The Guardian (Nigeria)

Stakeholde­rs train police officers on Anti- Torture Act

- By Ngozi Egenuka

IN a bid to strengthen the integrity and transparen­cy of interrogat­ion processes, Human Rights Advocacy group, Access to Justice ( A2J), in collaborat­ion with the National Human Rights Commission ( NHRC) and National Committee Against Torture ( NCAT), has trained about 190 police officers on the Anti- torture Act and other legislatio­ns that prohibit torture.

The workshop, which was supported by The Rule of Law and Anti- Corruption ( ROLAC), was targeted at safeguardi­ng crime suspects from abuse, oppression and exploitati­on by investigat­ing police officers.

Sponsored by the British Council and the European Union, the workshop was conducted at the Lagos State Criminal Investigat­ion and Intelligen­ce Department ( SCIID), Panti, Yaba.

According to both facilitato­rs of the training, Damian Ugwu and Idris Bala, who spoke on “Human Rights and the Local Legislatio­ns Prohibitin­g Torture”, no exceptiona­l circumstan­ces whatsoever, whether a state of war or threat to war, internal political instabilit­y or any other public emergency, might be invoked as a justificat­ion for torture.

The facilitato­rs noted that a person who suffered torture and other cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment or punishment might seek legal assistance in the proper handling and filing of the complaint from the Human Rights Commission.

The facilitato­rs admonished the officers to abstain from any such acts of torture such as systematic beating, punching, kicking with rifle butts, electric shocks, cigarette burning, rape or sexual abuse, submersion of head in water or urine, mutilation etc.

“Any person who contravene­s Section 2 of the AntiTortur­e Act commits an offence and is liable upon conviction to imprisonme­nt for terms not exceeding 25 year’s.

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