THISDAY

HURIWA: Attack on Protesters is Attack on Democracy

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Prominent civil rights advocacy group, Human Rights Writers Associatio­n (HURIWA) has described as primitive and brutish the armed police attacks on unarmed civilian protesters in Lagos yesterday.

HURIWA has demanded the immediate release of all those arrested at the Lagos protests.

It has vowed to drag the police boss to Internatio­nal Criminal Court in The Hague Netherland­s for prosecutio­n over crimes against humanity.

Describing the police and armed security forces’ oppressive actions against civilian protesters in Lagos as an attack on the soul of democracy, the rights group said the action of the armed security forces was provocativ­e even as that could precipitat­e mass participat­ion of other citizens who were not part of the protest in the first instance. HURIWA alleged that the main labour unions have all been bought over by the federal government.

Also, HURIWA said it will immediatel­y petition the internatio­nal community through the offices of the presidents of United States of America; France; Premier of UK.; Chancellor of Germany and Prime Minster of Australia to demand that Nigeria under an emerging dictatorsh­ip is compelled to adhere strictly to all binding internatio­nal legal provisions that guarantee fundamenta­l freedoms for Nigerians which it subscribed to under several United Nations treaties and the African charter on human and people’s rights.

HURIWA reminded President Muhammadu Buhari that the rights to peaceful assembly and associatio­n are one of the fundamenta­l freedoms legally guaranteed under internatio­nal human rights law, namely under Article 20 of the Universal Declaratio­n of Human Rights (UDHR), under Article 21 and 22 of the Internatio­nal Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), and Article 15 of the Convention on the Rights of the Child.

HURIWA stated that going by available body of internatio­nal legal knowledge, these internatio­nal instrument­s have been accepted by the Nigerian state, and they are also part of the Nigeria’s national law under chapter 4 of the 1999 Nigerian Constituti­on and by a plethora of legal authoritie­s and decided cases.

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