Federal Government,
yesterday, has described report as arrant falsehood, the recent report by
Amnesty International which rated Nigeria very high among countries that have
made torture a common investigative technique.
Amnesty International had
in the report, alleged that security agencies in the country usually torture
and inflict injuries on suspects within their custody.
Debunking the report,
Chairman of the National Committee Against Torture, Dr. Samson Ameh, SAN, said
that it had become necessary to “disabuse the minds of Nigerians and the
international community on the wrong information being peddled by Amnesty
International about Nigeria. The report was deliberately negative.”
Addressing journalists in
Abuja, Dr. Ameh, maintained that Nigeria was a signatory to the United Nations’
Convention against torture, adding that the Federal Government had equally
ratified the optional protocol of the UN Convention against torture.
Ahmed said, “The protocol
enjoins countries that have ratified the convention to establish national
torture prevention mechanism. Soon after the ratification, Nigeria constituted
the National Committee Against Torture as its national torture prevention
mechanism. Nigeria has been consistently taking steps to make sure that torture
is eliminated in this country. This was why the National Committee Against
Torture which was inaugurated on September 28, 2009, by the Minister of Justice
and Attorney General of the Federation, with a membership that cuts across all
sectors of the society.”
Besides, he noted that the
committee’s terms of reference included to, “Receive and consider
communications on torture from individuals, civil society organizations and
government institutions as well as visit to all places of detention in Nigeria
and promptly, impartially examine any allegation of torture therein.”
The committee, according to
him, was made up of nineteen members including the Executive Secretary of the
National Human Rights Commission, Prof. Bem Angwe, former Director General of
the National Institute of Advanced Legal Studies, Prof. Epiphany Azinge,
Olawale Fapohunda, Mrs. Rhona N. Dimude, Mrs. O. O. Fatunde, Mrs. Joy
Bob-Manuel, a representative of the Inspector General of Police, among others.
Ameh said his committee had
visited several prisons and detention centres across the country, saying they
had also made recommendations to the federal government on the need to quickly
arrest the dilapidated condition of prisons in Nigeria. He said there was need
for government to build more prisons as a way of addressing the problem of
prison congestion. “More courts should be built and judges appointed to fast
track justice delivery in the country”, he added.
killed so many innocent pple, shame
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