a disservice to the public, for anyone to bring a charge of human rights violations against the police for a diligent discharge of their constitutional duties.

    A young adult who worked assiduously to instigate public disturbances, incite the people against constituted authorities, with the goal to precipitate violence in the community, should be made to have her day in court. Her misconduct is not covered by the right to free speech. Indeed, no freedom is ever absolute. As we say, your freedom to swing your hands must stop in front of my nose. When your swinging hands hit my face, there could be dire consequences. In the same vein, the right to free speech does not permit the Hamdiyyas’ of this world to freely advocate violent disruption of social or community life.

    There is absolutely no justification for her outburst especially as the governor is known to be alive to his responsibilities far above the duties imposed on him by the constitution. 

    It is not Amnesty International that hereby stands accused of malicious distortion and tendecious misrepresentation of facts. The fault lies with the individual who filed the jaundiced report, and who went ahead to malign the name and the person of Governor Ahmad Aliyu Sokoto, obviously, for politics reasons. Let it be on record that the governor did not issue any order for the arrest or mistreatment of Hamdiyya Sidi, or anyone else for that matter. The Police did not need gubernatorial approval to nab or prosecute an offender of the law, nor is it the constitutional duty of the Governor to get involved in any or every single activity of the Sokoto State Police Command, which reports directly to the Police Headquarters in Abuja. The Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria places security in the exclusive domain of the central government, and the Sokoto State Government cannot alter it.

    Indeed, all lovers of human rights and justice, especially the right to speak freely according to conscience, would readily agree with the position of Amnesty International that: “Harassment and intimidation (of anyone including) Hamdiyya Sidi is unlawful and must end. Nobody’s life should be at risk on account of their holding an opinion or expressing the same in public. It is neither conceivable nor acceptable in a democracy, for elected governor to attempt to silence and punish a person in order “to create a climate of fear for people who want to express opinions critical of government”, but with a caveat; respect for laws.

    It is grossly unfair for anyone to ascribe human right abuses to the amiable, urbane and thoroughbred democrat like Dr Ahmad Aliyu Sokoto. The misguided operative who associated the governor with “frightening intolerance of dissenting voices through heavy handed clampdown on critics”  needs to be examined for substance abuse. By impugning the impeccable character of Dr Ahmad Aliyu, the misguided AI operative violated a vital article of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR), the constitution of all true human rights activists. Article 10 of UDHR states that “everyone has the right to a fair hearing”, while Article 11 complimentarily adds that “every suspect has the right to be presumed innocent until proven guilty”. The AI agent never made effort to engage the governor and, therefore, denied him his right to a fair hearing, but went ahead to take away his innocence when he had not been proved guilty.

    Going forward, the Nigeria office of Amnesty International should closely monitor the activities of the operative responsible for the Sokoto state versus Hamdiyya Sidi legal tussle. If unchecked, he has the dubious capacity to destroy the positive image that the organization has earned through decades of dispassionate adherence to the facts.

  • On Amnesty International’s Sokoto case and selective advocacy

    On Amnesty International’s Sokoto case and selective advocacy

    By Aminu Mohammed

    Amnesty International’s recent call for the Sokoto State Government to drop purported charges against a young local  home video actress reflects a troubling pattern of selective activism. While the organization claims to be a defender of justice and human rights, its glaring silence on critical human rights issues, especially in the Southeast and Northern Nigeria, exposes a troubling bias.

    Consider the detention of underage children and their placement in the dock recently—an incident that went unremarked by Amnesty. Similarly, a naval officer was allegedly secretly detained by his boss, denied due process, and later dismissed from service. These egregious human rights violations received no condemnation from Amnesty. Why the silence? Why the selective outrage?

    The recent frenzy surrounding Sokoto is another example of Amnesty’s skewed priorities. At the heart of this controversy is a petition filed by the Village Head of Sabon Birnin Daji against a suspected questionable actress named Hamdiya, who was reported to have masqueraded as the owner of a rescue Non-Governmental Organization. This individual, through false claims and inciting videos, sought to manipulate public emotions and tarnish the state’s reputation. However, her true character was exposed when villagers in Sabon Birni, a village in Wurno Local Government Area of Sokoto State, publicly disowned her. This revelation came just a week after a respected Kannywood actor debunked her pretentious claims of providing salvation to Sokoto villagers in bandit-ravaged communities.

    Instead of lauding the efforts of concerned stakeholders, especially the Village Head who filed the petition, Amnesty International and its allies have chosen to vilify Sokoto state government. One must ask: Why is Sokoto being dragged into a matter of due process that the government had no direct hand in initiating?

    Particularly disturbing is the involvement of UK-based lawyer Bulama Bukarti, a known PDP apologist, who has joined the chorus of politically motivated attacks against Sokoto. His actions, like those of others in this orchestrated campaign, appear to prioritize partisan interests over truth and justice.

    Moreover, Amnesty’s silence on the billions extorted by bandits from Northern families under the guise of “taxes” for farming is baffling. These are real, devastating human rights violations. Families are impoverished, livelihoods destroyed, and countless lives lost, yet Amnesty seems unmoved.

    Read Also: Funding critical for Amnesty programme success —Diri

    Equally glaring is Amnesty’s inaction on the Southeast’s infamous “no-work Mondays,” imposed by non-state actors. This imposition has crippled livelihoods, forced businesses to shut down, and deprived citizens of their fundamental rights to work and provide for their families. How is this not a blatant violation of human rights? Amnesty has failed to address the plight of those who suffer under this unofficial, unlawful directive.

    In Kano, the government once demolished buildings officially allocated to citizens, leaving many without recourse. Again, Amnesty chose silence, showing a disturbing inconsistency in its advocacy. Is Amnesty a genuine human rights organization or merely a political tool serving selective interests?

    The Sokoto State Government has been unfairly dragged into this matter despite having no direct involvement in the petition against the fraudulent actress. It is commendable that the government continues to focus on maintaining peace and stability in a region already grappling with insecurity. The criticisms leveled against Sokoto Governor Ahmed Aliyu are not only unfounded but also reek of political motivations aimed at discrediting a government committed to maintaining order.

    Amnesty International’s credibility is at stake. Its selective advocacy undermines its legitimacy and alienates the very communities it claims to protect. If Amnesty genuinely seeks to defend human rights, it must address the glaring injustices perpetrated by non-state actors like bandits and the systemic failures of state institutions that harm ordinary Nigerians daily.

    This politically motivated gang-up against Sokoto must be called out for what it is—a deliberate attempt to twist facts and undermine lawful governance. The Sokoto State Government, which has remained committed to fairness and due process, must be exonerated of any wrongdoing. Let us not allow bias and selective outrage to obscure the truth.

    Governor Ahmed Aliyu’s performance continues to overshadow the efforts of detractors bent on tarnishing his administration. Those with subjective mindsets should assess the present administration objectively and recognize its achievements.

     *Mohammed is based in Sokoto.*

  • Compromised NHRC collaborating with Amnesty International to destabilize Nigeria – Group

    The Save Humanity Advocacy Centre (SHAC) has fingered the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) as a puppet in the hands of Amnesty International in its well-orchestrated plot to destabilize Nigeria.

    Following the international non-governmental organisation’s (NGO) recent alliance with the RevolutionNow group, several Nigerians began a seven-day protest to demand its eviction from the country.

    According to these Patriots, the London-based NGO have long-overstayed its welcome in the country, sponsoring different agendas to portray President Muhammadu Buhari’s government in a bad light in the international space.

    Instead of investigating the claim of these Nigerians, the NHRC unsurprisingly jumped in defence of Amnesty, a move which has become synonymous with the agency.

    In a statement signed by Executive Secretary Ibrahim Abubakar on Wednesday, the SHAC reckoned that the clearly compromised NHRC has derailed from its core mandate with a recent history of sympathising with terrorist organisations.

    The group, therefore, called on the Federal Government to investigate the NHRC and its leadership with a view to establishing the extent of its complicity in the destabilization agenda that Amnesty International is running.

    Read full statement below:

    Recent days have seen genuinely patriotic civil society organizations occupying the premises of Amnesty International to demand that the so called international human rights NGO leaves Nigeria. The call for the organization to leave Nigeria is not arbitrary as it arose out of the subversive activities that Amnesty International continues to engage in. These subversive activities, as the CSOs have pointed out, are aimed at destabilizing Nigeria to satisfy the objectives of the NGOs clients locally and internationally.

    We realize that Amnesty International has been condemning the occupation of its offices by these CSOs that are resolute on saving Nigeria from its grip. It has been blowing hot about how it would not be intimidated while also doing what it knows how to do best: lying that those protesting against its criminal activities in Nigeria are pro-government or are being sponsored to decry the crimes it is committing in Nigeria. Several ineffective groups have been conscripted to join Amnesty International’s lying train.

    The follow-follow syndrome of some compromised NGOs that have joined Amnesty International in echoing its lies appears understandable to some extent. Some of them are sub-contractors to Amnesty International in delivering projects and assignments aimed at destabilizing Nigeria – some of the NGO’s staffers actually owned such groups. Others are participating in helping it to destabilize Nigeria because of the money they are getting from the same circuit of sponsors and financiers for which Amnesty International is running errands. Some others are doing what they do out of ignorance – these are those that have the ridiculous belief that anything foreign or international is naturally superior or better than the indigenous content.

    The Save Humanity Advocacy Centre (SHAC) has been at a loss as to where it should place the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC), which has abandoned its core mandates to run errand for Amnesty International. We understand that the Executive Secretary of NHRC, Anthony Ojukwu, through a statement he caused the Director (Corporate Affairs and External Linkages), Lambert Oparah to issue, was saying “nobody or institution has the right to oust any lawful organisation from exercising its freedom of association and expression in Nigeria without an order of a court of competent jurisdiction.”

    This position, be it Ojukwu’s personal view or NHRC’s official position, is ridiculous to the extent that it should cause the Commission to be overhauled in order to redirect its focus to its thematic areas as advertised on its own website. The behaviour of NHRC and its leadership also calls for certain past developments to be reassessed in retrospect since it has heightened the possibility that the Commission is in bed with Amnesty International in the plot to destabilize Nigeria. We shall mention a few instances that now look too suspicious to be mere coincidences.

    The two recently proscribed terrorist organizations, the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) and the Islamic Movement in Nigeria (IMN) always use NHRC office for their protests, which means that people in that Commission encourage them and such decision could have only come from the leadership. Even more curious is how the NHRC was always spared each time IMN took its violent protests to the Commission’s premises while neighboring government offices get vandalized.

    It is of concern that NHRC has failed in the few instances it bothered to investigate issues around these groups (IMN and IPOB) especially when it has to do with the human rights abuses, they inflict on other Nigerians. This is even when the accusations raised against these groups touch on “Freedom of Religion & Belief” and “Torture, Extra-Judicial, Summary & Arbitrary Executions,” which are thematic focus for the Commission.

    The Commission’s Executive Secretary, Anthony Ojukwu, is in the same circle with the decision makers in Amnesty International. These are the people that have instructed Ojukwu to issue the statement in support of their organization, which raises the question of what other instructions the leadership of NHRC has received from and executed on behalf of the foreign NGO.

    NHRC is deliberately failing in its statutory responsibilities to create room for Amnesty International, in order for it to have the locus to issue its frivolous reports on the state of human rights in Nigeria. If the Commission tasked with monitoring human rights issues in Nigeria has decided to outsource its responsibility to a foreign entity, which has an agenda against the interest of Nigeria. It is disheartening that the NHRC leadership continues to defend Amnesty International even when it has full knowledge of the destabilization agenda being implemented against Nigeria.

    Gentlemen of the press, you can now appreciate from the above that NHRC is a failed institution where rights abuses start and stop. It is an organization in need of urgent help that the Federal Government must urgently provide. It appears that it is now more beholden to Amnesty International and its affiliated donor agencies.

    We like the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC), its Executive Secretary – Anthony Ojukwu and their NGO client that the occupation of Amnesty International’s offices will continue and possibly exceed the promised advertised 7-days until it leaves Nigeria. Perhaps the only saving grace would be an undertaken from the group to discontinue all aspects of its subversive activities in Nigeria. The combined threats from NHRC, the NGO and its partners would do nothing to stop patriotic Nigerians from defending their country.

    The Save Humanity Advocacy Centre (SHAC) urges the Federal Government to investigate the NHRC and its leadership with a view to establishing the extent of its complicity in the destabilization agenda that Amnesty International is running in Nigeria. Any official of the Commission found to have aided this crime against Nigeria should be properly sanctioned and made to face the law.

  • Amnesty International responsible for war in most countries; planning to visit same on Nigeria – Group

    Concerned Diasporas, a group of Nigerian intellectuals in the United States of America (USA) and neighbouring Canada has blamed Amnesty International (AI) for the rising cases of killings and violence in most countries across the globe.
    The group came to this conclusion having thoroughly reviewed the activities of the UK-based humanitarian organisation in recent times.
    To avert impending occurrence in Nigeria, however, these intellectuals have alerted the Federal Government and Nigerians about AI’s systematic plot to disintegrate the nation by whipping up ethnic and religious sentiments.
    In the report jointly signed by Esther Ede and Olajuwon Olagunju, President                                                     and Secretary General respectively, the group reckons AI carries out psychological terrorism through the issuance of reports not often a reflection of the reality on ground.
    While advising fellow Nigerians to disregard Amnesty’s misleading reports, the Concerned Diasporas urged the FG to systematically flush the supposed humanitarian group out of its borders.
    According to these distinguished Nigerians “ the difficulties experienced towards procuring military hardware for the fight against Boko Haram/ISWAP terrorists are as a result of the activities of Amnesty International that has continually churned out false reports of the human rights compliance of the relevant authorities in Nigeria.
    “ Amnesty International has become a propaganda tool for Boko Haram/ISWAP and other militant groups to continue to perpetrate acts of violence against innocent women and children.
    “ Amnesty International deliberately feign ignorance to the dehumanizing acts carried out by terrorist groups in Nigeria, and tactically avoids presenting such violent acts in any of its reports on Nigeria since 2015.”
    The Concerned Diasporas Group further asserted that “Amnesty International has taken this dishonourable path of causing the Nigerian authorities significant discomfort in the international community, and therefore is indeed an interested party on the side of Boko Haram/ISWAP terrorists.
    “ That the continuous existence of Amnesty International in Nigeria is more than a necessary evil that cannot be tolerated if Nigeria is indeed serious about winning the war against terrorism and other related militant groups in the country.
    “ The Nigerian government must activate all necessary machinery to see that the nefarious activities of Amnesty International in Nigeria are curtailed in the overall interest of peace and tranquillity.”
    Among others, the Concerned Diasporas recommended the following:
    “ That the Nigerian government must encourage its citizens to disregard the reports of Amnesty International and also refuse to avail themselves to be used as a willing tool by Amnesty International in the disintegration plot of Nigeria.
    “ That the Nigerian authorities must scrutinize the work permit of the expatriates in the organization to ascertain their conformity to Nigerian immigration policies.
    “ That the Nigerian people must join hands with the government to ensure that Amnesty International does not in any way undermine the sovereignty of Nigeria as it is has done in other countries where it operates.
    “ That the Nigerian Labour Congress should investigate the compliance of Amnesty International to the Nigerian Labour laws.
    “ That the Federal Inland Revenue Service should audit the financial dealings of Amnesty International to ensure its compliance with Nigerian financial and tax laws.
    “ That the Nigerian Authorities must as a matter of urgency launch international advocacy to draw the attention of the world to the activities of Amnesty International in Nigeria and how it has continually endangered our relative peace and tranquillity.”