Tag: Victims

  • President to support terror victims

    President to support terror victims

    President Muhammadu Buhari yesterday commended steps being taken by the Office of the National Security Adviser (ONSA) and other agencies of government to rehabilitate victims of terrorism and violent extremism in Nigeria.

    He spoke in Abuja after receiving a briefing on the work of the Countering Violent Extremism (CVE) Department of ONSA.

    Buhari, according to a statement by the Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Femi Adesina, said the Federal Government will continue to do its best to ensure that victims of Boko Haram’s atrocities receive necessary support, and that it will strive to rid the country of terrorism and insurgency in the shortest possible time.

    One of the objectives of the CVE is to reform terrorists and prevent others from joining terrorist organisations and violent sects.

    Head of the CVE Dr Fatima Akilu, told President Buhari at a meeting also attended by National Security Adviser (NSA) Col. Sambo Dasuki, that its non-military approach was running concurrently with the armed onslaught against insurgents in the country.

    She said so far, the CVE had rehabilitated no fewer than 305 victims of terrorism rescued from the Sambisa Forest by the Nigerian military.

    She also told the President that  a National Security Corridor Programme has been created to provide a safe route for those who wish to leave Boko Haram voluntarily, and that 47 erstwhile members of the group have embraced the programe.

    Dr. Akilu also said that no fewer than 22 women and girls, recruited as suicide bombers by Boko Haram are now undergoing rehabilitation by the CVE  after voluntarily embracing its de-radicalisation programme.

  • Victims of Cross River anti-forestation task force still cry

    Victims of Cross River anti-forestation task force still cry

    The Anti-Deforestation Task Force, an arm of the Cross River State Forestry Commission, has been enmeshed in allegations of illegality and fraud perpetrated by a cartel in the force and has been a matter of public concern in the state for some time.

    The recent disbandment of the force and arrest of some of its top officials on the order of the new governor, Prof Ben Ayade, over allegations of mismanagement of the forest for personal gains, has generated a lot of strong feelings about what may have been going since they were  inaugurated by the former governor of the state.

    A press release from the Ministry of Information signed by the Permanent Secretary, Mr Freedom Ejom, made available to The Nation in Calabar, stated that offenders are to be prosecuted without delay.

    The rate of alleged allegations of extortion and other unwholesome practices by the Task Force by members of the Public and concerned citizens of Cross River State it is believed may have fueled the governor’s decision.

    Members of the public had been complaining that people who refused to play ball have fallen victims. They complained that people most times timber are seized without following due process and auctioned without recourse to the huge investment by their owners who are businessmen.

    •Okon
    •Okon

    For Chief Ededem Okon Ayito, who said he is a victim, life has become a living nightmare for him as he alleged that all the timber he legally harvested from a protected area he acquired at Ekpri Ibami Community in Akampka Local Government Area was unduly auctioned without fair hearing and no opportunity given to him to make his case.

    Ayito alleged, “I acquired that place from the Village, Head of Ekpri Ibam Community for planting of plantain, cocoa and oil palm and other cash crops. But with the trees in the location my plantain and other things will not do well, so I had to fell the trees with proper approval from the forestry people.

    “In the process of perfecting the documents and waiting for a final charting to come from them they confiscated my 7950 pieces of timber. I am baffled that they declared only 2,147 in the Order. Also, while the courts were still on strike, they got an Order to sell 2,147peices of timber while the courts were still on strike”

    “I wrote to them (Anti Deforestation Task Force) through my lawyer Barr Orchardson Umoh   that the wood belongs to me and all necessary documentation is being processed and that I copied the governor too. But to my greatest surprise within one week they started selling the wood which is contrary to the CRSF law in section 68 (subsection 4) states that the commission may dispose of any items and forest produce, which the owner might have abandoned to escape arrest and it is not found, and remains unclaimed for 60 days.”

    “They did not even get to Calabar nor did they wait for the sixty days to elapse before selling. Not only that they also got an order while the courts were still on strike.

    “They have turned my life into a living hell, the banks are after me I am selling off most of my properties at auction price just to meet up with my responsibilities. My family is suffering. My children are almost out of school. I really could not believe that such a thing is happening in Cross River state,” Edem lamented.

    •Ako
    •Ako

    When our reporter visited the Village Head of Ekpri Ibam, Chief Michael Bassey Ako, he said the land that was given to Chief Edem Ayito was not under reserve but in the protected area, hence he had the right to fell the trees and harvest timber.

    In 2014 a Court Order (MSC.NO.FC/CA/MSC./6/2014) was issued for the sale (auction) of 2,147 Pieces of timber during the period in which the courts were on strike (the first warning strike by Judiciary Staff Union of Nigeria (JUSUN).

    Secretary of JUSUN, Cross River State Branch, Comrade Ogboni Adjah said the courts were on strike at the time and it was called of in August.

    But according to the lawyer of the Anti-deforestation Task Force, Barr U.A Ibitam said that the courts were not on strike that it was JUSUN that was on strike.

    He said, “The courts were not on strike and are not and the only people on strike are JUSUN. Judges and Magistrates have never been on strike because they are not members of JUSUN. The only thing is that some judiciary staff that is affected would not be there to assist them (Judges and Magistrates)

    “That is why you still you still see Judges performing swearing in and other official judicial functions every magistrate and Judges is at liberty to perform judicial functions. That is the point I just wanted to clarify. Apart from this I will not go further to comment because this subject matter is before Justice Ebuta”. He stated.

     

    •Umoh
    •Umoh

    But Ayito’s lawyer, Mr Umoh Orchardson said the finality of the Order was quite questionable and given in bad faith. “An exparte application cannot be used to sell off someone property without even hearing from the person,” he said.

    He continued, “The Forestry court is under the Cross River State Judiciary. The Order which authorized the auction of the timber could not have sat because there was a strike which affected all the courts in the country. No court in Nigeria was sitting no matter how important your matter was.

    “The judiciary headquarters was also under lock and key from 11th of July till the 8th of August 2014, because the entire place was locked. The question remains, where did they sit and how did they get the registrar to sign? The same court had other cases on its list that were listed from the time the strike started and none of them was sat upon neither did they take a new case.

    According to Chief Ayito, there was there was no order for the Anti-deforestation Task Force to confiscate the 7,950 pieces from his farm in Ekpri Ibami Community in the first place, but alleged they “manufactured” an order for a public auction of only 2,147.

    “They never gave an order for the 7,950 rather they got an order for only 2,147. Where is the remaining 5,803 pieces of timber, which has not been accounted for till date? Also how did a Magistrate give an order within 24 hours that a motion was filled to sell a property without giving time to the owner to be heard? It is quite ridiculous and highly questionable”

    “I am really surprised that a motion filed on 22nd of July was granted on the 23rd to sell 2,147 instead of all the pieces (7950) which was confiscated by the ATF.”

    Another timber dealer at Akim Timber market who said he was also a victim, Mr. Bassey Akpan, alleged:  “This cartel has been in existence for a long time, they have been doing their dirty deals since 2009. I have lost a lot. I sold my house and my only truck. My children are not even going to school; I am now living on good will from friends.

    “I have left everything in the hands of God, since they collected my money and gave me documents yet they still came back and seized my wood running into 14.2million naira, how can I ever recover from this.”

    Chief Magistrate, Emeng Edogi admitted that the Order (MSC.NO.FC/CA/MSC./6/2014) emanated from his court on the said date.

    But he said that the Cross River State Forestry court is a mobile court and was not affected by the JUSUN strike as he is also not a member of JUSUN and he acted based on the facts that were presented before him, before giving the Order (MSC.NO.FC/CA/MSC./6/2014) which he gave in good faith.

    Following the disbanded of the task force there seems to be a tangible feeling of relief among timber dealers in the state.

    Some dealers from Akim market, Akai Effa ,Edide Edibe expressed happiness over the decision of the governor to dissolve the Task force which they alleged  was monster used by some nefarious minded people to defraud unsuspecting businessmen.

    A timber dealer at Edibe Edibe Timber Market, Mr Promise Eso, said the development was timely

    He said: “They have been using the Task Force as their personal business. When they arrest you they sell the timber without following due process. Even if you have the necessary documents they still confiscate your timber illegally and that has been happening since 2009. They have been doing it with impunity.

    Another timber dealer at Akai Effa market, Mr. Victor Bassey alleged, “I had to start from the scratch because of what they took from me. I lost everything to their fraudulent activities.”

  • NEMA donates drugs for treatment of Onitsha fire victims

    The National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) has donated drugs valued at millions of naira to hospitals where victims of the Onitsha tanker fire are receiving treatment.

    Presenting the drugs, NEMA’s Director-General, Alhaji Mohammed Sani Sidi explained that the gesture was aimed at assisting the Doctors in saving the lives of the survivors.

    Represented by the Director of Relief, Mr. Eugene Eze, Sidi said: “We want to encourage the hospitals with these drugs and medical consumables for the speedy recovery of the victims.

    “NEMA Sympathises with the victim’s families, we share their pains and commend Doctors for their efforts”.

    Others at the presentation were the Southeast coordinator, Major James Eze and his Southwest counterpart, Dr. Bandele Onimode, and Executive Director, Anambra State Emergency Management Agency (ASEMA), Chief Paul Odenigbo.

    Some the benefiting hospitals include Menax, Toronto, Bex and General Hospitals.

    The team also visited Governor Willie Obiano where the governor stressed the need for state governments in the Southeast to strengthen their various emergency boards.

    The Governor appealed to the Federal Government to provide fire-fighting trucks and equipment to help avert deaths resulting from tanker accidents.

    He assured the people that the State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA) will cooperate with the Federal Government to help the victims.

     

  • Boko Haram: 900 victims in Edo camp

    Boko Haram: 900 victims in Edo camp

    Over 900 victims of Boko Haram attacks in some northern states are presently in a internally displaced persons (IDP) camp in Edo state.

    The camp tucked in a forest near a community on Edo south senatorial district, which location is being kept secret for security reasons, is run by a faith based group, International Christian Centre for Missions.

    A visit to the camp at the weekend showed that some of the IDPs included children as young as four months and many others in their teens and 20s and a few adults.

    Managers of the camp said the facility for the needy has been providing food and shelter for the IDPs since 2013.

    The camp covers a large expanse of land and has several blocks of rooms and halls, most of which were made of wood, serving as classrooms and bedrooms for the displaced persons.

    The refugees included men, women and children whose families were killed and their homes burnt by the insurgents.

    “There is no public power supply so the place is powered by generators for its light and water.

    “With the over 900 victims coming to join the existing 400 indigent persons in the camp, facilities have been overstretched especially food .

    It was learnt that not less than six bags of rice is needed for a meal and four bags of garri for a meal per day.

    The Overseer of the camp, Solomon Folorunsho said the IDPs were brought to the facility from Borno and Adamawa States, through Jos, the Plateau State capital.

    He said that the Centre depended on donations from faith-based organisations, institutions and individuals.

    “This centre is a place for mission work and discipleship and also to care for children who are in need from different parts of Nigeria. We ‎have been in existence since 1992, catering for children from different villages who have been abused, oppressed and are orphans in the society.

    “We had about 400 children before we saw the need of children in the North East, whose parents were killed.

    ” Some of them ran to the mountains where they ate sand, stones and leaves. And there were some who died of various diseases.

    “Some of them ran to Cameroon and I started getting phone calls there that we from the South here should help to rescue these children, as they were just wandering in the streets. That was what prompted us to set up a committee of pastors who located the children and brought them together to verify their identity.”

    He said the state government was recently informed of the situation three months ago through the Ministry of Women Affairs but was yet to get any response.

    Meanwhile, some of the victims who recounted their ordeal said that they lost all they had to the insurgents who also attacked them in caves where they had initially sought refuge.

    Tani Philemon, said that she was abducted by the insurgent from her home, in Gwoza Local Government Area of Borno State, but escaped miraculously after several day of fasting.

    Another victim, Grace James, 17, said that she and her family fed on raw maize while on the run, after they were attacked and their home destroyed by the insurgents.

    “We kept running for our lives, feeding on fresh maize without cooking it. When we got to a big stream through which we were to cross into Bornu‎, we saw many dead bodies floating on the stream. But we finally got to Bornu and later to Jos. It was in Jos that we heard about a camp in Benin,” ‎she said.

  • Some rescued Boko Haram victims have gunshot, blast injuries

    Some rescued Boko Haram victims have gunshot, blast injuries

    National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) Director-General Muhammed Sani Sidi, in this interview with TONY AKOWE, provides insights into the condition of women and children freed from insurgents in the Sambisa Forest. Among other things, the DG said most of the former captives came very ill, some with gunshot and bomb blast wounds. Excerpts:

    The insurgents began to hurt Nigerians since they hurled their first bomb and fired their first bullet. Graduating from public nuisance to claiming swathes of territory, Boko Haram fighters have assaulted everything Nigerians hold dear, giving new assignments to emergency workers.

    •Sidi attending to one of the women at the camp
    •Sidi attending to one of the women at the camp

    The National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) have had its role scaled to unknown levels. Its Director-General Muhammed Sani Sidi knows how much the agency’s duties have changed, how demanding they have been, especially since troops rescued many captives from the terrorists’ lair.

    What has been NEMA’s experience managing the rescued victims of insurgency?

    I must say that the security agencies in Nigeria have done very well in the fight against insurgency. Just recently they recorded huge successes by rescuing about 300 women and children from Sambisa Forest who were under the captivity of Boko Haram. When they were rescued we received a call from the military authorities that they would be handed over to the National Emergency Management Agency. Don’t forget we have about 14 camps in Adamawa State alone and because of the successes recorded by the military in the fight against insurgency, most of the communities that were under the occupation of Boko Haram have been recovered and now peace has returned so the IDPs are beginning to move back to their various communities, making it necessary for the agency to begin to reduce the camps.

    At the moment we have six camps which we call residential camps that are presently hosting about 27,000 IDPs in Yola in particular and we have over 200,000 living within the host communities. We see the receipt of this rescued women and children as just an added responsibility to what we have been doing as an agency with IDPs. We consider them special because they have been under captivity for a long period of time. Obviously most of them are women and 70% are children below the age of five. Out of the 275, sixty-three came unaccompanied and that is very worrisome; it is a terrible situation to have children under the age of five unaccompanied, meaning they have lost their parents and we cannot link them with their parents at the moment, six of them came with pregnancy and that is a sympathetic situation.

    That contradicts the claim that most of the women returned pregnant

    That is not correct. I must put it on record that only six of them came with pregnancy and we must add, however, that we must be very careful not to stigmatise these innocent Nigerians who were under captivity and came back with pregnancy so that we don’t end up stigmatising the child that is yet unborn. I think we must respect their rights and be careful of the way we talk about the issue.

    Who is responsible for these pregnancies?

    I think we must really de-emphasise the issue of these pregnancies; what is important for us as an agency is the welfare and well-being of these women and children, and that is what we have been focusing on. You recall we received them in the middle of the night and our staff waited for them like for two days because of the logistics of transporting them from Sambisa Forest to our camp in Yola. When they came they were very weak and sick. Out of the total of 275, about 158 came very sick, so we had to do an assessment, profile them and some that had serious ailments were transferred to the Federal Medical Centre in Yola. Those that could be taken care of in the camp within the capacity of doctors and nurses were taken care of in the camp.

    What was the nature of their ailments?

    Most of them came especially the children had eye diseases, malaria, fatigue; they came looking very hungry, tired and traumatised. You can imagine people living under that kind of horrible condition. We had to immediately organise for trauma counselling and other requirements like feeding, clothing and even personal hygiene.

    Have you been able to assess the true identity of these rescued women?

    We have carried out assessment of the rescued women and children and before they were even delivered to us in our camps, the military have done profiling to ensure that they are not security risks and that they are innocent people captured by the insurgents and rescued by the military. What is left for us is to identify where they came from and that we have done and then we have assessed them medically and we shall continue to monitor them, especially the children. Some of them have also sustained various degrees of injuries, from gun shots, bomb blasts and they have been referred to Federal Medical Centre where they are receiving treatment.

    What were the specifics of the military profiling, and has NEMA carried out its own independent assessment?

    Our assessment is limited to their conditions, we are not a security agency; the military have done their job by profiling them and ensuring that they are not security risks. They could live in our camps like any other IDPs but they are special to us. They are different from the normal IDPs that are resident in our camps because these are people who were under captivity for a long time, they are traumatised so they need counselling, they need support so as to be rehabilitated back into the society.

    What is the humanitarian condition of the rescued women and children?

    Emphasis is now giving to the rescued 275 women and children, but before their arrival we have been managing IDPs. Like in Borno we have over 10 camps; in Adamawa we have six residential camps and we have IDPs in host communities who are more in number. We have been managing these IDPs for the last five years and we have enjoyed tremendous support from the Borno, Adamawa, Yobe and Gombe state governments, where we have camps in the Northeastern part of the country. Humanitarian activity cannot really be done effectively by one agency, so there has to be collaboration and synergy between all the humanitarian actors. I must say that we have been receiving tremendous support from other actors. We have received training and support for our personnel from the UN system, the Nigerian Red Cross Society has been with us throughout these trying periods, they have been in all our camps and all the other state emergency managements agencies and indeed NGOs and civil societies. It has been a close collaboration and I must say they have all done very well.

    Is there any peculiar challenge in managing these special IDPs?

    Indeed they are special IDPs because, like I have said, they are people who need special attention. Most of them are children and our greatest concern are those 63 children that came unaccompanied and we have to find the ways and means of unifying them with their parents or families and that is a huge challenge. They can hardly speak, they are small kids just following the other groups looking lost and we are working side by side with all the other agencies working with us to identify their parents.

    Has there been any effort to trace their roots?

    Certainly, the first step is to establish information centres where people can give information, where the IDPs too can pass information to the camp management on matters that affect their situation. What I am saying is: it is going to take time. Just a few days ago some people came and identified their children, they are not among the 63 but we have other unaccompanied children in almost all the camps. Sometimes we are lucky we have people coming to identify such children as their parents and once the authorities [establish such claims] we hand them over to the parents.

    Are you saying some parents have shown up?

    Yes, but not in the case of the 275 children and women.

    What is the proof of parentage claims?

    There are procedures of verification before the children are handed over to parents in accordance with international best practices.

    How are those that came with ailments responding to treatment?

    I must commend caregivers in the camp because as at the time they arrived, most of them could not even stand on their feet. Now they are gradually recovering, even the mothers were so malnourished that they could not even breastfeed their children. It was terrible but now we noticed significant improvement and we have other agencies with specialty in nutrition that are assisting the nursing mothers and children to see that they recover quickly.

    Are the camps good enough to help the IDPs get back to their feet?

    I must say that the environment which they live is to a larger extent conducive. All the facilities required to live decent life are provided. We have electricity, water supply, sufficient toilets, adequate sanitation and hygiene and most importantly we have enough food to feed the IDPs.

  • How president-elect Buhari can achieve a fair deal for victims of corruption

    How president-elect Buhari can achieve a fair deal for victims of corruption

    Today the level of confidence in Nigeria is remarkably high, and president-elect General Muhammadu Buhari has been described by many as embodying ‘the promise of change’. Hardly surprising, given that one of the reasons he became president-elect is because of his apparent zero-tolerance approach to corruption. Nigerians have indeed, continued to offer increasingly passionate support to the president-elect, and have been very busy setting agenda for the incoming government on how it can bring about real change. Expectedly, high on the list is the need to prosecute and punish corrupt high-ranking government officials.

    But one useful complementary legal remedy against corruption has been largely ignored: the use of human rights law to empower the citizens and provide effective remedies for victims of corruption.

    Corruption is anathema to effective enjoyment of human rights, but it is often considered an ‘ordinary and victimless crime.’ It isn’t.

    Yet the myth that corruption is a victimless crime has prevailed for many years, in part because of the narrowed conception of corruption, and the perceived legal and practical challenges, such as causation, legal stand­ing, and evidence-gathering. However, it is not that those who characterise corruption as victimless completely disagree that it causes harms, especially to the economically and socially vulnerable (that is, any individual or determinate class of persons, who by reason of poverty, or disability or socially or economically disadvantaged and vulnerable position, suffer most the immediate effects of violations of human rights caused by corruption).

    On the contrary, the argument often put forward is that since no one victim suffers more harm than others, and that there may be no direct victim, it is probably pointless to labour in search of ‘invisible victims’. This line of reasoning would appear weak and difficult to sustain, for the following reasons. First, apart from causing both direct and indirect economic and other harms to citizens and the public in the form of the loss of the common wealth and public revenue, corruption also causes non-monetary loss in the form of wide­spread and consistent denial of impartial application of the rule of law.

    While it may be difficult to quantify the harms that corruption causes, this doesn’t make the harms less real, less destructive, or less corrosive. In fact, the manifestations and indicators of these harms can be easily recognised in the form of poverty and the systematic, gross human rights violations that millions of economically and socially vulnerable Nigerians have suffered for many years.

    As former UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan stated during the 2003 adoption by the General Assembly of the United Nations Convention against Corruption (UNCAC) corruption: ‘(H) as a wide range of corrosive effects on societies; undermines democracy and the rule of law; leads to violations of human rights; erodes the quality of life…hurts the poor dis­proportionately by diverting funds intended for development, and undermines a state’s ability to provide basic services.’

    While it is true that the causes of poverty and underdevelopment in Nigeria are complex (and no single factor causes poverty), the longstanding problem of corruption is unquestionably one explanation for deficits in the rule of law, a drain on public treasury, and exacerbation of existing vulnerabilities and inequalities.

    The Buhari government, therefore, can’t afford to treat grand corruption as an isolated incident if he doesn’t want to be accused in four years’ time of leaving both communities and individual victims of corruption powerless and without effective remedies.

    At the moment, the legal frameworks against corruption in Nigeria do not reflect elements of the accountability of the government for the human rights violations faced by victims of grand corruption. The victims are largely neutralised (and virtually anonymous) in the criminal process, with no access to human rights remedies.

    The overriding priority for the Buhari government starting on 29 May is, therefore, first, to provide a strong leadership by proposing and facilitating the passage of a bill by the National Assembly that would characterise grand corruption as a breach of national trust and grant the citizens enforceable human right to ensure the eradication of corruption and abuse of power and, second, to establish a Trust Fund for victims of corruption in the country.

    With respect to the first point, the Buhari government can take a clue from the abandoned 1995 draft Constitution of Nigeria (proposed, ironically, while Abacha, regarded as one of the most corrupt leaders of Nigeria, was in power), which explicitly grants legal standing to the citizens to sue for violations of their human rights occasioned by corruption. The draft constitution provided in Section 35 that  ‘Every person shall have the right to: (a) ensure the eradication of corrupt practices, and abuse of power; (b) protect and preserve public property; (c) fight against misappropriation and squandering of public funds.’

    The proposed legislation can also contain provision to characterise the failure of national and foreign banks to prevent stolen funds from being cached in their banks and to aid in their recapture as complicity, after the fact, and itself, a delict.

    Secondly, the Buhari government should establish a Trust Fund for victims of corruption, drawn mostly from recovered stolen wealth and other interest that might be generated from this. Given the limited resources available, fines should be imposed on corrupt officials, and such fines should be set aside as endowment for the trust funds. The proposed trust funds can also be aug­mented by support from international development agencies and other relevant institutions and the private sector.

    Part of the funds should be used to establish victims’ assistance programmes to ensure the victims’ perspec­tive is fully integrated into the fight against corruption.

    The notion of trust funds for victims of human rights violations is a well-established mechanism in international law and relations, such as under Article 75 of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court (which creates a fund for the benefit of victims of international crimes and their families, the assets of which may originate from money or property col­lected through fines or forfeiture imposed by the ICC on the individual perpetrator).

    The idea of a trust fund is also frequently adopted in mass claims pro­grammes (such as the Iran-United States Claims Tribunal of 1981) to provide ‘effective remedies for numerous individuals who suffered losses, dam­age or injuries as a result of an armed conflict or a similar event causing widespread damage’. The existence of armed conflict is not a requirement for mass claims: similar types of claims would arise from environmental disasters, causing widespread damage or injury, or from systematic human rights violations in peace time caused by corruption.

    The goal is presumably to achieve ‘practical justice: that is, a justice that would be swift and efficient, yet not rough’. Mass claims cases are clearly similar in kind to the adverse effects of corruption on human rights. Therefore, the Buhari government should replicate the mass claims principles, and work towards establishing trust funds (as an essential element of remedial justice) for victims of corruption.

    By establishing such trust funds, the Buhari government will also be signalling that victims will no longer be marginalised in the fight against corruption.

    Indeed, the UN Basic Principles of Justice for Victims of Crime and Abuse of Power provides some guarantees for victims (including family members of direct victims), such as those that suffer ‘substantial impairment of their fundamental rights’ through acts or omissions, including abuse of power. Corruption is implied here as the ultimate abuse of power. Victims of human rights violations would be entitled to effective remedies regardless of whether they bring their claims against the state in an individual or collective capacity.

    On the one hand, the institutions of gov­ernance and the society as a whole are the victims. On the other hand, corruption disproportionately inflicts grave harms on the economically and socially vulnerable, who, in addition to violations of their specific human rights, are also denied access to effective operation of the rule of law and institutions of government.

    In his ‘Covenant with Nigerians’ the president-elect stated ‘I believe if Nigeria does not kill corruption, corruption will kill Nigeria.’ He is spot-on. But if any significant and sustainable success is to be recorded in the fight against corruption, the Buhari government will need to avoid more of the same. Nigerians want to see General Buhari taking creative, radical, evolutionary, and bold initiatives to fight corruption and thereby working to create a state that serves its people’s interests.

    Make no mistake, the road to ‘change’ will be filled with ‘potholes and blind curves.’

    But four years from now, Nigeria can be ‘a new country’ where corruption is no longer considered ‘normal’ if the Buhari government can show strong leadership, political will, and the courage to do something dramatically different.

    As John Maynard Keynes said in his famous speech in Manchester in 1926: ‘The political problem of mankind is to combine three things: economic efficiency, social justice and individual liberty.’ Buhari’s primary task in the next four years is to produce a country that will come closest to passing Keynes’s triple test.

    • Olaniyan, PhD, is the author of ‘Corruption and Human Rights Law in Africa’

  • Victims of Delta demilition seeks compensation

    An June 4, 2014, the Delta State government, through its Ministry of Environment, moved into Ijala, an ancestral home of the Itsekiri people and site of the royal cemetery, where all past Warri (Itsekiri) Olus (monarchs) are buried, to demolish over 80 ‘illegal’ structures.

    The structures were deemed to be defacing the traditional site, where prominent Itsekiri monarchs, including Olu Erejuwa II, the father of the current Olu, Ogiame Atuwatse II was buried.

    However, nearly a year on, the aggrieved people rendered homeless by the ‘beautification’, have been thrown into poverty and rendered homeless. It was gathered that over 1,000 persons were displaced by the demolition exercise and face shortage of land for property development as a result of action.

    The victims have appealed to the outgoing Governor Emmanuel Uduaghan, who is their kinsmen, to pay them compensation in order to enable them pick up the shattered pieces of their lives and move on. The appeal was contained in a letter dated May 6.

    The letter signed by the Olara-Aja (head) of Ijala Ikenren community, Pa. Prince A.B. Ikenren; Mr. Mathew Wilkie, spokesman and Mr. Henry O. Erikowa, Chairman, Community Trust, said their joy of an emerging vibrant new layout at Ifie was caught short with the demolition exercise.

    The government action, they further opined, had shattered the hopes and aspirations of the house owners in the area.

    “We want to passionately appeal to you to temper justice with mercy to take a second look at the whole issue and consider compensating those whose houses were demolished to enable sustainable infrastructural development of this historical enclave of Warri Kingdom.”

    The signatories to the petition particularly regretted the lack of action on the demolished area, a development they said has led to the vast land being taken over by thick forest once again even as the masses were hungry looking for land to build on following the congestion and high cost of rent in the oil city.

  • Synagogue: Pathologist yet to identify six victims – Obafunwa

    Synagogue: Pathologist yet to identify six victims – Obafunwa

    A Consultant Pathologist, Prof. John Obafunwa, on Friday said forensic examiners have yet to identify the bodies of six victims of the Synagogue Church of All Nations building collapse.

    Obafunwa, who is the Chief Medical Examiner of Lagos State, disclosed this while presenting the final report to the coroner’s inquest set up to unravel the cause of the incident.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the inquest was set up by the Lagos State Government to investigate the Sept. 12, 2014 building collapse which killed 116 people, mainly South Africans.

    The report entitled: “Report on the Collapsed Building in Synagogue Church of All Nations,’’ was admitted by the court as Exhibit 034.

    Led in evidence by Mr. Akingbolahan Adeniran, counsel to the Lagos State Government, the witness said autopsies were performed on the 116 bodies recovered from the collapse site.

    He said the post mortem examinations were concluded on Sept. 30, 2014 and the samples for DNA examination were sent to Unistel Laboratory in South Africa.

    Obafunwa said: “the first set of DNA and fingerprinting results were sent to me on Nov. 3, 2014. Thereafter, an identification committee was set up.

    “At this time, 74 South Africans (as well as few from Switzerland, Zimbabwe, Democratic Republic of Congo, etc) were identified and subsequently released to the South African Authority on Nov. 15, 2014.

    “Again, the identification committee sat on Feb. 4, 2015 following the receipt of other results from South Africa.

    “During this time, another 11 South Africans were identified and again released to their authority on Feb. 5, 2015, thus concluding the release of a total of 85 victims of South African origin.

    “The respective death certificates as well as embalmment certificates were also handed over to the South African authority.’’

    According to him, in addition to these figures, 25 others (comprising 22 Nigerians, two Benenois and one Togolese) were identified and released, bringing the total number of deceased individuals to 110.

    He said: “there are six bodies left in the morgues (three each in Isolo and Yaba mortuaries) that are yet to be identified.

    “In summary, the victims of the building collapse comprise 60 males, and 56 females; among the male victims was a child allegedly aged six years.

    “The distribution of the causes of death is as follows: 56 Multiple injuries, 19 Traumatic asphyxia, 19 Exsanguination, 12 Severe craniocerebral injury, nine Haemothorax following multiple rib fractures and one Congestive cardiac failure following hypertensive heart disease.

    “The varying injuries seen on the victims are consistent with blunt force trauma that will normally be sustained from a collapsed building.’’

    Testifying earlier at the proceedings, Mr. Oladele Ogundeji, the engineer who supervised the project, insisted that the collapse of the building was inconsistent with structural defect.

    He said all the materials used for the construction were of the best quality, insisting that the foundation bases and columns were adequate to support the building.

    NAN reports further hearing on the matter was fixed for March 25.

  • Gunshot victims now to be treated without police report, say Reps

    Victims of gunshot wounds will henceforth be treated without Police report, the report on a Bill for an Act to make Provisions for the Compulsory Treatment and Care for the Victims of Gunshot and Other Matters Connected Therewith has said.

    House of Representatives members adopted the report last Thursday.

    The report, which was sponsored by Nkiruka Onyejeocha (PDP, Abia), Chairman, House Committee on Aviation, was passed and adopted after consideration at the Committee of the Whole.

    Mrs Onyejeocha,  arguing the bill, said: “The issue of conditional access to medication by victims of gunshot in Nigeria has generated thorny arguments among scholars, policy makers, medical practitioners and the general public.”

    “The central thesis of the argument from all sides revolves around the issue of saving lives vi’s-avis the provision of the extant law”.

    According to her, the misinterpretation of the provision of the Robbery and Firearms (Special Provision) Act, Cap 398 of 1984 has been largely responsible for the refusal of medical practitioners to attend to gunshot victims which often time leads to loss of innocent lives.

    The lawmaker said passing the bill will give unrestricted access to medical services by victims of gunshots; as well as strengthen legal provisions and guarantee peoples’ fundamental rights to life and dignity of their persons.

    A legislation with 18 clauses, the bill covers all aspects of gunshot injuries and the circumstances thereto if signed into law will make it mandatory for medical facilities to attend to individuals with such injuries without recourse to police report or approval for the purpose of saving lives. However, immediate notification must be made to the police regarding such cases.

    “Despite the Act providing that, it shall be the duty of any person, hospital or clinic that admits, treats or administers drug to any person suspected of having bullet wounds to immediately report the matter to the police, medical institutions in Nigeria have severally refused to attend to victims of gunshot requesting such victims to produce police report.

    “The refusal of hospitals and other medical facilities to attend to gunshot victims amounts to a negation of the fundamental human rights of those victims to life as enshrined in the relevant sections of the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria”, she said.

    Clause 1 of the bill states: “As from the commencement of this Bill, every hospital in Nigeria whether public or private shall accept or receive for immediate and adequate treatment with or without clearance any person with a gunshot wound.

    According to Mrs. Onyejeocha, the refusal to treat victims of gunshot also amounts to a negation of the ethics and oath of the medical profession (to save lives) which practitioners swore to keep.

    Hospitals denying the provision of medical care and attention to gunshot victims until police report is produced, as it is the practice in Nigeria is not supported by cross-country experiences in places such as the United Kingdom and Canada,” she noted.

    Clause 4 of the bill states:  “It shall be the duty of any hospital that receives any person with gunshot wound to report the fact to the nearest police within two (2) hours of commencement of treatment”.

    While Clauses 5 and 6 of the bill give the police power to immediately begin investigation into the circumstances surrounding the gunshot upon receipt of a report from the hospital authority; and must not take the victim away from the facility until it is certified by the Chief Medical Director of the hospital that the victim is fit enough to leave and is in no further need of Medicare.

    A penalty of six months imprisonment is stipulated by clause 7 of the Bill for doctors who fail to notify the police of such cases and a fine of N100,000 (hundred thousand) on any erring hospital. Clause 9 recommends five years imprisonment with a N50,000 (fifty thousand) fine on anyone who willfully withholds information from the police authority.

     

  • APC rally shootings victims recount experience

    APC rally shootings victims recount experience

    Ex-Head of State, Odigie-Oyegun: we’re worried

    Victims of Tuesday’s shootings at Okrika, the Rivers State hometown of First Lady Patience Jonathan yesterday relived their ordeal.

    The campaign rally of Rivers All Progressives Congress (APC) governorship candidate Dakuku Peterside, was truncated by explosions and gunshots fired by thugs suspected to be sympathetic to the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    One policeman was killed while more than 50 people were injured.

    Among the injured were four soldiers, who were being treated at the Braithwaite Memorial Specialist Hospital (BMH) in Port Harcourt, the state capital.

    Some reporters including Channels Television man Charles Eruka were injured. Eruka was stabbed on the head and neck.

    Speaking at the hospital, a Soldier, who simply gave his name as Matthew, said, “I was posted to Okrika on election duty. You can see me here, we are about four soldiers rushed to this hospital. You can see wound all over my body,   I thank God that I am alive to tell my story.

    Other soldiers at the hospital refused to speak.

    Okechukwu, Ibe, an eyewitness, who lives in Okrika, said “ There was  tight security in and around the venue of the rally, Okrika Grammar School, but the first dynamite explosion occurred at about 1:20pm on the field.

    “The explosion attracted the attention of Anti-Bomb Disposal Unit, Counter-Terrorism Unit and other security operatives to carry out search behind one of the school buildings. Shortly, an announcement was made from the podium, ordering everybody in the VIP stand irrespective of status, to vacate the area for security reasons.

    “While the people on the VIP stand were about heeding the order, the second explosion occurred inside the school classroom at about 1:31pm, while the third explosion happened five minutes later. The venue became tensed up, and there was pandemonium. Security agencies arrested a young man allegedly in connection with the explosions.

    “Barely 20 minutes after, the APC  governorship candidate and his campaign team arrived, and the programme continued. In the midst of solidarity speeches, sporadic shootings came behind the Okrika Grammar School and the Cemetery.

    “People scampered for safety, while the shootings increased. The hoodlums attacked the Public Address System (PAS) and other facilities with explosives. At this stage, it was difficult to ascertain the number of people.”

    Police spokesman Ahmed Mohammad denied that another policeman had died in the hospital. The Commissioner of Police (CP), Dan Bature and I were at the hospital to see them. They are stable and recuperating,” he said.

    Mr. Joseph Amachree, one of the victims whose legs were bandaged, said: “my brother, all I could say is that God gave me another chance on earth.  I was at the venue. After the second explosions, we thought it was over. I went back thinking normalcy had returned.

    But I was surprised when some people came with all kinds of weapons, shooting, I heard a gunshot, but I cannot say what happened. Only to see myself at the hospital bed the next day. I thank God I am getting better now.

    Philip Williams, another victim, said he saw people running for dear lives and he joined them.

    When they rushed me here I was bleeding on my head and I couldn’t talk. I thank God that I can talk to you now and I can recognize you.

    Anayo Onukwugha of Leadership said: “Immediately the sounds of the guns and dynamites started coming closer, I made for an alternative route to connect to the ATC road, knowing full well that the road leading to the Saint Peter’s Cathedral had been taken over by the armed youths, who were exchanging gunfire with security agents.