A leading pro-democracy and civil Rights advocacy group
– HUMAN RIGHTS WRITERS ASSOCIATION OF NIGERIA (HURIWA) has lamented the needless
killing of an NYSC participant doing his service with channel television Mr.
Precious Owolabi and the Deputy commissioner of police Umar Usman just as the
Rights group has asked the federal government to pay #100 million compensations
to the families of those killed in the unfortunate violence that trailed the
protest by Shiites Islamic movement in Abuja.
In a media statement by the national coordinator comrade
Emmanuel Onwubiko and the national media affairs director Miss. Zainab Yusuf,
HURIWA has also cautioned the federal government against the rumored
declaration of the Shiites Islamic group as a terrorist organization just as
the Rights group submitted that the Right to freedom of religion is guaranteed
by the constitution and must never be abridged.
“We make haste to call on the current Muhammadu
Buhari-led administration to adopt dialogue and peaceful negotiations with the
aggrieved party as a way out of the imbroglio beginning with the immediate
freedom for their detained leader Sheikh El-Zaczacky and his wife”.
“The Federal government cannot afford to continue to
toil with the peace of the nation by refusing to obey a binding decision of the
Federal High Court which ordered bail for the detained religious cleric and his
wife. The contradictory explanations for the continued breach of this court
order amount to an untenable sophistry on the part of the president of Nigeria”.
“First, president Buhari appeared on national television
and stated that he will not respect the court’s order to release on bail the
leader of the Islamic movement of Nigeria and immediate past national security
adviser Sambo Dasuki because in his words, the duo constituted threats to
national security. Many months after, the special assistant on media to
President Buhari Malam Garba Shehu issued another statement contradicting his
boss and asserts that the federal government has nothing to do with the
continuous detention of the leader of Islamic movement of Nigeria. Only
yesterday however, the spokesman of Buhari in the person of Femi Adesina
introduced another contradictory dimension by saying government will not
release him because there is an appeal filed against the bail orders granted
him. We then wonder why the cacophony of illogical arguments from the same
office of the president on this singular matter. We call on this president to
act like a statesman and free all the political detainees and not just the
leader of Islamic movement of Nigeria. Nigeria must truly practice
constitutional democracy”.
HURIWA has therefore condemned any further clampdown on
the group because according to the Rights group the government cannot undermine
enjoyment by citizens of the religious freedoms on grounds that such human
rights are buttressed by the following constitutional provisions in sections
39(1); 40; 41(1); 42(2) and 38(1) states as follows:
Section 39(1) states: “Every person shall be entitled to
freedom of expression, including freedom to hold opinions and to receive and
impart ideas and information without interference.”
Section 40 states: “Every person shall be entitled to
assemble freely and associate with other persons, and in particular he may form
or belong to any political party, trade union or any other association for the
protection of his interests:
Provided that the provisions of this section shall not
derogate from the powers conferred by this Constitution on the Independent
National Electoral Commission with respect to political parties to which that
Commission does not accord recognition.”
Section 41(1) states: “Every citizen of Nigeria is
entitled to move freely throughout Nigeria and to reside in any part thereof,
and no citizen of Nigeria shall be expelled from Nigeria or refused entry
thereby or exit therefrom.”
Section 42(2) states: “No citizen of Nigeria shall be
subjected to any disability or deprivation merely by reason of the
circumstances of his birth.”
Section 38(1) states: “Every person shall be entitled to
freedom of thought, conscience and religion, including freedom to change his
religion or belief, and freedom (either alone or in community with others, and
in public or in private) to manifest and propagate his religion or belief in
worship, teaching, practice and observance.”
HURIWA stated that the President is obliged to compensate the relatives of those killed especially the journalist and the police officer because if government had obeyed the courts and freed the religious leader, the protest that was marred by unwarranted violence couldn't have happened in the first place.
HURIWA has demanded independent commission of investigators including forensic analysts to determine what actually happened that so many persons got killed during the protest in question.
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