Nigeria
Nigeria
Nigeria
Human rights problems during the year included the abridgement of citizens' right
to change their government; politically motivated and extrajudicial killings by
security forces, including summary executions; torture, rape, and other cruel,
inhuman or degrading treatment of prisoners, detainees, and criminal suspects;
harsh and life-threatening prison and detention center conditions; arbitrary arrest
and detention; prolonged pretrial detention; denial of fair public trial; executive
influence on the judiciary and judicial corruption; infringement on citizens' privacy
rights; restrictions on freedom of speech, press, assembly, religion, and movement;
official corruption and impunity; violence and discrimination against women; the
killing of children suspected of witchcraft; female genital mutilation (FGM); child
abuse and child sexual exploitation; societal violence; ethnic, regional, and
religious discrimination and violence; vigilante killings; trafficking in persons for
the purpose of prostitution and forced labor; discrimination against persons with
disabilities; discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity; child
labor; forced and bonded labor; and abductions by militant groups.
By October 9, although most militant groups in the Niger Delta had accepted then
president Yar'Adua's offer of amnesty, by year's end killings and kidnappings by
militant groups began to increase, although not to previous levels.
Section 1 Respect for the Integrity of the Person, Including Freedom From:
Security forces were responsible for killings during attempts to apprehend religious
extremists.
National police, army, and other security forces committed extrajudicial killings
and used lethal and excessive force to apprehend criminals and suspects, as well as
to disperse protesters. According to a December 2009 Amnesty International (AI)
report, security services executed detainees in custody, suspected armed robbers
under arrest, persons who refused to pay bribes, and persons stopped during road
checks. While not confirming the report, Parry Osayande, the retired police deputy
inspector general in Nasarawa State, told reporters in 2009 that police killed
hundreds of detainees annually, which he blamed on lack of training and
inadequate funding. Authorities generally did not hold police accountable for the
use of excessive or deadly force or for the deaths of persons in custody. Police
generally operated with impunity in the illegal apprehension, detention, and
sometimes execution of criminal suspects. The reports of state or federal panels of
inquiry investigating suspicious deaths were not published.
During the year the Joint Task Force (JTF), a unit formed in 2003 to restore
stability in the Niger Delta and composed of elements of the military, police, and
security services, conducted raids on militant groups and criminal suspects in the
Niger Delta, resulting in numerous deaths and injuries to both alleged criminals
and civilians alike. Credible reports also indicated that other military personnel and
paramilitary mobile police carried out summary executions, assaults, and other
abuses across the Niger Delta (see section 1.g.).
On June 29, the mother of Salisu Ahmadu found his body in a Jos mortuary after
he was missing for five days. He was arrested earlier for driving a motorcycle
during a government crackdown on commercial motorcycle ("okada") drivers. His
mother stated that she saw injuries and two gunshot wounds on his body.
In April 2009 police in Mowe, Ogun State, indiscriminately fired into the home of
Patrick Akama, who had called police because his home was being burgled.
Akama died instantly.
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In April a Maiduguri high court found that in July 2009 police detained and
subsequently killed Baba Fagu, the father-in-law of then Boko Haram leader
Muhammad Yusuf. The court ordered the federal and state governments to pay 100
million naira ($667,000) as compensation to Fagu's family. The police stated that
they would appeal the judgment. Fagu's death followed violent clashes between
police and militant members of Boko Haram in four northern states in July 2009
which resulted in more than 700 deaths; quick burials in mass graves precluded an
accurate accounting of the dead. Numerous injuries resulted, and the Red Cross
estimated that about 4,000 persons were displaced. The clashes were preceded by
Boko Haram attacks on police stations and government buildings in Bauchi and
Maiduguri. There were reports of summary executions, use of excessive force, and
widespread arrests of suspected extremists, many based on little or no evidence.
Corpses of militants were found at police stations, and there were numerous reports
that police pulled persons from cars and summarily shot them. According to AI, in
July 2009 security forces killed an estimated 200 alleged members of the sect
trying to flee Maiduguri. Religious leaders condemned the philosophy and actions
of Boko Haram but criticized the government's use of excessive force and its
failure to address the social problems, including poverty and lack of education,
underlying the violence.
Also in July 2009 soldiers arrested Yusuf. Credible media reports claimed that
police executed Yusuf, whose bruised body subsequently was seen at state police
headquarters with multiple bullet wounds. While police initially admitted killing
Yusuf in custody, they subsequently claimed he was killed while trying to escape.
Buji Fai, a former state government official suspected of funding Boko Haram,
also reportedly was killed in custody along with Fagu. In August 2009 then
president Yar'Adua pledged to conduct a full investigation of the Boko Haram
uprising, including the circumstances surrounding Yusuf's death, but authorities
had not publicly released the results of the investigation by year's end.
In October 2009 a soldier shot Friday Ojieh at close range in his office in Ikeja,
Lagos. The soldier claimed self-defense, but the victim's aunt questioned this
explanation as the young man had some money in one hand and his cell phone in
the other.
killings, and enforced disappearances each year. Victims were not picked at
random and, in a country where "bribes guarantee safety," those who could not
afford to pay were at risk of being shot or tortured to death. The majority of cases
were not investigated, and perpetrators were not punished. When investigations did
occur, they did not comply with international standards, and officers suspected of
extrajudicial executions generally were sent away on training or transferred to
other states instead of being prosecuted. Police often claimed that the victim was
an armed robber killed in an exchange of gunfire or a suspect killed while trying to
escape police custody. AI charged that Police Force Order 237, which permits
officers to shoot suspects and detainees who attempt to escape or avoid arrest, "lets
the police get away with murder."
In December 2009 in the northern state of Bauchi, a clash between members of the
Islamic Kala-Kato sect, town residents, and security forces resulted in some 40
deaths, including children, in fighting that lasted about three hours. The conflict
started when residents complained to police about aggressive open-air preaching
against other Muslim groups. Police arrested 20 persons, including children, for
allegedly fighting and burning homes. Police claimed that they killed sect leader
Mallam Badamasi and recovered "bomb-making tools and explosives."
No action was taken against the four police officers from Ede, Osun State, who in
2008 beat to death Misitura Ademola following her arrest for theft; or the police
officers in Oshogbo, Osun State, who in 2008 beat to death Dauda Najeem while
attempting to extract a confession of theft.
Authorities charged a police officer with responsibility in the 2008 death of bank
manager Modebayo Awosika, who was shot in the head for failing to stop after his
car collided with a police vehicle in Lagos. In November during the trial of a
police officer implicated in the case, police admitted that a police officer had killed
the victim; a second officer remained at large at year's end.
According to the 2009 AI report, police officers from the Ketu antirobbery squad
arrested persons attending a 2008 community party and released only those who
could pay a fine. One of the detainees unable to pay died after being beaten with an
iron bar and rifle butt.
No investigation was conducted into the 2008 police killings of more than 50
persons in Ogaminana, Kogi State; police reportedly attacked the village in reprisal
for the killing of a colleague by local youths.
In April 2009, after receiving a second petition from the Osun State Civil Societies
Coalition against Corruption and Rights Violations, a team of police investigators
visited Oshogbo to examine three extrajudicial killings that occurred in 2008 and
seven that occurred in prior years. The investigators did not release a report on
their findings by year's end, despite multiple petitions.
For example, on April 3, Lagos police reportedly fired live ammunition into a
crowd of young protesters and killed two persons. The crowd was protesting the
police force's killing of another man two days earlier who was suspected of spray-
painting graffiti. A Lagos police spokesperson later dismissed the accusation, and
stated that no one was killed.
Violence and lethal force at unauthorized police and military roadblocks and
checkpoints continued during the year, despite numerous announcements by the
police inspector general that independent police roadblocks would be eliminated
and offenders punished. According to AI's December 2009 report, police often
stopped commercial drivers and asked them to pay a bribe, the amount of which
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was determined by the weight of the vehicle. Police shot drivers who refused to
pay and also shot them when a disagreement occurred over the price, or when it
was unclear whether a bribe had been paid.
In May 2009 at a checkpoint in Emene, Enugu State, police shot Aneke Okorie,
who later died on his way to the hospital. An eyewitness told AI that a police
officer shot Okorie in the stomach and then hung his gun around Okorie's neck to
suggest that the officer had been attacked by an armed robber. When radio reports
in Enugu State claimed that police had killed an armed robber, the eyewitness and
community leaders wrote a petition to the inspector general of police stating that
Okorie was innocent and asking that the perpetrators be brought to justice.
Authorities arrested the three police officers involved in the shooting and
dismissed one, who awaited trial at year's end.
In September 2009 in Festac, Lagos State, five police officers stopped the car of
Lagos State University student Michael Egwu at a checkpoint and demanded
documentation, which Egwu produced. According to eyewitnesses, the officers
subsequently demanded money, and an argument ensued, during which one of the
police officers shot and killed Egwu. News reports claimed an officer was in
custody over the incident, but there was no confirmation by year's end.
In November 2009 a 70-year-old man on the way home from the wedding of his
son died after being shot in the head at a police checkpoint in Osogbo, Osun State.
The man had refused to pay a 20-naira (13-cent) bribe. According to news reports,
fellow officers removed the intoxicated police officer from the scene.
In December 2009 the district coroner absolved police of any involvement in the
2008 killing in Lagos of journalist Abayomi Ogundeji and ruled that armed thieves
were responsible. Police also claimed that Ogundeji had been killed by thieves, but
a coroner's inquest in July implicated police in the killing after eyewitness accounts
described the victim's unwillingness to get out of his car at a police roadblock. One
of the eyewitnesses was shot and killed a few days before the inquest. The district
coroner, however, accused police of failing to conduct a proper investigation.
Despite police pledges fully to disclose details of the prosecution into the 2008
shooting death of Gabriel Mordi at a checkpoint in Agbor, Delta State, police
officers responsible for the killing were quietly redeployed to other locations in
2009.
Police and military personnel used excessive and sometimes deadly force to quell
civil unrest, property vandalism, and interethnic violence.
For example, in October 2009, in Biu, Borno State, two of 100 motorcycle riders
protesting the enforcement of a requirement to wear crash helmets were killed
during a confrontation with police; several riders also were injured. A mob
retaliated by burning Biu government offices.
Organized extremist groups such as Boko Haram attacked police and security
forces during the year. Targeted attacks on police officials, their families, and
police stations contributed to the increase in overall levels of violence. For
example, on September 7, Boko Haram members attacked the Bauchi State prison
to free other members of their group, resulting in the deaths of seven guards and
police officers. Reports indicated that 732 prisoners escaped, most of whom
authorities recaptured within four days (see section 6).
There were credible reports that traditional leaders were involved in killings.
For example, in January 2009, the Ovie of Ozoro, a traditional ruler, and several of
his supporters attacked Eugene Ebiri, an individual with mental disabilities who
lived in Isoko North Local Government Area, Delta State. Ebiri's offense
reportedly involved sitting on the Ovie's throne. He subsequently died, according
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There continued to be reports of street mobs killing suspected criminals during the
year. There were no arrests reported from these mob actions and no developments
in cases from previous years.
b. Disappearance
There was also a significant increase in abductions, some of which may have been
politically motivated, in other parts of the country. Earlier kidnappings involved
international oil workers and perceived high-value targets. During the year,
however, kidnappings occurred against the middle class as a means of generating
quick cash, and against political opponents for political gain. Criminals also
kidnapped senior religious leaders.
While kidnappings for ransom commonly occurred in the south, they became more
widespread as a money-making "venture."
On April 8, more than 50 doctors from the main teaching hospital in Benin City
went on strike after unidentified gunmen abducted the chief doctor on his way
home from work. The protesting doctors demanded that authorities find the captors
and increase security. In May doctors again went on strike to draw attention to the
five doctors who had been kidnapped in Benin City within one week, claiming
"doctors had become the prime targets of kidnapping."
On May 12, captors abducted and later killed Philomena Udoma, the 69-year-old
mother of Akwa Ibom gubernatorial candidate Iniekong Udonwa. They abandoned
her body at the side of a rural road. Her candidate son was captured from the
family home at the same time, wounded by a gunshot, and then left behind because
of the severity of his wounds.
On June 7, individuals kidnapped Halima Adamu, the wife of the speaker of the
Jigawa State House of Assembly. Police arrived at the scene, chased, injured, and
arrested four men after a gun battle. Two of the suspects died on the way to the
hospital, while the remaining two died the next day.
On June 22, kidnappers abducted a British citizen in central Abuja and took him to
a hideout while demanding a ransom. Police rescued the victim and arrested the
suspected kidnappers. Reportedly no ransom was paid.
During an Akwa Ibom raid on July 8, police killed three kidnappers in their effort
to free kidnap victim Akpan Timothy Akpan, the brother of Senator Effiong Bob.
Police confiscated four AK-47 rifles and 145 rounds of ammunition.
On August 30, police rescued the ten-year-old son of Adamu Dahiru, a candidate
for the House of Representatives, kidnapped by gunmen from his home in Bauchi.
Neither the family nor police would confirm payment of a ransom.
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On September 1, police posted public photos and information about two men, one
of who was a former police officer, wanted for the kidnap and murder of
Lotachukwu Ezeudu, a student from Enugu. Authorities offered a financial reward
for information leading to the arrest of either suspect.
Although the constitution and law prohibit such practices and provide for
punishment of such abuses, torture is not criminalized, and security services
personnel, including police, military, and State Security Service (SSS) officers,
regularly tortured, beat, and abused demonstrators, criminal suspects, detainees,
and convicted prisoners. Police mistreated civilians to extort money. The law
prohibits the introduction into trials of evidence and confessions obtained through
torture; however, police often used torture to extract confessions.
JTF use of excessive force during raids on militant groups and criminal suspects in
the Niger Delta resulted in deaths, injuries, mass rape, displacement of civilians,
and other abuses in the Delta region (see section 1.g.).
In May, the Open Society Justice Initiative, together with the NOPRIN, released a
138-page report, Criminal Force: Torture, Abuse, and Extrajudicial Killings by the
Nigeria Police Force, with first-hand reports from investigations at over 400 police
stations. Describing summary executions of suspects, torture as a means of
investigation, rape, and extortion, the report claimed that the government had
acknowledged these problems but had actually allowed the abuse to continue with
"a stunning degree of impunity."
burned; the boy was taken to the local hospital, where he recovered. Police stated
that any officer found culpable would be disciplined or prosecuted; a court case
was pending at year's end.
In August 2009 the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) arrested
and detained without charge student leader Abduliahi Ebiloma. In July 2009
Ebiloma had asked to meet with the education minister to discuss the teachers'
strike and the removal of the minister; the minister had rejected his request. During
his 78-day detention Ebiloma was beaten, shocked with electrodes attached to his
torso, and not allowed to confer with an attorney. In October 2009 he was released
without explanation, and his case was in the court system at year's end. The case
was repeatedly continued at the request of prosecutors during the year. Ebiloma
was suspended from his university and was denied access to transcripts while
awaiting a court decision.
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Police and military use of excessive force in quelling the July 2009 uprising in
Boko Haram communities resulted in numerous deaths and injuries (see section
1.a.).
Police occasionally beat children. For example, in July 2009, police in Iket, Akwa
Ibom, entered a shelter that held 150 children accused of witchcraft. When the
children tried to prevent the arrest of staff members, police beat children, rendering
two girls unconscious (see section 6.).
Security forces beat journalists during the year (see section 2.a.).
According to credible reports, during the year security forces committed rape and
other forms of sexual violence against women and girls with impunity. Police
officials acknowledged that rape was a problem. In May, the Open Society Justice
Initiative reported that rape was "a routine but unspoken aspect of policing" and
was "one of the fringe benefits attached to night patrol." In January, a police officer
allegedly impregnated 24-year-old homicide suspect Halima Abdu while she was
detained in Maiduguri. Authorities arrested the officer, but no public information
was available as to his whereabouts.
AI reported in December 2009 that police frequently raped women in detention but
that victims did not report the abuse because of the social stigma attached to rape
and the fact that police officers had committed these crimes. In 2008 the NHRC
reported a sharp increase in reported cases of rape and sexual abuse, particularly of
minors and women in prisons and detention centers.
Varying Sharia penal codes existed in 12 northern states, and Sharia courts
delivered "hadd" sentences. For example, such sentences included caning for minor
offenses such as petty theft, public consumption of alcohol, and prostitution; it was
unknown if any of the sentences were carried out during the year. Numerous
Sharia cases from previous years awaited appeal or implementation of sentence,
including pending amputation sentences in Jigawa, Bauchi, Niger, Kano, and
Zamfara States. To date, the only amputation sentence carried out involved a
victim who refused to appeal his 1999 conviction.
Statutory law mandates that state governors either impose a stay or implement
amputation or death sentences. Authorities often did not carry out sentences under
Sharia due to the lengthy process for appeals. Because no relevant case had been
appealed to the federal level, federal appellate courts had yet to decide whether
such punishments violated the constitution. Courts consistently overturned stoning
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Ethnic or communal clashes resulted in deaths and injuries during the year (see
section 1.a.).
Prison and detention conditions remained harsh and life-threatening. Most of the
country's 227 prisons were 70 to 80 years old and lacked basic facilities. Lack of
potable water, inadequate sewage facilities, and severe overcrowding resulted in
dangerous and unsanitary conditions. The federal government operated all the
country's prisons, but maintained few pretrial jail facilities. Of the total prison
population, 73 percent was not yet convicted. There were no regular outside
monitors of the prisons, no statistics on mistreatment of prisoners, or on the
availability of food or medical care.
Prison illnesses included HIV/AIDS, malaria, and tuberculosis. Inmates with these
illnesses lived with the regular population. Although authorities made an effort to
isolate persons with communicable diseases, the facilities often lacked the space to
do so. No reliable statistics exist on prison deaths.
The office of the controller general of prisons released statistics at the end of
August showing that the country's prisons held 48,000 inmates. Individual prisons
held up to 275 percent of their designed capacity. For example, the prison in Ikoyi
had a capacity of 800 prisoners but held more than 1,900. Makurdi prison in Benue
State, with a capacity of 240 prisoners, housed 456, while Port Harcourt prisons,
with a capacity of 804 prisoners, held 2,924. Of the inmate population, about 2
percent were female and 1 percent juveniles.
Authorities sometimes held female and male prisoners together, especially in rural
areas, and prisons had no facilities to care for pregnant women or nursing mothers.
Infants born to inmate mothers usually remained with the mother until weaned.
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Although the law precludes the imprisonment of children, in 2008 more than 300
children lived in the country's prisons, many of whom were born there. Despite a
government order to identify and release such children and their mothers,
authorities had not solved the problem by year's end.
Political prisoners were held with the general prison population, not separately.
The government did not make widespread improvements to prisons during the
year, but individual prison administrations made attempts to obtain donations to
benefit the inmates. For example, benefactors contributed equipment and materials
for workshops. In September the first lady of Kano State paid the fines of 15
female inmates, allowing their release from overcrowded prisons.
Those awaiting trial suffered more than those already convicted due to lack of
funding for their care. Inadequate medical treatment caused many prisoners to die
of treatable illnesses. In October 2009 Jerry Manwe, the chair of the House
Committee on the Interior, made a surprise visit to the Kaduna State Prison, after
which he called conditions "deplorable" and criticized the lack of facilities. The
deputy controller of prisons responded that the prisons lacked safe water,
electricity, and basic infrastructure.
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The country also operated 86 satellite prisons, 11 farm centers, eight zonal offices,
and six directorates, all of which held prisoners and detainees. Conditions in these
facilities were no better than in the other prisons.
Disease was pervasive in cramped, poorly ventilated prison facilities, and chronic
shortages of medical supplies were reported. Only those with money or whose
relatives brought food regularly had sufficient food; prison officials routinely stole
money provided for food for prisoners. Poor inmates often relied on handouts from
others to survive. Prison officials, police, and other security forces often denied
inmates food and medical treatment as punishment or to extort money.
During a visit to Niger State's Minna Old Prison on September 2, an observer noted
that women were housed in a separate cell building and slept on bunk beds under
mosquito nets which the wife of the governor provided. By contrast, the 252 male
prisoners slept on bare floors with no bedding in a prison built in 1937 to house
149 prisoners.
Inmates died from harsh conditions and denial of proper medical treatment during
the year; however, an accurate count was not available from prison authorities.
Prisoners with mental disabilities were incarcerated with the general prison
population, and no mental health care was provided.
The country does not provide services of an ombudsman who can serve on behalf
of prisoners and detainees to consider such matters as creating alternatives to
incarceration for nonviolent offenders to alleviate overcrowding; addressing the
status and circumstances of confinement of juvenile offenders; or improving
pretrial detention, bail or recordkeeping procedures to ensure that prisoners do not
serve beyond the maximum sentence for the charged offense.
The constitution and law prohibit arbitrary arrest and detention; however, police
and security forces continued to employ these practices. The JTF arbitrarily
arrested hundreds of persons during the year during sweeps for militants, and
security forces made arbitrary arrests in Plateau State following ethnic violence.
zone of the country to provide an opportunity for victims and their families to put
cases before a panel of judges in order to seek redress and public exposure of
police abuses. The public hearings were well attended, received press coverage,
and brought justice to the small number of complainants heard.
The NPF reports to the inspector general of police, who is appointed by the
president and responsible for law-enforcement operations. An assistant inspector
general commanded each NPF state unit. The constitution prohibits state and local
governments from organizing their own police forces; however, state governors
may direct federal police for local emergency actions. The SSS is responsible for
internal security and reports to the president through the national security advisor.
Due to the police's inability to control societal violence, the government continued
to rely on the army in some cases.
The NPF committed human rights abuses and generally operated with impunity in
the apprehension, illegal detention, and sometimes execution of criminal suspects.
The SSS also committed human rights abuses, particularly in restricting freedom of
speech and press.
Police officers themselves were not immune to harassment. For example, Emcy
Munlip, a female police corporal serving in Rivers State, refused the advances of
her commander, David Obike Eme. He directed that she would no longer have
government housing privileges and immediately evicted her with her belongings.
According to AI's December 2009 report, only a fraction of the NPF annual budget
reached state and local police stations, and the lack of funding contributed to many
police failures. Officers worked without basic equipment and sometimes made
crime victims pay for the gasoline and stationery necessary to conduct an
investigation. Such lack of resources contributed to corruption (see section 4).
Police and security forces have authority to arrest without warrant, if they have a
reasonable suspicion that a person committed an offense, a power they often
abused. By law police may detain persons for 48 hours before charging them with
an offense. The law requires an arresting officer to inform the accused of charges
at the time of arrest, to transport the accused to a police station for processing
within a reasonable time, and to allow suspects to engage counsel and post bail.
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However, police routinely detained suspects without informing them of the charges
or allowing access to counsel and family members. Provision of bail was often
arbitrary or subject to extrajudicial influence. Conditions of bail set by judges often
were too stringent to be met. In many areas with no functioning bail system,
suspects remained incarcerated indefinitely in investigative detention within the
prison system. Detainees were kept incommunicado for long periods. Numerous
detainees alleged that police demanded bribes to take them to court to have their
cases heard. If family members wanted to attend a trial, police often demanded
additional payment.
Persons who happened to be in the vicinity of a crime reportedly were held for
interrogation for periods ranging from a few hours to several months. After their
release, authorities frequently asked them to return for further questioning.
Security forces arbitrarily arrested numerous persons during the year. During the
January to March fighting between ethnic groups in Plateau State, and, after the Jos
bombings in December, authorities arrested hundreds of persons in Jos, many
based on little or no evidence of involvement (see sections 1.a. and 6). Some
bystanders gained release within a few days; however, an unknown number of
persons were held without bail or charges at year's end.
Security forces detained journalists and demonstrators during the year (see sections
2.a. and 2.b.).
The EFCC reportedly singled out political opponents of the governing party in its
arrest and detention of state, local, and federal government officials on corruption
charges during the year (see sections 1.c. and 4).
The rape of women in detention by police was a problem (see section 1.c.).
Lengthy pretrial detention remained a serious problem, and human rights groups
reported that detainees awaiting trial constituted 73 percent of the prison
population, with some awaiting trial more than 10 years. At year's end 35,000
pretrial detainees resided in the country's prisons, out of a total of 48,000 prisoners.
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Serious trial backlogs, endemic corruption, and undue political influence continued
to hamper the judicial system. Multiple adjournments in some cases resulted in
serious delays. Many detainees were denied trials because police lacked vehicles to
transport them to court on their trial dates. In Makurdi prison, where 78 percent of
prisoners were awaiting trial, pretrial detainees held a protest in November 2009
because so many were unable to make their court dates due to lack of
transportation.
The NHRC reported that some detainees were held because authorities had lost
their case files. Some state governments released inmates already detained for
longer than the potential maximum sentence they would have received if they had
been convicted. Although detainees had the right to submit complaints to the
NHRC, the commission had no power to respond. Detainees could try to complain
to the courts but often found this approach impossible. Even detainees with legal
representation often waited years to gain access to the courts.
On June 15, the National Economic Council announced a decision directing state
governors to sign death warrants immediately for the 870 death-row inmates in the
country's prisons for the purpose of reducing overcrowding. Such action led to an
immediate and vocal reaction by NGOs, the African Union's human rights body,
and the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), which
implored the government not to implement such a plan. Public opinion cited the
lack of fair trials and citizens' rights of appeal. Authorities did not carry out the
executions by year's end.
During the week of August 23, the chief judge of Niger State made spot visits to
state prisons as part of an annual effort to reduce overcrowded conditions. He
released inmates on several grounds, such as humanitarian and medical reasons,
the weak legal cases of pretrial inmates, remorse, and good behavior while in
prison.
In August 2009 Lagos State Governor Babatunde Fashola granted amnesty to three
death-row inmates; the sentences of 29 death-row inmates were commuted to life
in prison, and eight others were commuted to various jail terms. The governor
stated he wanted to give the prisoners "hope of changing their behaviors and being
rehabilitated into society."
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Although the constitution and law provide for an independent judiciary, the
judicial branch remained susceptible to pressure from the executive, the legislative
branch, and business. Political leaders influenced the judiciary, particularly at the
state and local levels. Understaffing, underfunding, inefficiency, and corruption
continued to prevent the judiciary from functioning adequately. Judges frequently
failed to appear for trials, often because they were pursuing other sources of
income and sometimes because of threats against them. In addition, court officials
often lacked the proper equipment, training, and motivation to perform their duties,
with lack of motivation primarily due to inadequate compensation. During the year
supreme court judges called for a more independent judiciary.
The Ministry of Justice implemented strict requirements for the education and the
length of service for judges at the federal and state level; however, there were no
requirements or monitoring bodies for judges at the local level, which resulted in
corruption and miscarriages of justice in those courts.
Sharia and customary (traditional) courts of appeal function in 12 states and the
Federal Capital Territory (FCT). The constitution also provides that the
government establish a federal Sharia court of appeal and a final court of appeal,
but these courts were not established by year's end.
The constitution provides that states may establish courts based on common-law or
customary-law systems. The law also provides that states may elect to use the
Sharia penal code in the courts. While Sharia courts have been in operation
throughout the north for centuries, in 2000 Sharia courts were empowered to also
hear criminal cases and pass sentences based on the Sharia penal code, which
outlines "hadd" offenses and punishments, including caning, amputation, and death
by stoning.
The nature of a case usually determined which court had jurisdiction. The return to
the Sharia courts stemmed at least in part from inefficiency, expense, and
corruption in the regular court system.
adequate legal standing reached the common-law appellate system. The highest
appellate court for Sharia remained the Supreme Court, staffed by common-law
judges not required to have any formal training in the Sharia penal code.
Trial Procedures
The constitution provides for public trials in the regular court system and
individual rights in criminal and civil cases. The law does not provide for juries. A
defendant is presumed innocent and has the right to be present, confront witnesses,
present evidence and witnesses, be represented by legal counsel, and have access
to government-held evidence; however, these rights were not always respected.
Although an accused person is entitled to counsel of his choice, there is no law
preventing a trial from going forward without counsel, except for certain offenses
for which the penalty is death. The Legal Aid Act provides for the appointment of
counsel in such cases and stipulates that a trial should not go forward without it.
Defendants have the right of appeal.
There were no legal provisions in common law barring women or other groups
from testifying in civil or criminal proceedings or giving their testimony less
weight, but the testimony of women and non-Muslims usually was accorded less
weight in Sharia courts. Some "qadis" (Sharia court judges) allowed separate
evidentiary requirements to prove adultery or fornication for male and female
defendants. For women pregnancy was deemed permissible evidence in some
Sharia courts. By contrast men could only be convicted by confessing to the crime
or by eyewitness testimony. Sharia courts provided women with certain benefits,
including increased access to divorce, child custody, and alimony, as to get an
audience in a Sharia court was significantly easier, faster, and cheaper than in a
common law court.
There was a lack of due process in numerous trials. For example, in April 2009, the
army convicted 27 enlisted soldiers who had served as UN peacekeepers of mutiny
and sentenced them to life in prison; the soldiers had protested after officers had
NIGERIA 21
stolen their stipend during deployment. After the case garnered international media
attention, prison guards took reprisals against the jailed soldiers. The army reduced
the sentences of the 27 to seven years. Meanwhile, the army found the officers
guilty of theft and reassigned or forced them to retire; however, none received a
prison sentence. In September the defense attorney appealed to the new army chief
of staff to review these sentences.
At the end of the year, a Lagos court released Major Hamza Al-Mustapha, who had
been held without trial since 1998. Authorities arrested him on treason charges for
alleged assassination attempts on former president Olusegun Obasanjo and other
prominent prodemocracy activists. Al-Mustapha was an army intelligence officer
on the staff of the former military leader Sonny Abacha. Saying the prosecution
had not made its case, the judge discharged Al-Mustapha and acquitted him.
The constitution and law provide for an independent judiciary in civil matters.
However, the executive, the legislature, and business interests exerted undue
influence and pressure in civil cases. Official corruption and lack of will to
implement court decisions also interfered with due process. The law provides for
access to the courts for redress of grievances, and courts can award damages and
issue injunctions to stop or prevent a human rights violation. However, the
decisions of civil courts were difficult to enforce.
The law prohibits such actions, but authorities infringed on these rights during the
year, and police raided homes without warrants.
legal process for deciding which homes would be demolished, and persons whose
homes were destroyed had no recourse to appeal and received no compensation.
According to the Swiss-based Center on Housing Rights and Evictions, authorities
demolished more than 800,000 homes in the Abuja area since 2003. There was
widespread opinion that the demolitions were primarily motivated by corruption
and discrimination based on socioeconomic class, since mostly lower- and middle-
class persons lost their homes and property, which, once vacated, were sold to
wealthy persons with connections to government officials.
A long effort by the Rivers State governor to demolish slums on 21 Port Harcourt
waterfront sites, which would displace 200,000 residents, came to the courts in
July when the members of the Ijaw ethnic group filed a suit to stop the demolition
and resettlement. The government sought to clear out "poorly built structures" and
to replace them with schools and commercial and residential buildings in an urban
renewal program paid by investors. Residents protested evictions without adequate
planning made for replacement housing for the poor. State payments were made to
landlords, but this money did not reach the residents in order to facilitate their
relocation. On August 29, First Lady Patience Jonathan, a native of Rivers State,
visited the area and joined the debate in a public disagreement with the governor
about the demolitions (see sections 1.a and 2.d.). In October, AI published a report
on the demolitions and displacement of residents, and called for an investigation by
the federal government of police use of excessive force, and the adoption of new
laws addressing the use of lethal force that would bring the country's laws into
agreement with those permitted under international human rights law and
standards. On October 24, a lawsuit was filed against the state and federal
governments for use of excessive force and loss of property. At year's end no
action on the court case was made public.
The government also destroyed the homes of suspected opponents. For example, in
January 2009 the JTF expanded its operations beyond the Niger Delta to raze 10
villages of the Abala community in Abia State. Residents were injured, and more
than 80 homes were destroyed. The JTF, in conjunction with Abia State vigilante
services and police forces, accused residents of sheltering armed robbers. No
action was taken against the soldiers and vigilantes.
In April 2009 authorities expelled 2,000 Fulani nomads from the Wase Local
Government Council in Plateau State after disputes over grazing their cattle on
farmlands; in May 2009 another 700 nomads were expelled from Borno State (see
section 6).
NIGERIA 23
In July 2009 a Lagos State government special task force demolished hundreds of
homes and buildings along the route of the Lagos-Badagry highway to make way
for a major road expansion project. Authorities warned that only homeowners able
to provide genuine title documents would be compensated and, alleging fraud,
denied the claims of many homeowners.
After the July 2009 uprising by Boko Haram, the government of Niger State
forcibly relocated 1,200 members of the Darul Islam sect (see section 2.d.).
The Niger Delta region is home to a large oil industry which produced about two
million barrels of crude oil per day at year's end. Particularly since 2006, militant
groups have used violence, including kidnapping oil company workers, to demand
greater control of the region's resources. Kidnapping for ransom, armed robberies,
gang wars, and fighting connected to the theft of crude oil, known as illegal oil
bunkering, continued during the year and contributed to the region's general
insecurity and lack of economic vitality. The government's amnesty program
reduced the level of conflict for much of the year; however, an increase in violence
and kidnappings began in October and continued at year's end.
Criminal gangs, called "cults" in some areas, have copied the methods of more
sophisticated militants to amass wealth and power. In a recent trend, kidnappings
targeted businessmen, doctors, teachers, religious leaders, foreign residents, and
others. Gangs extended their reach beyond the core Niger Delta states, where they
originated as politically sponsored thugs to intimidate opponents and to aid
election rigging. Kidnappings committed primarily for ransom increased
throughout the country, including in the north. In the previous three years power
struggles between gangs resulted in extensive property damage and hundreds of
deaths, including of civilian bystanders.
In June 2009 the government announced a general and unconditional amnesty for
militants in the Niger Delta, and almost all major militant leaders accepted the
offer by the October 2009 deadline. Authorities established a training camp in
Obubra, Cross River State, and some of an estimated 20,000 former militants had
completed training in nonviolence by year's end. Many militants expressed interest
in vocational training as well. They received stipends during rehabilitation. The
amnesty program resulted in a decline in militant violence; however, some
observers expressed concern that the militants' amnesty payments were being used
to purchase more arms.
NIGERIA 24
Killings
The JTF was responsible for numerous killings during the year, but no
investigations were conducted.
In December the JTF attempted to raid a camp of Niger Delta militant leader John
Togo. A human rights group reported that the JTF killed nine civilians in the
Ayakoromo community of Delta State during the raid. The observers took video
evidence of destroyed homes and villagers with bullet wounds including a body
with a head wound. Hundreds of displaced persons fled to Warri. A military
spokesman acknowledged the JTF may have killed civilians, but insisted that only
militants were targeted.
In June 2009 militants attacked two police officers escorting a Scottish oil services
worker from Port Harcourt; one of the officers died from his injuries. No arrests
were made.
In August 2009 soldiers shot and killed Clement Nwode in Abakaliki, Ebonyi
State, claiming he was a militant involved in the Ezza-Ezillo community clashes in
the state.
No developments occurred in the following 2008 JTF killings in the Niger Delta:
the March killing of four men near Isaka in the Okrika Local Government Area,
Rivers State, which was widely reported as an overreaction after JTF officials were
killed by militants; and the July killing of 12 suspected militants in Bayelsa and
Rivers States. There also were no developments in the following 2008 deaths that
resulted from clashes between the JTF and armed militants: the August deaths of
35 persons in Bayelsa, Delta, and Rivers States; and the September deaths of an
estimated 15 to 30 persons in the Elem Tombia and Ogboma communities of
Rivers State in a reprisal JTF attack after officers were killed. The JTF never
apologized for the deaths.
NIGERIA 25
Militants were responsible for numerous killings. For example, in July 2009 a gang
of unidentified gunmen ambushed a convoy of police escorting foreign workers to
their offices at a bottling company in the city of Aba, Abia State, and killed five
police officers. No arrests were made.
Abductions
Family members did not report most kidnappings, and no reliable statistics existed.
In the past, kidnappers targeted foreign nationals, but an increasing number of
middle class citizens, including women and children, were abducted. Police
reported that most kidnappings involved the complicity of persons close to the
victim's family, including relatives.
In some areas tensions remained high between oil-producing communities and oil
company employees and contractors. Foreign oil company contractors were
kidnapped for ransom, such as the capture of seven foreign workers from an
offshore oil rig on November 8. Nineteen workers, both citizen and foreign, were
rescued in a military raid November 17.
While kidnappings perpetrated by militant groups were generally for ransom, they
sometimes publicized the acts as an expression of grievances about lack of
economic development, local control of oil revenues, or prisoner releases. Oil
facility guards and JTF soldiers were among those killed in these incidents. During
the year criminals continued to kidnap the relatives (usually children or parents) of
prominent state politicians for ransom or to force payment for services such as
protection details and voter intimidation during elections.
On March 1, South African sound engineer Nick Greyling, two Nigerian sports
commentators, a cameraman, and 21 other passengers were taken hostage after
their bus was attacked by gunmen near Lagos. Greyling and his associates were
released four days later; it was not confirmed if a ransom was paid.
In January 2009 unknown persons abducted Chief Nelson Effiong, the house
speaker of Akwa Ibom State; he was released unharmed with no official report of a
ransom paid.
NIGERIA 26
Also in January 2009 gunmen hijacked a foreign oil supply vessel, took nine
crewmembers hostage, and demanded a ransom of $25 million. Four days later all
crewmembers were released safely with no public report of a ransom being paid.
In January 2009, following the razing of 10 villages in Abala, Abia State, the Abia
State vigilante forces, local security forces hired by the state government, arrested
five members of the Abala community and placed them in jails in Umuahia, Aba,
and in Owerri, Imo State. Police reportedly beat detainees regularly with the butts
of guns and knives. One of the detainees, Ikechukwu Nwagbara, was released after
two months, but the location of the remaining four detainees remained unknown at
year's end.
In June 2009, during another JTF attack in the same area of Abia State, JTF forces
allegedly raped numerous women and girls. Thousands of residents were
displaced, property was destroyed, and refugees in camps were left without
adequate food and water. No arrests were made in connection with the attack,
which triggered extensive media criticism.
In May and June 2009 the JTF conducted a military offensive against Tom Polo, an
ethnic Ijaw and one of the country's most influential and effective militant leaders.
Using helicopter gunships the JTF destroyed Tom Polo's base in Gbaramatu
Kingdom, attacked communities suspected of harboring militants, killed and
injured numerous persons, and scattered survivors into local creeks. JTF patrol
boats closed waterways while searching for militants. Civil society groups and
Ijaw leaders reported the destruction of Oporoza, Benikrukru, Okenroekoko, and
two other communities. Tens of thousands of persons were either displaced or lost
NIGERIA 27
their livelihoods because of the attacks. Critics charged that the attacks reduced
security in the area because Tom Polo's followers escaped with their arsenal intact
and moved into surrounding communities.
The constitution and law provide for freedom of speech and of the press; however,
the government sometimes restricted these rights in practice. Security forces beat,
detained, and harassed journalists, sometimes for reporting on sensitive issues such
as the president's health. Journalists practiced self-censorship, and local NGOs
claimed that newspaper editors and owners did not report some killings and other
human rights abuses, due in part to government intimidation.
A large and vibrant private domestic press frequently criticized the government.
Only one national, government-owned daily newspaper was published. State and
local governments owned daily or weekly newspapers. These state-owned
publications tended to be poorly produced, had limited circulation, and required
large state subsidies. There were 15 privately owned major daily newspapers, six
weekly newsmagazines, and several sensationalist evening newspapers and tabloid
publications.
On April 1, a team of more than 50 armed police officers and 100 armed vigilantes
from Imo State allegedly broke into the offices of Excelsior Press Limited,
destroyed equipment, stole 3.7 million naira ($24,000), and impounded books and
other materials printed for the Alliance for Good Governance of Imo State, a
political group.
On April 24, Muslim rioters killed Nathan S. Dabak and Sunday Gyang Bwede,
both journalists for The Light Bearer, a publication of the Church of Christ in
Nigeria, while the two covered sectarian violence in Plateau State. No separate
police investigation occurred. Also on April 24, in a separate incident two
unknown assailants shot and killed Edo Sule Ugbagwu, a judiciary correspondent
with The Nation newspaper in a home invasion in which no robbery occurred.
Security forces investigated the murder, but it remained unsolved at year's end.
NIGERIA 28
In the January 17 crisis in Jos, Christian journalists lost their equipment, and were
harassed and wounded by rioters whom witnesses suspected of being Fulani
herdsmen. On March 7, an angry crowd of mourners attending a Christian mass
funeral in Jos assaulted state radio reporter Murtala Sani, a Muslim reporter who
was assigned to cover the funeral. Police fired into the air to disperse the attackers.
Sani was taken to a nearby hospital, treated, and released.
Journalists received death threats during the year. In April following the
government's decision to remove Independent National Electoral Commission
(INEC) Chairman Maurice Iwu from his position, four journalists covering his
removal for different news sources received anonymous death threats.
On July 11, unknown assailants kidnapped four journalists returning to Lagos from
a meeting of the Nigerian Union of Journalists in Akwa Ibom State. The
journalists, Wahab Oba, Adolphus Okoronkwo, Sylva Okereke, and Sola Oyeyipo,
and their driver were held for a week. The kidnappers allegedly demanded a
ransom of 250 million naira ($1.7 million), but released the journalists under
pressure from the police. The governor removed the traditional ruler of the nearby
local government, Eze Vincent Okezie Uche, from his position and charged him in
court for allegedly sponsoring the kidnapping. The governor also suspended three
other traditional rulers for their part in the kidnapping plot. The cases remained
under investigation at year's end.
For example, on January 21, Governor Ikedi Ohakim of Imo State sent a team of
armed police to abduct Internet journalist Ikenna Samuelson Iwuoha from his
home. They allegedly brought the journalist to the governor's office, where he
allegedly was beaten by the governor himself and then detained by police without
access to medical care. Iwuoha later was charged with eight counts of libel against
the governor. Iwuoha later filed a lawsuit against the governor for his beating and
ill treatment while in custody. His case had not come to trial by year's end.
NIGERIA 29
On March 15, the chief security officer for the Nasarawa state governor allegedly
beat This Day reporter George Oko and National Life reporter Joseph Erunkeat at a
political rally as they attempted to record the event. The journalists received
medical treatment, but lost their equipment, including cameras, tape recorders, and
cell phones; and unspecified amounts of money.
On June 22, security agents allegedly attacked journalists for covering a brawl that
erupted inside the House of Representatives. Two reporters from the Nigerian
Compass, Wole Oladimeji and Julius Toba, allegedly were shoved, slapped and
detained while trying to prevent guards from taking the camera of a Vanguard
photographer who had taken pictures of the fight.
There were no arrests in the June 2009 Delta State case in which police assaulted
six journalists, seized their identification cards, and prevented them from covering
the demolition of several buildings built on government land without official
approval. The inspector general subsequently apologized to the six journalists, and
the Ministry of Lands paid to replace a journalist's eyeglasses that were broken
during the assault.
No arrests were made in the January 2009 case in which unidentified gunmen
broke into the apartment of The Scroll editor Janet Mba. Mba had called police
before the gunmen entered the apartment, and they fled when police arrived.
Security forces detained journalists and seized newspapers. For example, in March
2009 police in Bayelsa State arrested and detained Akin Orimolade, the Abuja
bureau chief of the newspaper National Life, and accused him of publishing a
report that defamed Governor Timipre Sylva. Police held Orimolade for one week
until Sylva ordered his unconditional release.
No new developments occurred in the March 2009 case in which police detained
Olusola Fabiyi, a journalist from the independent newspaper The Punch, alleging
that he failed to disclose the source of a story that a PDP governor in a northern
state plotted to kill former Lagos governor Ahmed Tinubu. After interrogation,
police released Fabiyi on bail.
NIGERIA 30
There were no new developments in the July 2009 case in which police arrested
and detained for six hours editor Shaka Momodu of a Lagos-based private
newspaper for publishing allegedly defamatory information about a prominent
businessman.
No charges have been filed in the 2008 case in which SSS agents raided the offices
of the newspaper Leadership, seized several computers, and arrested and detained
Leadership publisher Sam Nda Isaiah; the agents questioned him for two days
about a story reporting that President Yar'Adua was critically ill.
There were no developments in the following 2008 cases of arbitrary arrest: the
arrest without charge of online editor Jonathan Elendu after he published several
reports speculating about the president's health; the arrest of Murtala Muhammad
for speculating on the president's health in his online magazine Web site; and the
arrests of Daily editor Abdulrazaque Bello Barkindo, Weekend editor Laura
Olugbemi, and Weekend's former associate editor Simon Imoboswam for
"defamation of character" after the three published articles about the president's
health.
In December 2009 Kano station Freedom Radio was removed from state
government advertising and communication linkages after it broadcast reports
critical of the state government. After a nine-month suspension the linkages were
restored with Freedom Radio's management asserting the station would remain
independent and continue to place the public interest first.
In May 2009 the National Broadcasting Commission (NBC) ordered the closure of
a private radio station in Akure, Ondo State, for failure to pay a fine imposed for
broadcasting an interview with opposition political leaders; the NBC claimed the
interview was "capable of inciting people to violence on the eve of an April 24
local election." Later that month, the Ondo State High Court ordered the NBC to
allow the station to resume broadcasting, stating that it had not followed due
process.
In September 2009 security agents in Owerri, Imo State, detained and beat Wale
Oluokun, a Radio Nigeria correspondent, after he reported on youths with visual
disabilities who had marched on state offices to protest government neglect.
Oluokun stated he was taken to the chief security officer, who took off his shoe
NIGERIA 31
and beat the reporter, followed by more beatings by the security officer's
subordinates. Oluokun, who was hospitalized, claimed this was the second beating
he had received from security personnel after a radio report.
There were 14 independently owned private television stations and two privately
owned direct-to-home satellite network stations. The government owned one
television network, the Nigerian Television Authority, with 96 affiliate stations.
The law requires local television stations to limit programming from other
countries to 40 percent and restricts foreign content of satellite broadcasting to 20
percent. In 2008 NBC chief executive Yomi Bolarinwa ordered that all local
prime-time news broadcasts contain no more than 20 percent foreign content and
that international news be broadcast live. The 2004 NBC's prohibition of live
broadcasts of foreign news and programs remained in force but did not apply to
international cable or satellite services.
Because newspapers and television were relatively expensive and literacy levels
low, radio remained the most important medium of mass communication and
information. The government controlled much of the electronic media through the
NBC, which was responsible for monitoring and deregulating broadcast media.
The government suspended television and radio stations. For example, in May
2009 the NBC suspended for two weeks the broadcast license of radio station
Adaba 88.5 FM, based in Akure, because it had not paid a fine for political
reporting that constituted "incitement to violence."
Hamisu Lamido, a filmmaker who was arbitrarily arrested in 2008 for releasing a
film before submitting it to the state censorship board, was released on bail after
three months. In September, Lamido filed a lawsuit against the censorship board
for defamation of character, which he won with an out of court settlement.
Libel is a civil offense and requires defendants to prove the truth of opinion or
value judgment contained in news reports or commentaries, or pay penalties. This
limited the circumstances in which media defendants could rely on the defense of
"fair comment on matters of public interest" and restricted the right to freedom of
expression. Penalties for defamation of character included two years' imprisonment
and possible fines.
No actions were taken during the year to promote or improve freedom of the press.
Internet Freedom
NIGERIA 32
There were few government restrictions on access to the Internet or reports that the
government monitored e-mail or Internet chat rooms. Individuals and groups
generally engaged in peaceful expression of views via the Internet, including by e-
mail, with few exceptions, According to the International Telecommunications
Union, approximately 29 percent of the population had access to the Internet.
Several Internet news sites critical of the government experienced server problems,
which site owners attributed to government interference. Such disruptions usually
lasted a few hours.
In March, a Kaduna Sharia court ordered the immediate suspension of all debates
on blogs and on the online social networking sites Facebook and Twitter regarding
the 1999 amputation of Bello Buba Jangebe's right hand as punishment for stealing
a cow. The court issued a restraining order to prevent an NGO, the Civil Rights
Congress, from discussing the decade-old case in its online forums. The presiding
judge stated the defendants, as Muslims, had no right to question any judgment
given by a Sharia court. The judge's order represented the first of its kind
restricting Internet freedom.
Freedom of Assembly
The constitution and law provide for freedom of assembly; however, police
effectively precluded antigovernment rallies by prohibiting any rally they deemed
could result in violence, which. In areas that experienced societal violence, police
and security forces permitted public meetings and demonstrations on a case-by-
case basis.
NIGERIA 33
The March 10 rally by the Save Nigeria Group (SNG) in Abuja was peaceful, as
the crowd clamored for more information from government during the illness and
absence of then-president Yar'Adua. The group was nonviolent and
nonconfrontational as police were brought in, antiriot vans were stationed in the
central area, and fortified construction trucks barricaded the entrance of the
National Assembly's gate.
On July 19, security forces turned a mass rally of youths away from the governor's
office in Kano, preventing the youths from presenting a petition about the
upcoming elections. Earlier, after initially being stopped by police, a leadership
group was granted access to see the Emir of Kano, who spoke with the youths
about their desire to express their ideas peacefully to leaders.
On July 29, a peaceful rally by the SNG was disrupted in Yenagoa, Bayelsa State,
when youths reportedly attacked the demonstrators with cutlasses and bottles. The
SNG had earlier received a government permit for the rally; two police officers
were injured along with two activists. Police arrested three of the attackers.
Security forces used excessive force to disperse demonstrators during the year,
resulting in numerous deaths and injuries (see section 1.a.).
Freedom of Association
NIGERIA 34
The constitution and law provide for the right to associate freely with other persons
in political parties, trade unions, or special interest organizations, and the
government generally respected this right in practice. The constitution and law
allow the free formation of political parties. There were 62 parties registered with
INEC at year's end.
c. Freedom of Religion
For a complete description of religious freedom, please see the 2010 International
Religious Freedom Report at http://www.state.gov/g/drl/irf/rpt/.
The constitution and law provide for freedom of movement within the country,
foreign travel, emigration, and repatriation; however, security officials restricted
freedom of movement at times by enforcing curfews in areas experiencing ethno-
religious violence and routinely set up roadblocks and checkpoints to extort money
from travelers. Security officials continued to use excessive force at checkpoints
and roadblocks, which were sometimes maintained every few miles.
The government cooperated with the Office of the UN High Commissioner for
Refugees (UNHCR) and other humanitarian organizations in assisting refugees and
asylum seekers through the National Commission for Refugees (NCFR), its federal
commissioner, and the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA). The
Eligibility Committee, on which the UNHCR has observer status, governed the
granting of refugee status, asylum, and resettlement, and it also reviewed refugee
resettlement.
There are no legal grounds for forced exile, and there were no examples of formal
legal proceedings to exile a citizen. However, there were citizens who self-exiled
for political reasons, such as Nuhu Ribadu, former Chairman of the EFCC, who
left the country in January 2009 after threats on his life. Ribadu voluntarily
returned in June.
NIGERIA 35
The NCFR estimated a total of one million IDPs at one time or another during the
year, There was no national registration of internally displaced citizens, and no
accurate count. There were many causes of displacement, including boundary and
border disputes, sectarian and communal violence, localized political violence,
forced evictions, conflict in the Niger Delta and Plateau State, the government's
use of force in efforts to eliminate extremist sects, such as Boko Haram, altered
cattle grazing patterns due to climate change, and major flooding in the northwest.
Government response to IDPs was uneven depending on the state affected. Federal
NCFR budgets did not cover the need; state and federal emergency management
resources were inadequate. A national IDP policy was under development but had
not been signed by year's end.
In January and March violent ethnic clashes near Jos caused up to 30,000 persons
to flee their homes for relative sanctuary in other villages or nearby Bauchi State.
NEMA worked with civil society and religious groups in an attempt to provide
food and shelter to IDPs. Bauchi State offered homes to families fleeing the
violence, scattered them around the state to integrate them into small communities,
and gave many families land to build a house and to have a plot to farm. At year's
end most of these IDPs either moved back to their villages, or took up residence
with family members; 5,000 IDPs permanently relocated to Bauchi State.
Ethnic disputes over land and political power along the borders of Benue, Taraba,
and Ebonyi States resulted in the displacement of hundreds of persons. The
governors of Benue, Taraba, and Ebonyi States attempted to quell the violence
through meetings with local leaders, curfews, and development programs. The
federal government deployed mobile police units to affected areas to prevent
further violence.
During the year authorities in Port Harcourt forcibly displaced residents on the
waterfront in an area slated for redevelopment, an action that left thousands of
residents homeless (see Section 1.f.). In October AI released the report Just Move
Them: Forced Evictions in Port Harcourt, Nigeria documenting the forced
NIGERIA 36
In August 2009, following the July uprising by Boko Haram militants across four
northern states, Niger State police forces raided the compound of Darul Islam, an
Islamic sect. According to state officials, civil society groups, and press reports,
police arrested approximately 4,000 persons, detained them for questioning, and
searched the compound for weapons. Although no weapons were immediately
found, the government forcibly relocated sect members, including children, in an
effort to disperse the sect's members before any violence could develop in their
isolated village. The government provided no notice and minimal compensation to
residents, evicted approximately 1,250 members from their village, and sent them
by bus to their states of origin. Another 300 members were deported to Niger after
police determined that they lacked proper citizenship documentation. Family
members were moved into vacant schools and government buildings in their states
of origin, where the lack of sanitation, food, and sleeping facilities resulted in
outbreaks of cholera among sequestered groups. Police claimed that the arrests and
evictions were intended to preempt the violence that had occurred the previous
month in Boko Haram communities and that police had received reports that the
community was forcibly holding women and children. However, human rights
observers stated that the government violated the constitutional and human rights
of thousands of innocent persons.
Since early 2009 as many as 1,000 fishermen and their families from the Bakassi
Peninsula sought refuge near Calabar due to reported violence by Cameroonian
police forces. This area was part of the lands which the International Court of
Justice awarded to Cameroon pursuant to the 2007 Greentree agreement to settle
the disputed land border between the two nations. Rivers State emergency services
was trying to provide permanent housing and services for displaced citizens at
year's end.
Protection of Refugees
The law provides for the granting of asylum or refugee status, and the government
established a system for providing protection to refugees. In practice the
NIGERIA 37
According to the UNHCR, the country had 8,747 refugees at year's end, most of
whom were from Liberia, Cameroon, and the Democratic Republic of Congo. At
year's end 5,316 Liberian refugees remained near Lagos, waiting either for
repatriation, resettlement, or local integration. In addition, the UNHCR provided
for 1,120 refugees from the Democratic Republic of Congo, Sudan, Chad, and
other West African nations. There were 1,994 Nigerians who had been living on
the Cameroonian side of the new border and were now settled in Bakassi, Cross
River State, who are not considered refugees. Also 1,815 persons had requested
asylum, 66 percent of them from the Democratic Republic of Congo.
The NCFR established a camp in a remote area of Taraba State for refugees from
Cameroon. An office operated by the NCFR in Maiduguri, Borno State, assisted
refugees from Chad, but there was no official camp in that location.
Refugee status for persons displaced by the civil war in Sierra Leone terminated in
January 2009, when the camps were closed. Subsequently, 553 persons were
repatriated to Sierra Leone. Another 240 refugees who requested residency were
provided two-year residency permits and help in obtaining passports from Sierra
Leone; the refugees also received job training and small grants from the UNHCR
to begin their lives in the country.
Section 3 Respect for Political Rights: The Right of Citizens to Change Their
Government
NIGERIA 38
The constitution and law provide citizens with the right to change their government
peacefully through periodic, free, and fair elections held on the basis of universal
suffrage. The government, however, abridged citizens' right to change their
government during the 2007 national and state elections, which were conducted
amid widespread fraud and numerous incidents of violence.
In May 2007 Umaru Musa Yar'Adua was sworn in as president with his vice
president, Goodluck Jonathan. The inauguration marked the first transition from
one elected civilian presidential administration to another since the country gained
independence from the United Kingdom in 1960. Forty-three parties participated in
the national assembly elections, and 50 parties were listed on the ballot in the
presidential election. However, the presidential, national assembly, gubernatorial,
and state-level elections were marred by poor organization, widespread fraud, and
numerous incidents of violence. Although the INEC claimed a 60-percent voter
turnout nationwide, most independent observers estimated it was less than 20
percent. All major international and domestic independent observer groups
questioned the fairness of the elections and cited problems throughout the country,
including ballot stuffing, intentional miscounting at both polling stations and the
ballot-compilation stages, underage voting, multiple voting, intimidation, violence,
and at least 300 deaths, including some politically motivated killings. Although all
parties participated in the misconduct, observers cited violations by the ruling PDP
significantly more often than those by other parties.
In 2007 as part of his pledge to address the shortcomings in the electoral system,
President Yar'Adua established the Electoral Reforms Committee, consisting of
governmental and NGO representatives, which was charged with bringing the
electoral process to international standards. The committee submitted its report to
President Yar'Adua in December 2008, citing lack of independence for the INEC
and state electoral committees as key deficiencies in the 2007 electoral process.
The administration rejected crucial reforms outright, and forwarded seven of its
own reforms to the National Assembly, where they languished without action.
Following the elections, election tribunals received more than 1,250 legal motions
filed across the country to overturn the results of individual elections for all levels
of government posts, including the presidency. Both major rival candidates of
Yar'Adua--Atiku Abubakar and Muhammadu Buhari--petitioned for the annulment
of the presidential race. The tribunal upheld the election, but Abubakar and Buhari
appealed to the Supreme Court. In December 2008 in a 4-to-3 decision, the
NIGERIA 39
Supreme Court rejected the appeals, thereby upholding the election of President
Yar'Adua. During the year courts continued to hear and adjudicate cases related to
the 2007 elections.
Political violence occurred at federal, state, and local levels, as well as within
political parties. The government made little effort to investigate or bring charges
in any cases of political violence.
Following the removal of Adamawa State house speaker and his deputy on April 5,
about 200 PDP loyalist youths invaded the assembly complex, overpowered
security guards, and threatened to burn the building. The youths protested the
forced resignations of the speaker and his deputy, and the appointment of the new
speaker, who had just defected from the minority party, Action Congress.
Violence marred local elections during the year. In the April local area elections in
the FCT, 41 persons were arrested because of violence at the polls. Charges
included brandishing machetes and knives in an attempt to disrupt ballot counting;
blocking the major road in the area, stranding several hundred cars; and smashing
windshields and injuring motorists in protest over election results.
On May 6, four unidentified gunmen opened fire as they raided the campaign
office of a senate aspirant in Oyo State, injuring two aides, who were hospitalized.
No arrests were made by year's end.
On May 7, a violent clash between two factions of the PDP in Osun State killed
two persons, and injured 25 others. The violence occurred during a political
gathering when about 40 thugs allegedly stormed the meeting. No arrests were
made public.
On July 21, hoodlums armed with guns, machetes, and sticks attacked Oyo State
elected officials at a village ceremony to inaugurate a new water well system. The
attackers reportedly arrived at the scene in two 18-seat buses, and injured aides of
the senate leader and a house committee chairman. Eight victims were
hospitalized, and six vehicles were vandalized in the attack.
On August 7, hours after his official declaration to run for a house seat from Edo
State, candidate Oghogho Omorogbe was confronted by a group of five gunmen,
and shot. No arrests were made by year's end.
NIGERIA 40
On August 9, clashes between the All Nigeria People Party (ANPP) and PDP
supporters in Zamfara State killed at least three persons, injured many others, and
left at least six vehicles burned. The violence occurred when supporters of the
ruling PDP governor sought to prevent the rival ANPP senate candidate from
holding a rally.
On August 28, a PDP rally in Maiduguri, Borno State, to introduce the support
group for reelection of the president was marred by at least one death when armed
youths invaded the meeting with knives and cutlasses. Police and security services
broke up the fight with tear gas. No arrests were reported.
Also on August 28, unknown gunmen killed a personal assistant to the Bauchi
State governor, the latest of five attacks on politicians in Bauchi State.
On June 24, the Senate confirmed the appointment of Professor Attahiru Jega as
chairman of the INEC, to replace Maurice Iwu. Iwu had supervised the seriously
flawed 2007 elections. Chairman Jega proceeded to nominate some new electoral
commissioners, and promised to conduct credible elections in 2011. At year's end
Jega continued to enjoy popular support for the changes he was making in
preparation for the 2011 elections.
During the year the INEC registered new political parties, bringing the total
number of parties to 62. Establishing a political party was relatively easy if the
required fees were paid. Parties generally formed around individuals rather than on
ideological grounds. Allegations continued that the PDP established new parties to
confuse voters with large numbers of candidates.
In June 2009 the Bauchi State house of assembly impeached Deputy Governor
Muhammad Gaba Gadi, who refused to move to the PDP along with the governor
in April, for alleged financial wrongdoing. Legislators reportedly were offered 10
million naira ($67,000) each for their signatures.
In August citizens in the diaspora petitioned the INEC to be able to vote in the
2011 national elections, but the required technology and organization were not
available. According to the petitioners, of the 20 million citizens living abroad,
approximately five million would be eligible to vote.
NIGERIA 41
Men continued to account for more than 90 percent of the country's appointed and
elected officials in more than 500 ministerial and national assembly positions.
There were only eight female ministers out of 42, eight female senators out of 109,
and 25 female representatives out of 360. Although there were no female
governors, four of 36 states had female deputy governors. President Jonathan
appointed a woman as the minister of petroleum resources, a key cabinet position.
To promote national unity and loyalty, the law mandates that the composition of
the federal, state, and local governments and their agencies, as well as the conduct
of their affairs, reflect the diverse character of the country. The current
administration demonstrates this diversity. President Jonathan is an Ijaw from the
southern state of Bayelsa, the vice president is a Hausa Fulani from the northern
state of Kaduna, the senate president is an Idoma from the central state of Benue,
and the speaker of the house is Yoruba from the southwest state of Ogun. The
government attempted to balance other key positions among the different regions
and ethnic groups. The majority PDP party also engaged in "zoning," a practice of
rotating positions within the party among the different regions and ethnic groups to
ensure that each region was given adequate representation. This practice has
become an issue as Jonathan's transition from vice president to president after the
death of former President Yar'Adua, a northerner, upset the prior rotational
scheme. With more than 250 ethnic groups, it was difficult to ensure representation
of every group in the government.
Corruption was massive, widespread, and pervasive at all levels of government and
throughout the security forces. The constitution provides immunity from civil and
criminal prosecution to the president, vice president, governors, and deputy
governors while in office.
There was a widespread perception that judges were easily bribed and that litigants
could not rely on the courts to render impartial judgments. Citizens encountered
long delays and frequent requests from judicial officials for bribes to expedite
cases or obtain a favorable ruling.
unit was ineffective and made no arrests by year's end. Citizens could report
incidents of police corruption to the NHRC; however, it had no power to act on
such complaints, and no other mechanism was available to investigate security
force abuse.
On August 17, Human Rights Watch (HRW) released Everyone's in on the Game,
a report on corruption and human rights abuses by the police. HRW compiled
information from 145 interviews, and documented pervasive police extortion with
impunity committed by police officers throughout the country. Police demanded
bribes, threatened arrest and physical harm, and enforced a system of "returns" in
which officers were compelled to pay up the chain of command a share of the
money they extorted from the public. This system undermined the rule of law and
created a large disincentive for superior officers to hold their subordinates
accountable for extortion and other abuses.
The EFCC's anticorruption efforts were largely ineffectual. The 2008 replacement
of its internationally respected chairman, Nuhu Ribadu, and transfer of many of its
senior personnel raised questions about the government's commitment to fighting
corruption.
Former Delta State governor James Ibori was acquitted on 170 counts of
corruption charges. He continued to face court charges in the United Kingdom for
money laundering and other financial crimes stemming from embezzlement during
NIGERIA 43
his government tenure. At year's end Ibori faced extradition from Dubai to London.
The EFCC cooperated with London police on the case, and EFCC Chairperson
Farida Waziri told media sources she was under no pressure to drop the case.
On February 21, the EFCC authorities arrested former Nasarawa State governor
Abdullahi Adamu on allegations of the fraudulent awarding of contracts and
stealing of public funds estimated at 15 billion naira ($100 million) during his eight
years in office which ended in 2007. The court immediately granted Adamu bail.
Supporters questioned the timing of the charges; the announcement came just days
after Adamu declared his intention to run for governor again. At year's end
Adamu's motion to dismiss the case was pending in the Federal High Court in
Lafia, Nasarawa.
and general Ibrahim Babangida which charged that Babangida mismanaged 12.4
billion naira ($82 million) during his administration. The civil society group Socio-
Economic Rights and Accountability Project accused the attorney general of a
cover-up by refusing to accept its copy of the report, which the organization
forwarded to Adoke in May after he was unable to locate the original.
In June 2009 the newly appointed Central Bank Governor Lamido Sanusi fired the
managing directors of eight banks with large portfolios of nonperforming loans.
In August 2009 the central bank governor replaced the heads of four banks after
the banks failed corporate governance audits. In October 2009 Sanusi replaced the
heads of four additional banks for the same reasons. Legal proceedings broadened
by year's end to include a total of 29 bank executives. Among the bank executives
facing charges, one faced a 25-count criminal charge for fraud of more than 160
billion naira ($1 billion), while another faced a 22-count criminal charge of the
fraud of 350 billion naira ($2.3 billion).
In October 2009 the courts convicted former Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA)
board chairman Bode George and five other commissioners of abuse of public
office in the improper awarding of contracts. George was sentenced to 30 months
in prison without the option of paying a fine.
In December 2009 the EFCC arrested former Sokoto State governor Attahiru
Bafarawa, who was attending an opposition meeting to plan a new "mega"
opposition party. Bafarawa was charged with embezzlement of public funds in
2007, which he denied. Observers charged that the arrest was an attempt to harass
opponents of the ruling party. The court granted Bafarawa bail, and his case is
pending.
The corruption trial of former Ekiti State governor Ayodele Fayose in March was
moved at his request to the Ekiti courts, rather than Lagos, where the EFCC
originally brought charges. In 2006 he was accused of laundering 1.4 billion naira
($9 million) while in office. The case continued at year's end.
Trials also remained pending in the 2008 corruption cases against former aviation
ministers Femi Fani-Kayode and Babalola Borishade for the alleged embezzlement
of 19.5 billion naira ($130 million), former Adamawa State governor Boni Haruna
for misappropriating 93 million naira ($620,000), and the former chairman of the
NPA board of directors and five other NPA members for illegally awarding
contracts worth 84 billion naira ($558 million).
NIGERIA 45
The NHRC, which the government tasked with monitoring and protecting human
rights, maintained zonal affiliates in the country's six political regions. Since its
inception, the NHRC's operations have been limited by insufficient funding. The
commission also lacked an independent budget and judicial authority, and could
only make nonbinding recommendations to the government. The commission
published periodic reports detailing specific human rights abuses, including torture
and poor prison conditions. The government removed two prior effective and
outspoken NHRC executive secretaries without public justification. The current
leader, a former official of the justice ministry, was outspoken and publicly
advocated for human rights and an independent budget. The president is
empowered by law to remove the NHRC executive secretary if the public is not
being well served.
For example, in May two members of the Civil Liberties Organization (CLO) were
attacked by air force police in Lagos after they tried to investigate the case of
Ebere Ihiedoha, whom air force officers beat almost to death at a base in Ikeja,
Lagos, for a minor traffic offense. Senior officials made no attempt to investigate
the incident by year's end. CLO members attempted to press charges at the hospital
where they received treatment after the attack, but the doctor refused to issue them
a medical certificate due to fear of retaliation from air force officers.
On November 9, a group of EFCC officers and mobile police visited the Child
Rights and Rehabilitation Network (CRARN) shelter to arrest Sam Itauma, the
director of the CRARN, at the request of the state governor. When reached by
NIGERIA 46
telephone, Itauma was asked to appear at EFCC offices to answer charges of fraud.
In the director's absence, police attempted to arrest other personnel as children and
other staff obstructed the arrests. Four children were beaten and required medical
attention.
In May 2009 members of the Eagle Squad, a special police force sponsored by the
government of Osun State, arrested 12 leaders of the Osun State Civil Societies
Coalition Against Corruption and Rights Violations; the arrests occurred
immediately after revocation of bail for the 12, who were arrested in 2008 for
protesting an election tribunal decision.
Civil society groups requested both the UN Special Representative for the
Prevention of Genocide and the International Criminal Court to visit Jos and
launch investigations into the ethnic violence and government's lack of response.
No visits had occurred by year's end.
The Open Society Justice Initiative and the NOPRIN published a 129-page report,
Criminal Force: Torture, Abuse, and Extrajudicial Killings by the Nigeria Police
Force (see sections 1.a and 4).
Women
The law criminalizes rape and provides penalties of 10 years' to life imprisonment,
as well as fines of 200,000 naira ($1,330) for those convicted of rape, but societal
pressure and the stigma associated with being a rape victim reduced both the
percentage of rapes reported and the penalties imposed for conviction. The law
recognizes spousal rape as a separate offense; however, spousal rape was difficult
to prove in court, and no such prosecutions were reported during the year. Rape
continued to be epidemic in universities. In 2006 AI issued a report criticizing the
judicial system for a conviction rate of only 10 percent of the total number of rape
prosecutions.
In May the Open Society Justice Initiative released a report on corruption within
the country's police force that highlighted the problem of rape of arrested
prostitutes by police. The report described police officers raping women who could
not pay as little as 1,000 naira ($6) for their release. Police allegedly raped women
who came to report crimes at police stations. The report also claimed that officers,
both male and female, sodomized women with bottles and metal pipes.
In October 2009 the government implemented its Niger Delta amnesty program to
rehabilitate former militants. In November 2009 a group was relocated adjacent to
the University of Port Harcourt, where shortly afterward the former militants raped
dozens of female students. There were no arrests reported, but the federal and
Rivers State governments relocated the former militants to an unknown location.
No action against perpetrators was taken during the year.
NIGERIA 48
According to the 2008 Nigeria Demographic and Health Survey (NDHS), three
percent of married women between the ages of 15 and 49 years experienced
spousal rape.
The constitution provides for equality and freedom from discrimination; however,
no laws criminalize gender-based violence, and some federal laws condone such
violence. For example, the penal code permits husbands to use physical means to
chastise their wives as long as it does not result in "grievous harm," which is
defined as loss of sight, hearing, speech, facial disfigurement, or life-threatening
injuries. Penalties for the sexual assault of a man exceed the penalties for the same
offense against a woman.
On June 10, the government deposed the traditional ruler of Akure Kingdom in
Ondo State after he attacked one of his wives in the street in full view of witnesses.
Police stated that they would press assault charges against the perpetrator, and the
actions were widely criticized in Ondo State and Abuja. In a countermeasure, the
accused filed an injunction naming police and the courts and asking the court to
drop the case. The courts had not begun to hear the case by year's end.
NIGERIA 49
Couples and individuals generally had the right to decide freely and responsibly
the number, spacing, and timing of children; however, effective information and
counseling on reproductive health was not widely available to women and couples.
According to the 2008 NDHS, 70 percent of women knew about at least one
method of family planning; however, only 15 percent used any kind of birth
control, and only 10 percent of women used modern methods. Approximately 50
percent of the population was adolescents, many of whom were sexually active,
but few of whom had access to contraceptives. The UN Population Fund reported
the maternal mortality rate at 840 deaths for every 100,000 live births in 2008, a
high rate partially due to births to adolescents and women at high risk of
complications from pregnancy. About 53,000 women and 250,000 newborns die
annually from complications of childbirth. About 39 percent of live births were
assisted by a trained health professional. Women married young and averaged a
fertility rate of 5.7 children; 36 percent of mothers did not receive any prenatal
care, and only 38 percent of new mothers received postnatal examinations within
two days of delivery. Women and men were given equal access to diagnostic
services and treatment for sexually transmitted infections.
Some women made considerable progress in both the academic and business
worlds, but women overall remained marginalized. No laws barred women from
owning land, but some customary land tenure systems allowed only men to own
land, and women could gain access to land only through marriage or family. Many
customary practices also did not recognize a woman's right to inherit her husband's
property, and many widows became destitute when their in-laws took virtually all
the deceased husband's property.
Polygyny is legal and continued to be practiced widely among many ethnic and
religious groups.
Women in the 12 northern states were affected to varying degrees by Sharia law. In
Zamfara State, local governments enforced laws requiring the separation of
Muslim men and women in transportation and health care. The Kano State
prohibition on commercial motorcycle taxis taking women as passengers remained
in place; however, it was not strictly enforced.
The testimony of women was given less weight than that of men in many criminal
courts.
Children
Citizenship of a child is derived from the parents. The government does not require
birth registration, and the majority of births were unregistered; however, this did
not result in denial of education, health care, or other public services.
government, with state governments required to pay a share; however, not all state
governments released their funding share. It was estimated that up to 10 million
children were outside the conventional school system. As a result of the
government's failure to pay them for months at a time, primary, secondary, and
university teachers were frequently on strike. In many parts of the country, girls
were discriminated against in access to education for social and economic reasons.
When economic hardship restricted families' ability to send children to school,
many girls were redirected into activities such as domestic work, trading, and street
vending. Many families favored boys over girls in deciding which children to
enroll in elementary and secondary schools. According to UNICEF, for every 10
girls in school, there were more than 22 boys. For young persons between the ages
of 17 and 25 years, 25 percent had fewer than two years of education.
Child abuse was common throughout the country. The government criticized child
abuse and neglect but did not undertake significant measures to stop traditional
practices harmful to children, such as sales of young girls into marriage. According
to credible reports, poor families sold their daughters into marriage to supplement
their incomes. Families sometimes forced young girls into marriage as early as
puberty, regardless of age, to prevent "indecency" associated with premarital sex or
for other cultural and religious reasons. Human rights groups reported sexual
assaults and rapes of young girls, especially in the north.
The 2008 NDHS reported that 30 percent of women in the country had been
subjected to FGM. While practiced in all parts of the country, FGM was most
prevalent in the southern region among the Yoruba and Igbo. Infibulation, the most
severe form of FGM, was infrequently practiced in northern states but was
common in the south. The age at which women and girls were subjected to the
practice varied from the first week of life until after a woman delivered her first
child; however, most women were subjected to FGM before their first birthday.
NIGERIA 52
The law criminalizes the removal of any part of a sexual organ from a woman or
girl, except for medical reasons approved by a doctor. According to the provisions
of the law, an offender is any woman who offers herself for FGM; any person who
coerces, entices, or induces any woman to undergo FGM; or any person who, for
other than for medical reasons, performs an operation removing part of a woman's
or a girl's sexual organs. The law provides for a fine of 50,000 naira ($330), one
year's imprisonment, or both, for a first offense and doubled penalties for a second
conviction.
The federal government publicly opposed FGM but took no legal action to curb the
practice. Twelve states banned FGM. However, once a state legislature
criminalized FGM, NGOs found that they had to convince the local government
authorities that state laws were applicable in their districts. The Ministry of Health,
women's groups, and many NGOs sponsored public awareness projects to educate
communities about the health hazards of FGM; however, underfunding and
logistical obstacles limited their contact with health care workers.
FGM often resulted in obstetrical fistula (a tearing of the vaginal area as a result of
prolonged, obstructed labor without timely medical intervention). Most fistulas
resulted in the death of the baby and chronic incontinence in the woman. The
social consequences of fistula included physical and emotional isolation,
abandonment or divorce, ridicule and shame, infertility, lack of economic support,
and the risk of violence and abuse. The absence of treatment greatly reduced
prospects for work and family life, and women affected often were left to rely on
charity.
million. In 2008 authorities arrested Williams and charged him with torture and
murder; he was arraigned in May 2009, and the case continued at year's end. The
government did not acknowledge the wider problem of accusing children of
witchcraft. The state governor, reacting to international press stories of persecution
of children accused of witchcraft in Akwa Ibom, issued arrest warrants for the
leaders of the SSN and the CRARN for alleged misappropriation of funds and
personal gain. The cases were pending at year's end with outstanding warrants for
the shelter's directors.
On September 24, in Akwa Ibom State, a father was arrested after he buried his
six-year-old twin sons in a shallow grave; the boys were rescued when villagers
heard their cries. The father believed the boys were wizards who were responsible
for the death of his wife, their mother. The police asserted that they were ready to
arrest anyone who committed a crime under the guise of witchcraft, but a clan
leader complained that, rather than celebrating the father who discovered
witchcraft in his children, the police were called.
In July 2009 police in Eket, Awka Ibom State, raided the CRARN shelter that
housed 150 abused and neglected children, some of whom had fled their homes
after being accused of witchcraft. Police beat children who tried to stop the arrest
of two staff members. The two were released later after the governor's office
intervened; two girls, aged 11 and 12 years, were left unconscious.
The government did not conscript nor recruit persons under the age of 18 into the
military forces.
In June, President Jonathan stated that there were 17.5 million vulnerable children,
including 7.3 million orphans. According to 2009 UN statistics, 1.2 million
children were orphaned due to HIV/AIDS. UNICEF added that 25 percent of
children in the country, including orphans, were vulnerable due to inadequate
nutrition, poor access to health care, and infrequent school attendance.
On May 24, an illegal orphanage that allegedly sold babies was discovered in Delta
State. The proprietor reportedly coerced pregnant, unmarried mothers to sign over
their babies. The police discovered six pregnant girls, among them a 14-year-old.
The case had not come to court by year's end.
Many children were homeless and lived on the streets. There were no known
statistics on their numbers. Major factors causing children to turn to the streets
NIGERIA 54
included instability in the home, poverty, hunger, abuse and violence by parents,
and displacement caused by clashes in the community.
The country is not a party to the 1980 Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of
International Child Abduction. For information on international parental child
abduction, please see the Department of State's annual report on compliance at
http://travel.state.gov/abduction/resources/congressreport/congressreport_4308.htm
l.
Anti-Semitism
There were no reports of anti-Semitic acts during the year. An estimated 700 to
900 members of the Jewish community resided in Abuja, all foreign employees of
international firms, and worshipped together in one synagogue.
Trafficking in Persons
or the provision of other state services. There were no laws requiring physical
accessibility, or access to information or communications for persons with
disabilities.
Mental health facilities were almost nonexistent. All disabled prisoners were kept
with the general inmate population without regard to disability, and no additional
services were available.
Persons with disabilities faced social stigma, exploitation, and discrimination, and
they were often regarded by their families as a source of shame. Many families
viewed children with disabilities who could not contribute to family income as
liabilities and sometimes severely abused or neglected them. Many indigent
persons with disabilities begged on the streets.
The government ran vocational training centers in Abuja and Lagos to train
indigent persons with disabilities. Individual states also provided facilities to assist
blind and other persons with physical disabilities to become self-supporting.
Persons with disabilities established self-help NGOs, such as the Hope for the
Blind Foundation in Zaria, the Kano Polio Victims Trust Association, the Joint
National Association of Persons with Disabilities, the Albino Foundation, and
Comprehensive Empowerment of Nigerians with Disabilities.
National/Racial/Ethnic Minorities
The country's population was ethnically diverse and consisted of more than 250
groups, many of which were concentrated geographically and spoke distinct
primary languages. There was no majority ethnic group; however, the three major
groups--Hausa, Igbo, and Yoruba--jointly constituted approximately half the
population. Ethnic discrimination was widely practiced by members of all ethnic
groups and was evident in private-sector hiring patterns and the effective ethnic
segregation of urban neighborhoods. A long history of tension existed between
some ethnic groups.
In September the naming of an Igbo as the commander of the army was seen by
many citizens to be an effort to address long-standing discrimination against Igbos
in the military, a practice that has been in place since the end of the Biafran War in
1970.
The constitution requires that the government have a "national character," meaning
that cabinet and other high-level positions are distributed to persons representing
each of the 36 states, or each of the six geopolitical regions. Traditional
relationships were used to pressure government officials to favor particular ethnic
groups in the distribution of important positions and other patronage.
All citizens have the right to live in any part of the country, but state and local
governments frequently discriminated against ethnic groups not indigenous to their
areas, occasionally compelling individuals to return to a region where their ethnic
group originated but to which they had no personal ties. The government
sometimes compelled nonindigenous persons to move by threats, discrimination in
hiring and employment, or destruction of their homes. Those who chose to stay
sometimes experienced further discrimination, including denial of scholarships and
exclusion from employment in the civil service, police, and the military.
For example, in Plateau State, the Hausa and Fulani, most of whom were Muslim
and considered nonindigenous, claimed to face significant discrimination from the
local government in land ownership, jobs, access to education, scholarships, and
government representation.
On January 17, violence erupted in the city of Jos in Plateau State. Accounts varied
as to what sparked the violence. Continuing violence in the succeeding days killed
an estimated 326 persons, primarily Muslim women and children, displaced
approximately 15,000 persons, and resulted in numerous injuries and extensive
NIGERIA 57
property damage. Security services made some arrests, but most alleged attackers
were released without charge. Few cases came to the courts, and there were no
documented convictions.
On March 7, Muslim Fulani herders attacked Berom villages, leaving 700 persons
dead. As in January, few arrests were made, and most of these arrestees were
released. There were no documented convictions from these attacks.
Reprisals and counter attacks continued all year, with estimates of victims over
3,000 by year's end. For example, on the night of October 26, unknown assailants
attacked villagers while they slept in the Bassa local government area in Plateau
State. Reports indicate that six persons, all women and children, were killed, and
several persons were injured. No arrests were documented.
The Presidential Advisory Committee on Jos Crisis delivered its report in August.
The report contained recommendations regarding land ownership, indigeneship,
creation of new local government areas, establishing a culture of nonviolence,
addressing youth unemployment, and community sensitization. No commitment
was made to implement these recommendations by year's end.
In the city of Jos, multiple bombs exploded near a church and busy shopping area
on December 24, killing and injuring Christians. In the weeks after these attacks,
more than 200 persons, both Muslim and Christian, were killed in reprisals and
counter-reprisals, according to HRW.
Numerous ethnic clashes occurred in parts of the Niger Delta, including the states
of Akwa Ibom, Bayelsa, and Cross River. On March 15, two bombs exploded at
Government House in Warri during a post-amnesty dialogue. The explosion
damaged buildings in the area and caused injuries to passers-by. One of the
militant ethnic groups claimed responsibility.
Conflicts over land rights continued among members of the Tiv, Kwalla, Jukun,
and Azara ethnic groups living near the convergence of Nassarawa, Benue, and
Taraba States.
Homosexual activity is illegal under federal law, and homosexual practices are
punishable by prison sentences of up to 14 years. In the 12 northern states that
have adopted Sharia law, adults convicted of engaging in homosexual activity may
be subject to execution by stoning, although no such sentences have been imposed.
No action was taken against persons who in 2008 stoned and beat members of the
House of Rainbow Metropolitan Community Church, an LGBT-friendly church in
Lagos. The attacks occurred after four newspapers published photographs, names,
and addresses of church members.
As of year's end the trial of 18 men, originally charged in 2008 with sodomy and
subsequently charged with vagrancy, had been postponed multiple times. All
defendants were able to post bail, set at 20,000 naira ($133), and were released. No
resolution of the case was announced by year's end.
There was widespread discrimination against persons with HIV/AIDS, which the
public considered a disease resulting from immoral behavior. Persons with
NIGERIA 59
HIV/AIDS often lost their jobs or were denied health care services. Authorities and
NGOs implemented public education campaigns to reduce the stigma and change
perceptions.
In 2008 the Bauchi State Agency for the Control of HIV/AIDS, Tuberculosis,
Leprosy, and Malaria announced an initiative to pair HIV-positive couples for
marriage in an attempt to reduce the spread of the disease. The couples were
introduced during counseling sessions and had the right to accept or reject a
suggested partner. As of March 2009, 94 HIV positive couples were matched and
had married. The Joint UN Program on HIV/AIDS voiced concern over the plan
due to the increased risk of passing the virus on to any children born, and the
possibility of leaving the children orphaned.
The law provides all citizens with the right to form or belong to any trade union or
other association for the protection of their interests; while workers exercised this
right in practice, some statutory limitations on the right of association and on trade
unions restricted this right. Under the Trade Unions Act, labor unions must be
registered with the government and must have a minimum of 50 members. The
law's intent was to prevent a proliferation of small unions.
Workers, except members of the armed forces and employees designated under the
Trade Union Act as essential public sector workers, may join trade unions.
Essential workers included government employees in the police, prison service, the
immigration and customs departments, the mint, and the Central Bank.
According to 2009 figures provided by the Michael Imoudu National Institute for
Labor Studies, eight million persons, or approximately 60 percent of formal sector
workers, belonged to unions. Officials of the Nigeria Labor Congress reported that
their 39 affiliated unions had a combined membership of between 3.5 and 3.8
million, including both private and public sectors. The officials reported that union
membership had declined in recent years. Many workers in the informal sector,
where most workers find employment, belonged to thrift and cooperative societies,
which helped with daily savings and with loans to meet business needs.
Trade union federations, called in the Trade Unions Act "central labor
organizations," must be registered with the government. Each federation must
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The law allows unions to conduct their activities without interference; however,
the law narrowly defines what union activity is legal.
The law limits the right to strike to matters pertaining to breach of contract or wage
and conditions of work. Strikes were prohibited over national economic policy.
The International Labor Organization (ILO) ruled that this policy was contrary to
ILO conventions. In 2009 the government chose not to enforce this provision of
the law during a four-month public university strike over the national minimum
wage, public education policy, and academic autonomy.
Workers not defined as "essential" had the right to strike, although they had to
provide advance notice. Workers under collective bargaining agreements cannot
participate in strikes unless their unions complied with legal requirements,
including provisions for mandatory mediation and referral of disputes to the
government. Workers can bring labor grievances to the judicial system for review;
however, courts do not ensure due process in protecting workers' rights. Laws
prohibit workers from forcing persons to join strikes, closing airports, or
obstructing public by-ways, with violations subject to stiff fines and possible
prison sentences. There were no known arrests during the year.
No laws prohibit retribution against strikers and strike leaders, but strikers who
believed they were victims of unfair retribution could submit their cases to the
Industrial Arbitration Panel with the approval of the Ministry of Labor. The panel's
decisions were binding on the parties but could be appealed to the National
Industrial Court. Labor representatives described the arbitration process as
cumbersome, time-consuming, and ineffective in deterring retribution against
strikers.
The law provides for the right of workers to both organize and bargain collectively
with employers. Collective bargaining occurred throughout the public sector and
the organized private sector but remained restricted in the private sector.
The Ministry of Labor is responsible for monitoring and addressing reported cases
of antiunion discrimination. According to labor representatives, in many cases
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Chinese employers reportedly failed to comply with labor laws pertaining to the
protection of union organizing, especially in the construction and textile sectors.
The law, which sets a general minimum age for employment of 14 years, did not
protect children from exploitation in the workplace and was not effectively
enforced by the government. Child labor was widespread, and the Ministry of
Labor and the National Agency for the Prevention of Trafficking in Persons
(NAPTIP) estimated that more than 15 million children were involved in child
labor.
Young persons under age 15 may only be employed on a daily basis, must receive
the day's wages at the end of each workday, and must be able to return each night
to their parents' or guardian's residence; however, under the Labor Act these
regulations do not apply to domestic service. The law also provides exceptions for
light work in agriculture and horticulture if the employer is a family member. No
young person under the age of 16 may work underground, in machine work, or on
a public holiday. No young person may be employed in any job that is injurious to
health, dangerous, or immoral.
For industrial work and work on vessels where a family member is not employed,
the minimum work age is 15 years, which is consistent with the age for completing
educational requirements; however, child labor remained a problem. The law states
that children may not be employed in agricultural or domestic work for more than
eight hours per day. Apprenticeship of youths above the age of 12 is allowed under
specific conditions.
The worst forms of child labor identified in the country included commercial
agriculture and hazardous farm work; street hawking; exploitative cottage
industries and hazardous mechanical workshops; exploitative and hazardous
domestic work; commercial fishing; exploitative and hazardous pastoral and
herding activities; construction; transportation; mining and quarrying; prostitution
and pornography; forced and compulsory labor and debt bondage; participation in
ethnic, religious, political conflicts, and violence; and involvement in drug
peddling.
Many children worked as beggars, street peddlers, bus conductors, and domestic
servants in urban areas. Children also worked in the agricultural sector and in
mines. Boys worked as bondage laborers on farms, in restaurants, small businesses,
and granite mines, as street peddlers, and beggars. Girls were forced to work as
domestic servants, street peddlers, and commercial sex workers. See further
information in the Trafficking in Persons Report www.state.gov/g/tip.
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In an effort to withdraw children from the worst forms of child labor, the Ministry
of Labor has established and upgraded skills acquisition and vocational training
centers in Kaduna, Ibadan, Enugu, and Lagos; four other centers were being
developed. New centers in Calabar, Bauchi, and Warri were completed. Hundreds
of smaller NGO-run or state-run vocational training centers also were in operation.
The Ministry of Labor dealt specifically with child labor problems and operated an
inspections department to enforce legal provisions on conditions of work and
protection of workers. From January to November the Ministry reported 12,040
labor inspections with 441 officers. Although the inspectorate employed nearly 400
inspectors for all business sectors, there were fewer than 50 factory inspectors for
the entire country. Victims or their guardians rarely made complaints due to
intimidation and fear of losing their jobs. Labor inspections were mostly random
but occasionally occurred when there was suspicion, rather than actual complaints
of, illegal activity. The ministry conducted inspections mostly in the formal
business sector, where the incidence of child labor was not reported to be a
significant problem. The NAPTIP bears some responsibility for enforcing child
labor laws, although it primarily rehabilitates trafficking and child labor victims.
The federal government passed the Child Rights Act in 2003, but it required state-
level ratification for full implementation. A total of 24 states, plus the FCT, have
passed the Act. The remaining states are in the north, where Sharia law is in effect.
UNICEF continued to advocate passage and enforcement in all other states.
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Private and government initiatives to eliminate child labor continued but remained
mostly ineffective. The government gradually implemented the ILO/International
Program for the Elimination of Child Labor Sustainable Tree Crop Program in the
cocoa and other agricultural subsectors, a component of which sensitized farmers
to issues relating to hazardous child labor and child trafficking for labor
exploitation. Akwa Ibom, Ondo, Cross River, and Abia states participated in the
program during the year.
The national monthly minimum wage is 5,500 naira ($36). The national minimum
wage did not provide a decent standard of living for a worker and family.
In August the minimum wage for federal public sector workers increased to 17,000
naira ($115) per month. The government, labor and private business negotiated
amendments to the National Minimum Wage Act, covering private employers,
state and local government workers. These amendments raise the monthly
minimum wage for all but federal workers to 18,000 naira ($120). In November
labor unions led by the Nigeria Labor Congress staged a one-day "warning strike"
to protest the lack of progress by the executive branch in sending the bill to the
National Assembly for passage. The unions suspended the strike after the Minister
of Labor made assurances that the government would forward the draft legislation
to the National Assembly. However, at year's end the National Assembly did not
take action on the bill. The Labor Ministry has responsibility for monitoring
compliance with the minimum wage, which it strictly enforced for companies with
over 50 employees. When a company with fewer than 50 employees was found to
pay less than the minimum wage, the ministry reviewed the company's records to
determine whether it could pay the minimum wage and then issued a ruling.
The Labor Act mandates a 40-hour work week, two to four weeks of annual leave,
and overtime and holiday pay, except for agricultural and domestic workers. The
law prohibits excessive compulsory overtime for civilian government employees.
The law establishes general health and safety provisions, some of which were
aimed specifically at young or female workers: however, the Ministry of Labor did
not properly monitor and enforce health and safety conditions due to insufficient
inspectors. The inspectorate division of the Ministry of Labor inspects factories for
compliance with health and safety standards. However, this division was
underfunded, lacked basic resources and training, and consequently did not
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The labor laws apply to legal foreign workers, but not all companies respected
these laws in practice.