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REVISITING THE HISTORICAL CONTEXT OF THE COMMISSION’S MANDATE 2. The questions persist: Where did Nigeria take the wrong turn? What is the root of its problems? Is it with its leadership or the followership? Have its resources been its undoing or is it the inability of the ruling elite to manage or distribute these resources in a prudent, accountable and transparent manner? What went wrong? Can we put Nigeria back on track again? Or, as a famous Nigerian playwright has asked, .Are the gods to Blame?. Or else why would a nation so richly endowed turn so suicidal? 3. These and several other questions go to the heart of the interlocking problems of democracy and development, and of peace and security in the country. The problem of the Nigerian State, and of good governance in the country is ultimately bound up with the oxymoronic formulation of the federal idea as unity in diversity. 4. The Nigerian State is a multinational State in conception; yet the possibility of a Nigerian nation, demanding overarching loyalty from its diverse ethno-national groups, seems perpetually constrained and contradicted by the primordial demands of its multinational diversity. This has been, and continues to be the fundamental problem of nation-building, of democracy and development in the country. 5. How do we transform the Nigerian State into the Nigerian nation, thereby confounding the cynics who contend that, almost 87 years after amalgamation in 1914, Nigeria is no more than a mere geographical expression, or who refer to her as the mistake of 1914. 6. Despite the lingering multifaceted and complex crises it has been going through since independence in 1960, the country has remarkably held together, always pulling away from the precipice, except for the civil war years between 1967 and 1970. Indeed, many would argue that perhaps the country’s resilience is both its strength and its weakness. 7. In short, as if in a stupor, the country has tottered on, all the fears, anxieties and frustrations of nation building, notwithstanding. Many have concluded that indeed, rather than being seen as evidence of weakness or fragility, the sense and sentiments of nationhood actually run deep in the veins of Nigerians. Nigerians love their country. They want to see it united and strong. The real problem is, at what cost and who bears the brunt? 9. It is arguable that the continuing frustration about the character of the polity is not unconnected with the general feeling among the Youth in the age brackets of 30-40 and below that earlier generations of the political class have squandered their hopes and future. 11. When the military seized political power in January 1966, there was a general feeling in the country that they were motivated by altruistic intentions and objectives to save the country from descent nto political chaos and instability. 12. As time passed, the country’’s military rulers and the military as an institution by and large lost their sense of direction. The greed of the military dragged the nation further and further away from the project of nationhood. The result is that by the end of almost thirty years of military rule, Nigeria is far more fragmented than it was in January 1966, when the military first seized power. 13. The democratic struggle against military rule in the country, whose high water mark was the return to democratic civilian rule on 29 May 1999, symbolizes and marks the return to the project of the three Rs (Rehabilitation, Reconstruction and Reconciliation), which the military enunciated after the end of the civil war in January 1970. 15. Looking back with the benefit of hindsight, we can see that, in a way, the noble and patriotic project of the three Rs was a forerunner to the Human Rights Violations Investigation Commission. Yet, the setting up of this Commission could be considered an indictment of the Nigerian political military class. LAYING THE BASIS FOR A REGENERATED NIGERIA 16. This is why we believe that there is need for this country, this nation-in-the-making to reflect more seriously on its future, so as to render the establishment of a similar Commission in the future unnecessary. 17. The preceding volumes of this Report have tried to show how the Commission grappled with the problems of providing a platform for Nigerians to confront their gory past, in order to gear themselves for the difficult but essential battles of laying the foundation for a just and democratic Nigeria. 18. Generally, it was evidently clear, from most of the petitions received by the Commission and from the verbal presentations and arguments canvassed during the Commission’’s Public Hearings, that there were genuine concerns among the petitioners and the generality of our people, the citizens, that Nigerians need a nation to belong to, a nation cemented by a social contract of mutuality and reciprocity in cultural, economic, political and social relations, a nation to be proud of, one that provides its citizens with an enabling umbrella of equality of opportunities, social and distributive justice, protection and security. 19. From the sentiments re-echoed in messages received and the keen interest demonstrated in the mandate and work of the Commission by innumerable Nigerians, within and outside our country, we are convinced that, with the right social, economic and political atmosphere, a united, powerful, purposeful, compassionate and egalitarian nation will emerge from the frustrations expressed and captured by such expressions as marginalization, stranger, indigene, discrimination etc. 20. There is enough evidence on the ground to suggest that, were Nigerians to see a leadership that can synchronize public sentiments for the emergence of a Nigerian nation with genuine policy programmes of national reconciliation, reconstruction and national integration, in the next ten or so years, the country could achieve harmony. 21. In view of this, our aim in the present Volume is to highlight some of the major institutional and structural changes that the Federal Government of Nigeria needs to embark upon to ensure justice to its citizens and thus lay a durable and solid foundation for a democratic Nigerian nation. 23. But as we listened to the various petitions, we also detected the flaws in many of the assumptions. A very interesting picture emerges, when we put all the petitions together in perspective. 24. For example, it was interesting to find that there was hardly any consensus on what really constitutes marginalization. What is more, it was interesting to note that while the Ohaneze petition on behalf of the Igbos pointed accusing fingers at the Federal Government, their allegations were challenged by both the Arewa Consultative Forum, on the one hand, and the Southern Minorities on the other. 25. While the Arewa Consultative Forum claimed to represent the North, the Joint Action Committee of the Middle Belt also leveled accusations against the North, which the Arewa Constultative Forum claimed it was speaking for. 26. Indeed, from the submissions received by the Commission, it is possible to conclude that as clusters of ethnic or regional blocs, we are all marginalized, but as Nigerians, the story is different. For example, although a rather unsteady picture has emerged, most of the Memoranda received by the Commission constituted a documentation of frustrations among ethnic blocs. 27. This ethnicised anger focused on the negative and did not give much thought to the substantial progress in many other areas that the country and the communities had made together in earlier periods of our national history. 28. We are of the view that a more consistent and objective reading of the country’’s history will lead to the inevitable conclusion that much progress had been made in the country’’s earlier post-independence history. For example, despite the excesses of military rule, we heard very commendable stories among various communities relating to what some patriotic and imaginative military administrators or governors had done when they governed States that were outside their own immediate States. 29. Evidence exist of the great works done by Muslim administrators in non- Muslim States and vice versa. We also recall periods when the nation knew tolerance and accommodation across ethnic and religious divides. 31. We hold that this is possible and also very much desirable. It is a much easier goal to pursue under a democracy than under military rule. 32. The Commission was of the view that there was need to go beyond the Mandate, in search of pathways along which the project of nation building must proceed. This is more so, because the Commission is uniquely the best opportunity that Nigerians have had in several years to forge an informed understanding of their country’s past and to put in place the necessary foundational building blocks on which a new Nigerian nation would rest. 33. After consultations with a broad spectrum of the stakeholders, it became clear to the Commission that the nature of Nigeria’’s chequered and fractured history demands that the Commission’s work should serve as a mirror to reflect the trials and tribulations of our country. This was not easy. THE GLOBALIZING CONTEXT OF HUMAN RIGHTS PROTECTION 34. The terrain the Commission traversed was long and excruciatingly tortuous. In spite of this, the Commission believes that it has laid a firm basis for a proper understanding of its work and of the imperative need for reconciliation in the country. But the work of the Commission and the recommendations put forward in this Volume must be set in a wider globalized and globalizing perspective setting. 35. Contemporary Globalization has brought in its wake, as its predecessors had done before it, a wide range of challenges, problems and prospects. The Commission believes that every nation must work out its own modus vivendi in making choices that will enhance its national image and advance its national interests. 36. It is in the context of the challenges of globalization that, in making our recommendations, we have taken cognizance of the fact that the choices Nigeria makes to strengthen respect for human rights and consolidate the nascent democratic experiment in the country will have an impact on the rest of Africa. Nigeria must be a model for Africa in this respect. ESTABLISHING THE CAUSES AND NATURE OF HUMAN RIGHTS VIOLATIONS 38. After reviewing the petitions, the Commission came to the conclusion that the issue was not a simple or straightforward one as such. 39. But on the whole, it was indisputably clear, from the evidence tendered before the Commission that the citizens of Nigeria generally believe that they have suffered badly in the hands of successive governments in the country, since independence, although this was more pronounced under military rule. However, it is clear that, beyond the accusations and counteraccusations of various ethno-communal, religious and other interest groups, the roots of bad governance in the country, historically and primarily, lie deep in the colonially-inherited structure and character of the post-colonial Nigerian State, and in the manner of its continuing incorporation into the world system. 40. As we shall try to show in the recommendations, justice and the protection of human rights in Nigeria must be anchored on fundamentally redesigned and restructured institutional (constitutional-legal, cultural, political and social) and structural (economic and resource-distributive) frameworks, which will help to forge and create in every Nigerian, a civic sense of belonging to a nation where we can all live with relative peace and security, a nation in which there is enough space for Nigerian citizens to be what God wishes them to become. 41. One of the major facts to emerge from the work of the Commission was that neither the federal government of Nigeria nor the Commission itself as well as the generality of informed Nigerians had an idea of how the work of the Commission would turn out. We have tried, in this Report, to explain the many difficulties that the Commission encountered. 42. However, the Commission felt strongly that there was no way it could answer all of the questions the country needed to address. Yet, the Commission was of the considered view that its greatest strength might lie in its ability to provide Nigerians with the rare opportunity to tell their own stories, even beyond the period covered by the Commission’’s mandate and with the possibility of drawing out some of the unanticipated consequences of a broader interpretation of its mandate. 43. This is why, as we have already indicated in this Volume, members of the Commission believed that, in spite of its limitations, the Commission offered the country one of the best chances of resolving some of the thorniest and seemingly intractable issues in its political and social history. THE ARGUMENT OF VOLUME ONE 44. In the Introductory Volume of this Report, we drew attention to the historical context for understanding not only the development of constitutional provisions for human rights but also the violations of those rights in the country. The Introductory Volume also provided a theoretical basis for understanding and appreciating the burden of our colonial legacy and its implications for, and impact on human rights violations in the country. 45. It is clear from the analysis in the Volume that our present predicament is a product of a particular historical conjuncture. It is evident that colonialism by itself constituted a gross violation of the highest order of the human rights of the peoples of Nigeria. But the colonial inheritance can no longer be presented as the only or major reason for that predicament. Independence provided the opportunity for dissociation from that inheritance and for a new beginning. Unfortunately, the country’s political class trifled with and, therefore, lost that golden opportunity for a national renaissance. 46. A proper understanding of the nature and character of the Nigerian State, as it is presently constituted and structured, and of current political practice in the country, is, therefore, fundamental to resolving the problematic issues of the future promotion and protection of human rights, the national question and democracy and development in the country. 47. In the same Volume, the Commission also gave the background to its establishment and highlighted some of its subsequent travails. Given the fact that this was a road that the country did not tread before the Commission was established, the challenges were enormous. What was even more frustrating was the fact that it became clear that the Federal Government had not made the necessary budgetary provisions for the work of the Commission. This led to a lot of unnecessary delays. 48. The Commission is of the considered view that a work of this nature clearly needs to be insulated from the vagaries and red tape of the bureaucracy. Given that the Government has always been perceived as the accused in human rights violations, it is important that the Commission be seen to be insulated from or independent of the government. If this is seen to be the case, the better are the chances of the Commission being seen to be objective. This is more so in a society where suspicion of governments and their agencies runs high. SUMMARIZING VOLUME TWO 49. Volume Two of this Report considered the implications of the challenges posed by contemporary processes of globalization for the promotion and protection of human rights in Nigeria by looking at the International Dimensions and Contexts of Human Rights. Globalization has made it impossible for any nation to try to be an island unto itself even it wished to be so. 50. The Volume examined at considerable length the implications of this internationalization or universalization of the core moral imperatives and values of the evolving international law and practice of human rights for Nigeria’’s municipal law generally and more specifically for its human rights domestic law and practice. 51. It is clear that membership of such sub-regional, regional and universal organizations like the Economic Community of West African States, the African Union (the successor to the Organization of African Unity) and the United Nations, impose on their member-states the obligation not only to subscribe to the common values enunciated in the relevant human rights provisions of treaties, conventions and other international legal instruments to which they have duly acceded by virtue of their membership of such supranational organizations, but also to reflect them in their domestic laws and practice and to implement them as public policy accordingly. 52. In the Volume, we traced the historical and philosophical-(jurisprudential) legal origins of some of the major themes relevant for our work and we concluded that, in the main, the international community remains an important moderating force in guaranteeing the promotion and protection of human rights in the world generally and, particularly, in many developing nations. 53. In Africa in particular, the issues of human rights can no longer be left to the whims and caprices of its political leadership and the state. 54. Because the Commission believed that it did not possess all the wisdom and skill necessary to undertake its work, it commissioned researchers to help it unearth some very important aspects of human rights violations during the period under review, which had either been inadequately covered or neglected by the various petitions received by the Commission. THE RATIONALE FOR VOLUME THREE 57. For example, given the prejudices and partisanship of both government-owned and privately-owned mass media, what happens when the rights of citizens who do not have access to sympathetic media, are infringed? This was the point or justification of the Commission’’s Public Hearings.to provide such an access to aggrieved citizens and communities who have had no opportunity to present their cases to the Nigerian public. 59. However, the cases of such aggrieved communities never really got national or even international attention, perhaps owing to either their lack of a celebrity of the status of a Ken Saro Wiwa, or their lack of resources as vital as Oil is to the national economy or to the peripheral or politically inconsequential nature of their location in the geopolitical calculations of the ruling elite. VOLUME FOUR: PROVIDING VOICE FOR THE WEAK 60. We hope that by introducing this dimension of the Commission’’s by the Commission. In Volume 4, we have looked at the Public Hearings. 62. Despite the initial logistical problems over whether the Commission 63. For a population that is largely illiterate, the public hearings 64. The objective of the Volume is primarily to capture those events, without imposing our own or some other interpretation on the material that had been assembled. CONFRONTING THE PHILOSOPHICAL AND POLICY PROBLEM OF REPARATION: VOLUME FIVE 65. Volume Five, titled Reparation, Restitution and Compensation, 66. It is important at this juncture to state that when the Federal 68. What really constitutes compensation and how do you compute How much compensation is enough compensation? Who determines if compensation 69. These questions might on the surface sound escapist or abstract, 70. This Volume is important, even if it is to underscore the fact that 71. During our Public Hearings, almost all petitioners claimed some 72. In making our recommendations, we have not lost sight of these 73. As we see from the discussion of Rehabilitation in the Volume, the 74. The process of sin, repentance and forgiveness as an endless circle 76. Such an attitude or .categorical imperative. will instill in us a sense CONCLUSION 77. Finally, in making our Recommendations, we have had to fall back 79. Drawing from this, we found the relevant sections to be: ii. To identify the persons, authorities, institutions or organizations vi. To recommend measures to be taken either against the 80. To be faithful to our Terms of Reference in making our 81. We are not unaware of the fact that not all the agents and agencies 82. The Commission noted over and over again that it was not on a 83. However, in reviewing the material that was submitted to us both 84. We shall briefly identify them and try to show how certain State THE DIFFICULT TASK OF CRAFTING VOLUME SIX 85. Volume Six of the Report, entitled Findings and Recommendations, 86. There were many questions that emerged, as the Commission 87. In so doing, the Commission found it necessary to go back to its We thematically summarize the findings as follows: 88 From the evidence before us, we hold that military rule has proved Tragically, we all now know that things have worked differently. Military rule has left, in its wake, a sad legacy of human rights violations, stunted national growth, a corporatist and static state, increased corruption, destroying its own internal cohesion in the 90. Clearly, the military are to be held accountable for gross human rights OIL: BLESSING OR CURSE? 91. Oil, one of the greatest blessings God has showered on our nation, rights violations. CIVILIAN COLLABORATORS OF THE MILITARY: THE BUSINESS/ POLITICAL CLASS 93. Unable to accept defeat, some politicians often turned to their PRESCRIBING CONDITIONS FOR A VIABLE DEMOCRACY 94. If democracy is to take firm roots in Nigeria, then the various 95. This means that politicians must learn to accept the rules of the 96. One of the missing links in Nigerian politics has been in determining 98. The role of religion in politics is, therefore, largely seen in negative terms. Although we did not receive particular petitions from either Christians or Muslims as religious groups, there were submissions from various sections of the society that alleged religious discrimination, while also complaining of being under the stranglehold of religiously-inclined hegemonic groups. This much was clear in the submission by the Hausa Christian community in Northern Nigeria. 99. However, the religious bodies ought to have done much more than 100. A new responsibility has now devolved on both the leadership of SECURITY AGENCIES AND HUMAN RIGHTS VIOLATIONS 101. It is evident that under military rule, the security and survival of 102. As we found out during the public sittings, security agencies tended Most of these agents and operatives were guilty of the torture, and sometimes even the 103. We received petitions of the alleged deaths of many suspects in 104. As was noted in Volume Five, our findings have led us to the RESIDUAL EFFECTS OF MILITARY RULE: ALIENATION, ANOMIE,ATOMIZATION AND POLITICAL VIOLENCE 105. One of the very obvious fallouts of military rule has been its impact 106. Thus, the emergence of ethno-religious cleavages and the 107. The courts form the citizen’’s last line of defence in his unequal During military dictatorship, the court found it difficult to perform their necessary function of upholding the fundamental human rights of the citizen. 108. Executive lawlessness and disregard for the rule of law became MINISTRY OF JUSTICE AND HUMAN RIGHTS ABUSES 109 We observed during our public hearings that some State Counsel 110 We recommend that the Federal Ministry of Justice should try to 111 The knowledge of these obligations will assist government ATTORNEY-GENERAL CUM MINISTER OF JUSTICE 112 In Nigeria, the Office of the Attorney-General of the Federation is 113. Nigerians agree that corruption in public life, which was pronounced CHAPTER 2 STATE POLICIES AND HUMAN RIGHTS VIOLATIONS 2. It is easy to argue that colonialism was not peculiar to Nigeria 3. It is clear now that the decision of the colonial administration to 4. For example, the regional arrangements, which were introduced 5. What is more, the long period of preparation, during which 6. The impression had been created that all three regions would 7. Thus, at independence, it was evident that the three regions 8. The result has been that post independence politics threw up 9. Our constitutional and political history is replete with many 10. The result is that we have continued to tinker with the inherited These were some of the privileges that set them apart from the rest of their societies. 12. Let us take the character and nature of the Nigerian state in THE CHARACTER OF THE STATE: PARTY POLITICS 13. We noted, while examining the texture of Nigerian history, that 14. There were four main parties that dominated the landscape in 15. The NCNC was by and large the most broadly based party that 18. But what is also evident from the structure of electoral politics THE CHARACTER OF THE STATE: EXPANDING THE POLITICAL SPACE 19. The Minorities. Commission Report was testimony to the reluctance 20. Even when concessions were grudgingly made in some of the 21. With independence in 1960, it did not take a long time for the 22. Since the expansion of the political space was a project that the 23. We are saddened that the successive fractions of the country’’s 24. While state creation was designed initially to go into the heart of 26. In many cases, the state seemed to have had very good intentions 27. Given the interminable and seemingly intractable crises generated 28. The real disease is the general perception of injustice of the state, its lack of concern for the welfare of its citizens and the high handedness of government agents, which all give the impression that the state is partial to some ethnic groups, and is indeed an active protagonist in inter-ethnic or intra-ethnic conflict on the side of some ethnic groups. 29. The result is that many citizens have come to rely on this process of 30. For example, the government of General Sani Abacha must assume THE MILITARY AND HUMAN RIGHTS VIOLATIONS ‘‘32. The data and evidence, which the Commission gathered, very 33. First, military rule violated the human rights of Nigerians to live 34. Thirdly, the military turned their instruments of coercion on 35. Ordinary citizens also fell back on their connections with military The evidence that was tabled before the Commission by various communities especially in such areas as the Niger-Delta lent weight to this position. There were many instances in Sometimes there were reports of pillage, rape and destruction of property. More often than not, these knee-jerk reactions by the military could be sparked off by such incidents as a motor accident around a military establishment or a quarrel. 37. In short, military rule disrupted almost every facet of our national 38. In another sense, military rule was a fundamental violation of the In this way, the rule of law, the underlying basis for justice and democratic rule was replaced by the rule of force. 40. The pernicious impact of decrees on the promotion and protection 41. It is clear from the evidence before us that the State usually refuses 43. Under the government of General Muhammad Buhari for example, 44. We also hold both General Muhammed Buhari and the members 45. The case of Dele Giwa has been dealt with exhaustively in Volume 46. We strongly recommend that the Federal Government reopen the 47. With respect to the death of Chief Moshood Abiola, we hold that, 48. We cannot wish these cases away. Nor can we sweep them under 49. Unless the cloud over these mysterious deaths of important public THE POLICE AND HUMAN RIGHTS VIOLATIONS 50. From the data and evidence gathered by our field researchers and 51. As the section in the volume of the report dealing with the security 52. Since the first contact that citizens generally have with the agencies 54. They are the ones that Nigerians seeking justice through the courts 55. Like their military counterparts and even more so, the Nigeria Police 56. It is clear from the petitions, which we received, that the police 57. First, there were cases of victims of human rights violations in the Thus, if a police man/woman infringed the rights of a citizen in 58. There are as many stories as there are victims of human rights 59. It is evident though that the corruption within the Nigeria Police is as a means of making up for their economic shortfall. This is why Nigerian policemen and women - Lack of working tools 63. In their various submissions, civil society groups, especially the 65. From the evidence we gathered during public hearings and in This much was graphically underscored by the testimonies of Olisa Agbakoba (SAN), More often than not, victims only came in contact with those who arrest or 67. We also discovered, from the evidence gathered through research 68. We visited the DMI detention cell at Apapa where civilian suspects 69. We also had evidence to the effect that told by petitioners that the 70. The case of Chuma Nzeribe exemplifies this situation most 71. We also found that many civilians had been detained for very long 72. The Government of the late General Sani Abacha is singularly 74. The coup plots of 1995 and 1997 were cited by petitioners as those 75. From the evidence before us, the Commission is of the opinion 76. The issue of the processes employed during military court PUBLIC BUREAUCRACY AND HUMAN RIGHTS VIOLATIONS and termination of employment, without due process. 79. When we took the matter up with the federal government, we were 80. We found from the content and tone of the petitions that concern 81. For example, there were allegations to the effect that certain senior 82. While some of the allegations are frivolous, others are heavy and 83. Allegations of corruption, inefficiency and ineptitude against the CHAPTER THREE RECOMMENDATIONS 1. The first task of the Commission was to clarify the petition it received. We identify those that amounted to gross human rights violations. The Commission thereafter decided to conduct public hearings only in respect of the cases alleging gross human rights violation. 3. Secondly, there was the need for the society itself to know what had gone wrong, beyond the public purview. Therefore, for many citizens, the public hearings meant a chance to heave a sigh of relief and to say: now we know! 4. The military had operated under a cloud of secrecy in many respects. What is more, except for some celebrated individuals who were prominent in society, the majority of victims who were not so well known languished in jails and detention centers without any mention by the media. They lived under very harsh and inhuman conditions. The public hearings gave them and the society a chance to hear their stories. 5. The Commission helped Nigerians through public hearings to get an idea of how their country had been run. The Commission was able to bring many of the perpetrators and victims to confront one another. This was a development that was very emotional for individuals, their communities and the nation at large. 6. We recall the developments among the Ogoni people in Port Harcourt, Rivers State where the Ogoni Four and Ogoni Nine were reconciled and reintegrated into the Ogoni Thirteen and comparative peace was brought into into Ogoni land. It is against this background that the Commission wishes to call on Nigerians to remain steadfast and firm 7. The aim of the Commission was not to reconcile all Nigerians within the period of its sittings or its life. No one can be under any illusion that this project will be realized in the immediate future. The life of a nation is not the same as the life of an individual. We therefore call on Nigerians to be patient, whatever the difficulties and the challenges. The end of military rule, hopefully, should be the end of impunity. Under democratic rule, things may be chaotic and messy, but the system will correct itself, because we shall, in the long run, learn from our mistakes and improve on our efforts. 8. We have under our mandate to make recommendations .to redress injuries of the past and prevent or forestall future violations of human rights. i.e. to say what happened in the past should never happen again. To ensure that this does not happen again is the responsibility of every Nigerian. Our recommendations below constitute some of then strategies to ensure that what happened in the past will not happen again. 9. The Commission is not unaware that this project is merely the beginning of a very long process. This is because there is no way that any society can claim to lay down a foolproof system to ensure that these violations do not happen again. A society can only try to devise protection mechanisms and also hope that its citizens take the protection of their rights as part of their lives. 10. Many Nigerians were already complaining while the public sittings were going on that the Commission had failed to reconcile Nigerians. We are of the view that the primary aim of the Commission has been very much fulfilled. 11. We are aware that our Recommendations cannot be conclusive or even exhaustive. We believe that they will merely offer a take off point. We therefore call on the Federal Government to address some of these Recommendations with dispatch. 12. In many respects, the Commission more than anything else in the country, has offered Nigerians an opportunity to open up their minds over a range of issues that went beyond politics. It is therefore with this sense of responsibility that we are making the following Recommendations: THE NEED FOR AN ALTERNATIVE PLATFORM 13. Nigerians have said it loud and clear that they are not happy with the state of the federation. Their fears, anxieties and frustrations are legitimate. The political class must not panic every time citizens question the basis of the federation. We do not believe that the cries of marginalization are evidence that Nigerians want their country to be broken into ethnic or regional kingdoms. 14. Indeed, from the inter- and intra-ethnic crises across the nation, we know that no single ethnic, regional or religious unit can lay claim to any form of homogeneity. We are aware of the fact that in the last twenty or so years, the country was subjected to gross injustice, misrule and brigandage by its rulers. 15. There is need for Nigerians to talk through the problems thrown up by their recent experience. Unlike the South Africans who had four years of negotiation before their transition ended, Nigerians had a rushed transition. We cannot undo the past, but we can at least correct the present, so that we can build a secure future for generations yet unborn. 17. The discussions can start from the wards and local government councils to the states and then finally to the national level. There is need for a shopping list of issues, which Nigerians should be free to discuss. Their discussion could be summarized and finally tabled before the state assemblies, before they are forwarded to the National Assembly. 19. Items to be discussed at the proposed palavers might include the following: Human Rights issues, Basis for Representation; Resource Generation; Infrastructure; Taxation; Participatory democracy; Identity (religion, ethnic, communal); Constitutional Rights; Policing; Crime Prevention etc). HUMAN RIGHTS AND CIVIC/MORAL EDUCATION IN SCHOOLS 21. Beyond the recitation of the National Pledge and the National Anthem, there is an urgent need for Nigerians to come to grip with the dynamics of their history, emphasising... 22. It was clear to us that respect for Human Rights is very much a new concept in recent African political and social discourse. We have noted that many of the hierarchy of the security agencies did not see any thing wrong in the application of torture and kindred inhuman tactics to extract information during interrogation. We also noted that even for many victims, the idea of what constituted human rights violations was not very clear. We therefore recommend that human rights education become fully integrated into the curricula of the military, police and other security personnel in the country. The Law Faculties in our Universities should set up Departments for the inter-disciplinary study of Human Rights Law as a matter of urgency. It is our view that as more and more of our citizens become aware of their rights, the issue of violations will be minimized greatly. The fatherhood of God necessarily implies the brotherhood of all Nigerians. We as a sovereign nation under God, are resolved, .to live in unity and harmony as one, indivisible and indissoluble sovereign nation under God.. ON EXPANDING THE POLITICAL SPACE 23. We recommend that the federal government and the state governments place a moratorium on the further creation of more states and more local governments . It has become clear that states creation is far from being the answer to claims of marginalization. In fact, such exercises create more problems than they are designed to solve. 24. Many of the newly created states so far rely on Federal Government subvention and so progress development has not really been made, which the creation of states was intended to achieve has been frustrated. ON RESOURCE GENERATION AND ALLOCATION 26. The memoranda from the various communities in the Niger-Delta dwelt substantially on what has come to be known as resource control. While we commend the Federal Government for the progress that has been made by the creation of the Niger-Delta Development Commission (NDDC), we believe more can be done. For now, the Commission should be closely monitored in terms of project conception and execution, with the local communities playing a central role in the execution and evaluation of the projects. SOVEREIGNTY AND CONSTITUTIONAL RULE 27. Although the implicit and explicit prohibition of unconstitutional take-over of government in various Nigerian constitutions has never been respected, we recommend that from May 29, 1999, anyone who stages a coup in the country must be brought to trial, no matter for how long they had ruled and regardless of any decrees they had passed to shield themselves from future prosecution. We further recommend that thenceforth, the country must be governed by the constitution and in accordance with its provisions. No one who overthrows a government should expect to get away with it, no matter for how long they govern unconstitutionally. 29. We also recommend that the military review its methods of internal discipline, especially in relation to detentions in the guardrooms, court martial and other methods of justice that violate human rights. Proceedings in guardrooms and court-martial should conform with the African Charter, especially relating to torture. 30. We recommend an overhaul of the Directorate of Military Intelligence (DMI), with its powers and functions limited strictly to military intelligence gathering. 31. We recommend an urgent return to professionalism while encouraging the authorities to act decisively to sanction the display of any form of religious, ethnic or sectarian sympathies in the exercise of official duties in the armed forces. Every member of the armed forces must, at least, undergo some form of training and re-ra-training. Training and re-training as an on-going process should be more vigorously be pursued. THE ACADEMIC COMMUNITY 33. We recommend the immediate restoration of a climate that guarantees academic freedom in our universities. There is need for proper fundings of the universities to enable them pursue Research and Development. 34. We recommend that urgent steps be taken immediately to restore the Nigeria Police to its lost, dignified place in our society. 36. We therefore recommend the following as a matter of urgency: * Minimum entry qualification of secondary school education THE JUDICIARY 37. On the Judiciary, we recommend the immediate release of the findings and implementation of the Report of the 1997 Kayode Eso Panel of Enquiry on the Judiciary. MINISTRY OF JUSTICE 38. We recommend that the Federal Ministry of Justice and the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) take very seriously the publication of readable summaries of citizenship rights and obligations in the country. The idea is to provide Nigerians with a guidebook on their citizenship rights and obligations. 39. We commend the Federal Government and a number of State Governments for setting up a Ministry for Women Affairs. It is the view of the Commission that this Ministry should be properly equipped to take on the major difficulties, which women encounter in Nigeria only. There is need for concrete legal codes to shelter women from the daily harassment and discrimination that they constantly suffer in Nigeria. 40. With regards to the allegations of murders, assassinations and disappearances, we recommend that the Office of the Inspector- General of Police be made to act on the cases that the Commission forwarded to it for further investigation. 41. However, in the cases of Chief Moshood Abiola, Chief Alfred Rewane, Bagauda Kaltho, Dele Giwa, such as Baguda Kaltho and the others and others, we recommend as follows: i. With respect to the cases of Chief Rewane, Kudirat Abiola and other cases the Commission passed the relevant files to the Honourable Attorney-General of the Federation for further action. The Attorney-General of the Federation then forwarded the files to the High Court in Lagos, where the cases are being prosecuted. ii. As for the case of Dele Giwa, we are of the view that beyond the legal technicalities that some of the key witnesses hung on to, the federal government should be encouraged to re-open up this case for proper investigation. iii. In the case of Bagauda Kaltho, there is enough prima facie to lead us to the conclusion that there was complicity by agents of government in the case. We therefore recommend that the case be re-opened for proper re-investigation and possible prosecution of the perpetrators. 42. While we affirm that matters pending before our courts should take their normal course, we also wish to advise that in the spirit of forgiveness, reconciliation, unity and peaceful co-existence across the country, which this Commission has belaboured in this report, the President may wish to consider a political solution as an alternative to the on-going protracted judicial process. 43. We also believe that Chief Moshood Abiola’’s death was the result of his incarceration and the denial of access to adequate medical attention. The testimony of the Chief Security Officer to the then Head of State, General Abdulsalami Abubakar, was full of contradictions. From the evidence before us, Chief Abiola died in suspicious circumstances. The Commission therefore recommends a thorough investigation to throw light to and inform the Nigerian people on what killed Chief Moshood Abiola. PRISON REFORM 44. Nigerian prisons have become notorious for their inhuman conditions. We recommend an entire overhaul of the prison system in the country. POPULARISING THE REPORT/CONSTITUTION 47. The Commission is of the view that no Commission or any constitution, for that matter, can put an end to human rights violations. Security agencies and law enforcement agencies will continue to breach the law. What is more, there will always be individuals within the system who will go beyond the call of duty. 48. We recommend the production and publication of what the Commission refers to as a Popular Version of both the relevant Human Rights provisions in our Constitution and the relevant sections of this Report. The idea is to put into the hands of the mass of our people, a document that can be the human rights version of the human rights Highway Code or of a Catechism, with a Question and Answer format. This should be a document that should be within the reach of every ordinary, literate citizen. It should be produced at very subsidized rate, in collaboration with the National Human Rights Commission. 49. In view of the importance that the international community has now placed on Human Rights, we are of the view that the Office of Minister for Human Rights should be created. There should be no conflict with the Office of the Attorney-General. In fact, the person chosen or appointed to the office need not have a legal background. This office is essentially to REHABILITATION/PRESIDENTIAL FUND 50. We propose the immediate setting up of a Human Rights Violations Rehabilitation Fund. This Fund is imperative as a foundational building block for national reconciliation. We are also of the view that this fund need not be solely a federal government venture. Afterall, during the heydays of apartheid, when Nigeria was in the forefront of the battle against the evil of apartheid, the government encouraged citizens of Nigeria to contribute to the South African Relief Fund. The response was very encouraging. We are of the view that the victims of human rights violations be treated the same way victims of other man-made disasters are treated, whether they are wars or of natural disasters like earthquakes. We had earlier suggested the setting up of a Presidential Fund to address the issues of token assistance towards ameliorating the pains and sufferings of some of the petitioners. We are also of the view that if this Fund is set up, it will also serve as a means for Nigerians to begin to make their own contributions towards this process. We recommend some of the following measures: 53 That the President should direct the Special Adviser on Economic Matters and the National Planning Commission to liaise with the European Union, so as to follow up the $l0m donation which that body made to the Commission in 1998. 54 That the Federal Government should levy all States, Local Government Councils, the Ministry of Defence, the Police, Corporate Bodies and individuals through a massive campaign to raise funds for this objective. We believe that the levy should be at the discretion of the Presidency. This will help create an atmosphere of family solidarity in the country and a feeling of being one another’’s keepers. 55 We recommend a National Human Rights Day to draw public attention to the issues of human rights violations. We suggest June 14, the date of the inauguration of the Commission as that date. If this recommendation is accepted, then the relevant agencies will work towards ensuring that a series of events are prepared around this date. COMMUNAL CLASHES HAUSA COMMUNITY IN KAFANCHAN 56 This petition was very hurriedly written from all indications. However, read along with the petition of the non-Hausa Community in Kafanchan, it is clear that the events have been over taken. It is to be noted that the non-Muslim community in Kafanchan against whom this petition had been directed had failed to follow up their petition because their prayer had been answered by the creation of a Chiefdom by the Kaduna State Government. We are also satisfied that the Kaduna State Government has taken the appropriate steps, which in the long term, will bring lasting peace to the community. We call on the Kaduna State government to make public the findings of the Committee it set up, even if not to the public, at least to the Communities concerned, to allay their anxieties. 57 In creating Ussa Local Government, it would seem that the government ended up digging a hole to fill a hole. The Kutebs are of the view that Takum belongs to them while the Jukun/Chamba lay similar claim. Whatever may be the case it seems that two main issues are responsible for the problem. The first is the 1975 Government Gazette which revoked the existing one of 1963 which had apparently placed the control of Takum in the hands of the Kuteb. The second is the creation of Ussa Local Government Council ostensibly to deal with the Kuteb problem. It would seem from the two that there was interference with due process from above in the case of the creation and constitution of the newly created Ussa Local Government Council as can be seen from the two letters dated March 12th and April 28th. 58 We are of the view that the harm may have already been done and it is not possible to repeal the edict setting up the Local Government Council. We recommend a massive development programme of Ussa Local Government Council. The federal government should assist the state government in rehabilitating those who were displaced by the series of communal riots spanning over the last ten years or so. We also recommend the elevation of the status of the traditional institution of the Kutebs to be at par with that of the Jukun/Chamba of Wukari so as to allay their fears and anxieties and enable them to have a sense of cultural freedom. Sadly, the Community has been victims of the lack of commitment of government to taking policies that may seem to be against the interest of the traditional ruling classes. When Bauchi state went through a spasm of violence in 1991, the Federal Government set up the Babalakin Commission of Enquiry. One of the most important recommendations of that Panel was the creation of a Chiefdom for the Sayawa people. Unfortunately, none of the successive governments has been courageous enough to implement this recommendation. Government has not told the people the reasons why it is unable to implement this very crucial recommendation. We very strongly recommend that the Federal Government requests the Bauchi State Government to comply with this recommendation and implement it to the fullest. 60. Secondly, we also recommend that the Bauchi State Government finds means to creating a more conducive atmosphere to guarantee harmony in the state. We are of the view that the State Government takes the necessary legal measures to ensure that the fears and anxieties of the non-Muslim communities are allayed and that adequate judicial arrangements be made to accommodate the cultural peculiarities of the State. In view of the fact that the media plays such an important role in the lives of citizens, we recommend that the state media tries to accommodate all shades of cultural and religious expressions that are not inimical to moral development and social harmony. We appeal to the Sayawa Community to cooperate with the State Government, taking cognizance that democracy now offers us all the best opportunity for resolving our conflicts through dialogue and collaboration. 61 We appeal to the Bauchi State Government to carefully go over the relevant sections of the various Panels of Enquiry and find ways of alleviating the sufferings of all those across the board who may have suffered in one crisis or the other. GENERAL LEKWOT AND SIX OTHERS 62 The petition submitted by Major-General Zamani Lekwot and Six Others was titled, Violations of the Fundamental Rights of the Petitioners on the Trial of the Complainants by Justice Benedict Okadigbo Tribunal. The retired General and his kinsmen were arrested amidst allegations of complicity in the violence and the deaths that followed. They were arraigned before the Justice Benedict Okadigbo tribunal and subsequently tried, convicted and sentenced to death. They alleged that the trial was a travesty of justice because, among other things, that even after the Attorney-General had filed a nolle prosequi, they were recharged, their lawyer filed a stay and applied for the right to enforce their fundamental rights. Although the order was granted, the learned judge declined to halt proceedings. Their lawyer filed an appeal at the Court of Appeal in Kaduna but the judge continued and even ended his trial before the Appeal could be heard. They appealed to the Supreme Court but the appeal was struck out on the grounds that the record of proceedings was not supplied. The petitioners alleged that the trial violated their right to life, fair hearing and the Africa Charter. We have no right to review the sentence of a tribunal. But from the evidence before us the trial did not conform with the African Charter. Accordingly, we recommend a state pardon. 64 The Commission believes that it does not have the powers to order that a case in which the Supreme Court has ruled be opened. During the hearings the petitioners tendered a document from the African Court for Human and Peoples. Rights in which it ruled that the Federal Government of Nigeria had erred in the handling of this case. NINZAM DEVELOPMENT ASSOCIATION 65. This petition, titled, An Appeal for Government Intervention and Restoration of Ninzam Chiefdom, was signed by Messrs James Ambi (President) and Aku A. Amboson (Secretary), presented the problems of the Ninzam community who live in the Southern part of Kaduna State. It was dated July 20, 1999. 66 However, the creation of Districts in Kaduna State by the new government of Governor Muhammad Makarfi has put paid to the request as the Ninzam people have been duly granted a Chiefdom. BELETIEMA/IGBABELEU COMMUNITY 67. The above community presented a petition titled, Human Rights Violation by the Liama and Egwema on the total annihilation of the Beletiema/Egbabeleu Community of Brass Local Government Area of Bayelsa State on 18th July, 1997 and April 9th 1999 respectively. The petition was signed on behalf of the Community by Chiefs M. E Dakolo 68 The petition alleged that in the two occasions listed, they were set upon and attacked by their neighbours, the Liama community. As such, the much that the Commission can do is to request the present administration in Bayelsa to dust up the findings of the Lt Col. C. O. Omoregie Panel and implement its findings. MAROKO EVICTEES COMMITTEE 70 The Petition, signed by Messrs S. A. Aiyeyemi (Leader) and 11 others is titled, simply Maroko Evictees Committee and simply dated, July 1999. Specifically on the 14th of July, the soldiers moved in and in less than one week, razed the houses of the 300,000 residents of Maroko to the ground. By the time the soldiers were through with their job, Maroko and its residents lay in ruins. This dastardly incident remains one of the greatest tragic legacies of military excesses. The Maroko residents had since then roamed the courts of Lagos State in search for justice. 72 After reviewing the evidence submitted by the petitioners, the Commission is of the view that the Lagos State government should, on behalf of its predecessors, apologise to the residents of Maroko and publicly condemn the high-handedness of Col. Rasaki.s government especially given that these innocent citizens went through this harrowing experience so as to satisfy the greed of a few elites whose residences have now sprung up in Maroko. We therefore propose that the Lagos State government should properly resettle the evictees of Maroko in the decent houses . KAFANCHAN INDIGENOUS PEOPLE.S FORUM 73 This petition, titled, Kafanchan Crisis and Human Rights Abuses sought to draw attention to the needs of those who call themselves the Indigenous People of Kafanchan. Essentially, they, like the Ninzam community were also demanding a chiefdom of their own. Again, like the Ninzam, this request has been granted by the Government of Kaduna state. In fact, the Community did not show up when their petition was called in Kano and they later informed the Commission that they felt that their petition had been overtaken by developments in Kaduna State. NWANIBA VILLAGE IN AKWA IBOM STATE 74. This community submitted a petition titled, Human Rights Abuses meted out on the Nwaniba people by Ifiayong Usuk People with the support of Akwa Ibom State Police Command. 75. The body of the petition is made up of allegations of problems that border on boundary adjustment. We are of the view that the Akwa Ibom State Government should be able to deal with this problem as it is a boundary adjustment issue. The state government might need to refresh its memory by making reference to the Gazette referred to in the petitioner’’s submission. UMUODE COMMUNITY 76 After reviewing the petition from the Umuode Community, we have come to the conclusion that the issues of human rights violations are indeed not the prerogative of governments and their agencies. Individuals, communities and organizations are sometimes worse culprits. The Umuode Community case clearly demonstrates the cruel cultural practices that are capable of bringing government efforts at securing human rights for its citizens to naught. Clearly, the predicament of this community is based on the false belief by the neighbouring community that the people of Umuode fall within a category of subhuman beings known as Uhu. Elsewhere in Igboland, this invidious cultural practice classifies the 77 After reviewing the submissions by the various parties, we have come to the conclusion that although the problems are internal to the community, some influential agents within government have not helped matters. We note that this community has produced very important personalities such as a world renowned scientist. It is preposterous to think that he is such a figure is considered a non person where he hails from. We therefore call on the Enugu State Government to act immediately to resettle the people of Umuode and address the issue of creating a climate fo | |||||