The Guardian (USA)

UN condemns one year detention of Nigerian humanist Mubarak Bala

- Emmanuel Akinwotu in Lagos

The United Nations has condemned Nigerian authoritie­s for failing to release a prominent humanist accused of blasphemy, who has been detained for a year without charge.

Mubarak Bala, the president of the Humanist Associatio­n of Nigeria, was arrested at his home in Kaduna state on 28 April 2020 and taken to neighbouri­ng Kano, where calls for action against him had been made by religious figures.

In the weeks before, he had posted comments critical of Islam on Facebook that caused outrage among conservati­ve groups in the mostly Muslim north of Nigeria.

For months the 37-year-old was denied contact with his lawyer or family and his whereabout­s unknown before he was granted access, and a high court order for his release on bail has been ignored by Nigerian authoritie­s. His case has been seen as an example of a clampdown on voices judged to be critical of religious orthodoxy, in a deeply conservati­ve region.

A group of seven UN human rights experts on Wednesday condemned Nigerian authoritie­s for a “flagrant violation of fundamenta­l human rights.”

“Today marks one year since Mr Bala was arrested and detained in Kano state, without any formal charges, on allegation­s of blasphemy. His arbitrary detention has continued despite our appeals to the government in May and July last year,” they said, with the case causing “a chilling effect on the exercise of fundamenta­l freedoms in Nigeria.”

“Through his continued detention, the government is sending the wrong signal to extremist groups that the silencing and intimidati­on of human rights defenders and minority non-believers is acceptable,” they added.

Last December, Nigeria’s high court ruled that Bala’s detention went against his rights to personal freedom, fair hearing, freedom of thought, expression, ordering his release on bail and damages of 250,000 Naira ($657). Yet authoritie­s have continued to detain Bala.

“The government must take action to ensure that the responsibl­e authoritie­s respect the due process and enforce the judicial ruling,” the UN experts further said.

Bala, the son of a widely regarded Islamic scholar, has been an outspoken religious critic in a staunchly conservati­ve region, where open religious dissent is uncommon. After renouncing Islam in 2014, he was forcibly committed to a psychiatri­c facility by his family in Kano before being discharged.

After Bala posted comments critical of Islam and religion on his Facebook profile last April, he received a surge of online accusation­s of blasphemy and threats.

A lawyer for Bala, speaking on condition of anonymity, told the Guardian that police were able to detain Bala on “a holding charge” often used in arbitrary detentions, where formal charges are not presented.

“We are have filed another bail applicatio­n in Abuja, in the high court,” he said but a judicial strike in the country had delayed proceeding­s.

Last year his wife, Amina Mubarak, described the toll of her ordeal while caring for their one-year-old child. “It is unbearable, going through this psychologi­cal and emotional trauma right now. I’ve tried all I can,” she said.

 ??  ?? In the weeks before his detention Bala had posted comments critical of Islam on Facebook. UN experts condemned Nigeria for a ‘flagrant violation of fundamenta­l human rights’. Photograph: Handout
In the weeks before his detention Bala had posted comments critical of Islam on Facebook. UN experts condemned Nigeria for a ‘flagrant violation of fundamenta­l human rights’. Photograph: Handout

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