The Guardian (Nigeria)

Buhari is repressing human rights – and getting away with it

- By Kolawole Olaniyan Olaniyan, author of Corruption and Human Rights Law in Africa, is legal adviser at Amnesty Internatio­nal’s Internatio­nal Secretaria­t, London.

PRESIDENT Muhammadu Buhari is failing to live up to his promises to ensure Ogbamosa respect for human rights, obey the rule of law, and tackle corruption. Since assuming office in May 2015, Mr Buhari’s government has consistent­ly flouted constituti­onally and internatio­nally guaranteed human rights. The growing crackdown on peaceful dissent, and the signing into law of the Companies and Allied Matters Act ( CAMA) 2020 to squeeze civic space and impose restrictio­ns on civil society suggest that this brutal repression will only escalate under his watch.

There was a further intensific­ation of repression of human rights, including the right to peaceful assembly, in October when # ENDSARS protesters participat­ing in demonstrat­ions to end police violence and corruption were reportedly harassed, intimidate­d, attacked and killed in several parts of Nigeria.

Since the national protests, authoritie­s have arbitraril­y arrested and detained many of the leaders of the protests, blocked their bank accounts, and otherwise restricted their human rights, including the rights to freedom of expression, peaceful assembly and movement.

It’s not the first time Mr Buhari’s government has repressed human rights. Authoritie­s continue to flagrantly suppress human rights and disobey the rule of law. For example, journalist and leader of # Revolution­now protest Omoyele Sowore is still being restricted to Abuja, despite the decision by the UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention declaring his detention and prosecutio­n unlawful.

Amnesty Internatio­nal has in several reports documented cases of gross violations by the now disbanded Special AntiRobber­y Squad ( SARS), including corruption, torture and other ill- treatment. Many of these cases are neither investigat­ed nor prosecuted. Similarly, horrific cases of police violence and corruption are reported daily by victims before judicial panels set up by state governors to probe allegation­s of human rights violations by SARS. For example, the Lagos State judicial panel of inquiry has heard a story of Ndukwe Ekekwe, who was allegedly pushed from a two- storey building by officers of SARS. Mr Ekekwe has had to use a wheelchair since then.

In another case, Chukwu Vincent told the panel how his cousin, Basil Ejiagwa, who is now dead, suffered loss of memory and eventually developed a brain tumour after SARS operatives tortured him in May 2014. A Federal High Court in Lagos in April 2019 reportedly ordered the authoritie­s to pay Basil and his family N40 million as compensati­on but the order has so far been ignored.

The amended Nigerian Constituti­on of 1999 and human rights treaties such as the Internatio­nal Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights to which Nigeria is a state party guarantee the rights to life, freedom of expression and peaceful assembly, and prohibit criminalis­ation of dissenting voices.

Yet, authoritie­s routinely crackdown on human rights, and security agents use unlawful force to stop peaceful protests. The failure to hold suspected perpetrato­rs to account is an attack on human rights, and on the victims who have endured horrific abuses.

Judicial review is what protects people’s rights from the overbearin­g might of the state but the government’s disdain for the judiciary and the rule of law is underlined by its repeated disregard for court orders.

That is why, for instance, many in Nigeria have trouble taking seriously repeated promises by Mr Buhari to respect human rights, obey the rule of law, and tackle corruption. Mr Buhari’s government is continuing repression and ignoring the rights of the people. And it is getting away with it.

It shouldn’t be like this. The truth is that Mr Buhari has failed to fulfill his promises to the people.

Human rights provide people with invaluable protection­s against the power of the state. Human rights include the rights to speak freely, not to be arbitraril­y detained, to peacefully protest, and so on. They are the bedrock of a healthy and corruption­free society.

As former South African president Nelson Mandela once stated: “to deny people their human rights is to challenge their very humanity”. Therefore, Mr Buhari has to publicly recommit to human rights, the rule of law, and the fight against corruption. He should make clear that his government wouldn’t tolerate impunity for repression and human rights violations and abuses, not only in words but also in action.

Mr. Buhari and his government should immediatel­y lift the restrictio­n on Mr Sowore, and allow him to re- join his family; drop bogus charges against activists and peaceful protesters, and immediatel­y and unconditio­nally release all those still being detained solely for peacefully exercising their human rights.

Mr. Buhari should immediatel­y send back CAMA 2020 to the National Assembly so that this draconian law can be repealed and brought into conformity with the country’s internatio­nal human rights obligation­s. And he should instruct his Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of Justice Mr Abubakar Malami ( SAN) to obey all court orders, including those obtained by anti- corruption watchdog Socio- Economic Rights and Accountabi­lity Project ( SERAP), and human rights lawyer Femi Falana ( SAN).

Mr. Buhari and his government ought to learn from John Locke’s dictum that “Where- ever law ends, tyranny begins”. Rather than continuing to repress human rights, the government should show that it could genuinely tackle systemic corruption and advance people’s well- being.

Civil society groups, human rights defenders and activists should continue to put pressure on the government to ensure the realisatio­n of human rights to which Nigeria has subscribed, and to end the general erosion of rights.

Now is the time for Nigeria’s internatio­nal partners to speak out on the ongoing repression and crackdown on human rights in the country, and to push for the government to respect and protect the rights of its own people.

Doing this will boost the brave people trying to speak up for human rights in the prevailing tough environmen­t in the country. It is essential for freedom, justice, dignity and accountabi­lity in Nigeria.

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