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DPMF Publications: DPMN Bulletin |
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The Human Rights Situation in Nigeria Since the Democratic Dispensation.
(Sonny Onyegbula) |
The inauguration of the democratically elected
government of General Olusegun Obasanjo (Retired) on May 29, 1999 witnessed the
end of sixteen years of uninterrupted military rule in Nigeria. On the whole,
since independence in 1960, Nigerians have enjoyed democracy for only ten years
while the military have ruled for the rest of the period.
The years of military rule were characterised by gross human rights abuse
and repression of political dissent. The respect for rule of law and due process
were abandoned for the naked abuse of power. The press reported several cases of
people being harassed, detained without trial, tortured, extrajudicially
executed, brazenly murdered, discriminated against and forcibly displaced from
their homes. Environmental pollution, degradation and wanton destruction of the
ecology as a result of oil exploration activities were common place in the oil
rich Niger Delta. Successive military governments enacted decrees aimed at
curtailing the enjoyment of fundamental rights and liberties by the people. The
military regime’s arrogation of judicial power and prohibition of court review
of its actions significantly impaired the authority and independence of the
judiciary. The regime of late General Sani Abacha was probably the worst. It
carried out widespread repression of human rights advocates, pro-democracy
activists, journalists and critics of his government. Extrajudicial killings,
torture, assassinations, imprisonment and general harassment of critics and
opponents were the hallmark of his administration1.
With the death of General Abacha on June 8, 1998, his successor General
Abdulsalam Abubakar towed the part of national reconciliation. He released from
jail political prisoners and granted amnesty to exiles to return home to
participate in the political process and national reconciliation. Abubakar also
repealed most of the decrees infringing on the fundamental rights of Nigerians
and hurriedly initiated a process to democratic rule. The elections commenced
with local council polls and climaxed with the presidential poll in February
1999. Though General Olusegun Obasanjo was declared the winner, poll observers
reported incidents of massive vote rigging and other electoral malpractices. On
the assumption of office, the Obasanjo regime has taken steps to improve the
human rights situation in the country. This process has also suffered some
notable setbacks. It is these strides and setbacks in the human rights sector
under the new democratic dispensation that this paper addresses.
The Obasanjo Human Rights Initiative
A month after General Obasanjo was sworn in as the President he
established the Human Rights Violation Investigation Commission headed by
Justice Chukwudifu Oputa, a retired justice of the Supreme Court of Nigeria. The
Commission was given mandate to investigate cases of human rights abuses
committed since the first military coup in 1966 and make appropriate
recommendations to the government.
President Obasanjo
while inaugurating the Commission said that the greatest benefit of the
Commission is that “ It would serve all of us not only to know the truth but
also as a result of knowing the truth, for Nigerians not to have to go through
the type of conditions and situations that they have gone through in not distant
past.”2.
The Commission received about 10,000 memoranda of human rights violations and
has since commenced public hearings across different zones in Nigeria. As a
further attempt towards national reconciliation, the president gave
authorisation for the release of the bodies of Ogoni minority rights activist
and playwright Kenule Saro Wiwa and his eight other kinsmen hanged following a
flawed judicial process and buried in secret graves.
The president took further steps to ensure that those who were
responsible for some of the gross human rights violations of the past were being
called to give account for the role that they played in the past administration.
Some of the people undergoing trial include the former chief of Army staff,
General Ishaya Bamayi, the eldest son of late General Sanni Abacha, Mohammed
Abacha and his Chief Security Officer, Al-Mustapha.
Setbacks
However, the gains made in the area of
human rights by the new government received a serious jolt with the incident
known as the Odi tragedy of November 20, 1999. On this date, the federal
government of Nigeria in a swift move to track down some irate youths who had
earlier in November 1999 alleged to have kidnapped and killed twelve policemen,
declared a state of emergency on Odi community after a 14-day ultimatum that was
yet to expire. On November 20,
thousands of combined military personnel invaded the community and unleashed a
heavy bombardment by artillery, air craft, grenade launchers, mortar bombs and
other sophisticated weapons in replication of a typical invasion of an enemy
territory in real warfare.
The military invasion of the Odi community resulted in the loss of lives of many
people, as well as animals and aquatic creatures.
Properties were looted and virtually all the infrastructure in the
community was either destroyed or torched.
Many citizens of Odi who were lucky to be alive were bundled aboard
trucks and taken to military barracks in Elele in Port Harcourt and Warri as
prisoners of war. The Odi community was occupied like a conquered territory.
By the time the soldiers were eventually evacuated and replaced with men
of the Nigerian police, Odi was in ruins. What
was left of a place with over 60,000 inhabitants was a handful of old men and
women, the lame and the sick. The
human and environmental rights activists that visited Odi on Wednesday, December
8, were told tales of mass burial, mass cremation, disembowelment
and mass dumping of corpses in River Nun. Indeed, the military solution in Odi was a genocide.
The words of the then Senate President, Dr. Chuba Okadigbo, who led a
delegation of the Nigerian senate to the area, were more revealing.
In utter disbelief he had said:
“I
am shocked……there is nothing to
say, as there is nobody to speak with.”3
Earlier that same year, in October 1999, Choba town near Port Harcourt was also
sacked while its women were raped by soldiers who were drafted to the town to
defend Wilbros, an American oil servicing company.
It
is also deplorable to note that years of government exploitation of the crude
oil reserve beneath the Niger Delta has not brought any desirable change to the
people. It has rather brought tales of poverty and squalor, due to
deprivation and neglect. It has
also brought tales of the cries of
the people against injustice and their resistance to subjugation, which has
always pitched them against the holders of state power.
In
recent times in Nigeria, ethnic clashes resulting in indiscriminate killings and
mindless destruction of properties have become a serious source of human rights
violation. The spate of killings of ordinary Nigerians under the guise of ethnic
conflicts and in total disregard for the sanctity of life is a worrisome issue.
In the eastern part of Nigeria,
the Aguleris and their Umuleri neighbours were at each other’s throats over
communal land which has taken scores of lives and properties. In the
west, the Ifes and Modakekes are at war with each other over the relocation of
local government headquarters, while the Ilajes and Ijaws were in dispute over
unmarked boundaries where oil is alleged to have
been found in commercial quantity. The
situation is even worse in the Niger Delta where the peoples of the Ijaw, Urhobo
and Itsekiris are tearing each
other to shreds over relocation of local government headquarters and other
problems bordering on age-long rivalries.
Most recently, some Hausas settlers and their host community in Sagamu
engaged themselves in an orgy of blood letting over an allegation that a Hausa
woman desecrated the traditional beliefs of their host.
The reprisal attacks and killing in Kano by the Hausa against perceived
opponents was in swift retaliation for the loss of their kin in the Sagamu
uprising.
Elsewhere in Lagos, a new but very dangerous dimension manifested in the recent
clash between the Oodua Peoples Congress (OPC) and Ijaw Peoples Congress in
Ajegunle, a Lagos suburb, leading to a loss of lives and properties.
Apart from president Obasanjo’s recent visit to these troubled spots,
the government has not taken any
concrete step to ascertain the remote and immediate causes of ethnic outbursts
in the country. Most times, the
government adopts ad hoc measures which, rather than check these conflicts,
escalates them by employing force of arms rather than using advanced conflict
resolution skills to calm frayed nerves and douse the embers of war.
When Nigerians celebrated the return to Democracy on May 29, 1999, it was with
confidence, hope and faith for what Democracy stands for.
Democracy is not just the rule of law and values but also means human
rights. It is human rights in the
sense that peoples’ opinions, views and fundamental rights would be respected
and protected by the constitution, which is adjudged supreme.
Not withstanding this cherished ideal, the attempt to elevate one
religion over the other in whatever guise or circumstance, as witnessed in
Zamfara state in Nigeria, is a breach of the fundamental rights as provided in
the international instruments. The
attempt to transform a unit in a federation of Nigeria into an Islamic
state by elevating Sharia law far and above the constitution, thereby denying a
segment of the population their
civil and religious rights in the same federation, amounts to a serious breach
of human rights. The violent
clashes and the orgy of killings that took place in Kaduna and other parts of
the country, where thousands of lives were lost and properties amounting to
millions of Naria destroyed as a result of religious clashes between Christians
and Moslems over imposition of Sharia as the core fundamental laws of the state,
is a case of human rights violation. More
so, the arrest, trial, conviction and amputation of an alleged cow thief, Buba
Jangedi, by the Zamfara State government under Sharia law without option of
judicial appeal is a clear case of infringement on the fundamental rights of a
Nigerian citizen supposedly protected by the constitution of the federation of
Nigeria.
Conclusion
As
the nation progresses in its democratic journey with renewed hope and faith for
human rights, it is necessary to point out that care should be taken to avoid
those negative practices that characterized the ugly past.
The unfortunate practice of police
brutality and extrajudicial killings prevalent in military dictatorships, which
runs contrary to the principles of human rights, is still rearing its ugly head
in this new democratic dispensation.
Barely two months ago, on May 5,
2000, Miss Odunola Alli, a young lady of 27 years, was killed at Ilupeju suburb
in Lagos when a trigger happy policeman in the convoy of the Lagos state deputy
governor shot her while trying to ward off a motorist regarded as intruding in
the way of the convoy.
Also on Thursday July 6, 2000, Lagos worker Samson Popoola
was killed when police fired tear gas canisters into the air to disperse
crowds of workers that stormed the Lagos state secretariat at Alausa, Ikeja,
while protesting the arrest of their leader, Ayodele Akele, by the police.
Democracy
no doubt has returned to Nigeria, but a critical overview of the situation shows
that it is still a long walk to freedom.
Endnotes
1.
For further reading see “U.S Department of State, Nigeria Country Report on
Human Rights Practices for 1997,” published by the Bureau for Democracy, Human
Rights and Labor, January 30, 1998. See also Constitutional Rights Project,
“CPR Annual Report: Human Rights Practices in Nigeria, July 1997–
September 1998.”
2. Extract from the speech of President
Obasanjo while inaugurating the Human Rights Violation Investigation Commission
on June 14, 1999.
3. The Guardian on Saturday, December 4, 1999, p.17.