NEWS
Buhari vs Atiku: Human Rights Watch releases damning report on
Nigeria’s election, makes revelations
The Nigerian
elections in 2019 that brought President Muhammadu Buhari back into office for
a second term were marred by political violence, some of it by soldiers and
police officers, Human Rights Watch (HRW) said on Monday.
Buhari defeated
Atiku Abubakar of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) in the keenly-contested
poll.
HRW called on
Buhari to take concrete steps to address the widespread political violence and
ensure accountability for human rights abuses by soldiers and police as he
begins his second term.
The report on the
election released on the HRW website on Monday noted that the election period
included persistent attacks by factions of Boko Haram terrorist group in the
northeast; increased communal violence between nomadic herdsmen and farmers
spreading southward from north-central states; and a dramatic uptick in
banditry, kidnapping, and killings in the northwestern states of Kaduna,
Katsina, and Zamfara. It maintained that security forces have failed to respond
effectively to threats to people’s lives and security.
Human Rights Watch
said it interviewed 32 people; including voters, journalists, election
observers, activists, and Independent National Electoral Commission officials
in Rivers and Kano states, and documented 11 deaths specifically related to
violent interference in the election process during the February 23
presidential election and subsequent state elections.
It added: “The
national and state elections in February, March, and April 2019 contributed to
the general insecurity across the country. The politically related violence
reported in many states was in contrast to the relatively peaceful 2015
elections that brought Buhari into his first term in office. According to a
report by SBM Intelligence, which monitors sociopolitical and economic
developments in Nigeria, 626 people were killed during the 2019 election cycle,
starting with campaigns in 2018.
“Kano state, in
northwestern Nigeria, has the highest number of registered voters in the
country. Rivers state, in the Niger Delta, receives the largest share of
crude-oil-based national revenue, representing significant electoral value to
any political party. The history of elections in both states is replete with
violence by state security agencies and criminal elements.
“Human Rights Watch
focused its research on both states in view of projections and reports of
violence during the 2019 elections. Despite police claims of increased security
measures to ensure peaceful voting, there seems to have been little or no
police response to reports of threats and acts of violence by hired political
thugs and soldiers against voters and election officials, Human Rights Watch
found.
“Voters and
election officials said that policemen either fled or stood idly by, fueling
allegations of complicity, as perpetrators stole election materials, disrupted
voting, and harassed voters. Witnesses said that the police also shot live
rounds of ammunition and used teargas to disperse people protesting voting
disruptions.
“Witnesses said
that after a soldier was killed in the town of Abonnema, in Rivers state, on
election day, soldiers shot at residents, killing an unknown number of people.
They also carried out sweeping arrests and arbitrarily detained several
people.”
“The soldiers were
on a rampage, shooting at anyone around,” said a 37-year-old man who witnessed
the episode. “As I made my way to flee, I saw people dive into the river, many
with gunshot wounds. The next day I saw three dead bodies riddled with bullets
floating in the water… I heard many more bodies were later recovered from that
river.”
HRW noted that
“Banditry and the recurring cycles of deadly violence between herdsmen and
farmers appear to have taken the lives of thousands. According to civil society
reports, over 3,641 people have died from deadly clashes between herdsmen and
farmers since 2015 and at least 262 people have been killed by bandits since
the beginning of 2019 in Zamfara State alone. The government deployed 1,000
military troops to the state in response, but few of those responsible for the
violence have been arrested or held to account.
“The northeast
conflict with Boko Haram and its splinter groups also remains one of Buhari’s
pressing challenges. Although Boko Haram’s territorial control has shrunk to
small pockets of villages around Lake Chad as a result of sustained government
military action since 2015, the group continues to carry out attacks against
civilian and military targets in the region and in neighboring Niger, Cameroon,
and Chad.
“In recent months,
renewed fighting between Nigerian government forces and a faction of Boko
Haram, known as Islamic State of West Africa Province (ISWAP), has led to
secondary displacement of civilians.
“Security forces
have been implicated in serious abuses, including arbitrary arrests, prolonged
detention without trial, torture, extrajudicial killings, rape and sexual
violence against women and girls in camps for displaced people. According to
the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA),
more than 27,000 civilians have died and about 1.8 million people have been
displaced since the beginning of the conflict in 2009.
“Authorities have
also failed to address impunity for killings by security forces elsewhere in
the country. The authorities have yet to publish the report of the Presidential
Judicial Panel set up in August 2017 to investigate the military’s compliance
with human rights obligations, allegations of war crimes, and other abuses by
the military.
“Nigerian voters
have entrusted Buhari with another opportunity to address the nation’s serious
human rights problems, including political violence,” Ewang said. “He should
start by reforming the security forces to ensure strict compliance with human
rights standards, and prompt investigation and prosecution of those credibly
implicated in abuses.”
On the 2019
election violence, HRW said: “Nigeria’s elections have historically been
fraught with controversy, violence, and other abuses, with the 2015 elections,
widely believed to have been largely free of violence, bucking this trend.
There were reports of voter intimidation and violence around the 2019 elections
at both the federal and state levels, including by armed men hired by candidates
and political parties and by security forces, including the national police.
“Bauchi, Benue,
Kano, Sokoto, Plateau, and Rivers states were particularly affected by violence
during the March 9 gubernatorial elections. The Independent National Electoral
Commission canceled elections in places where the elections were disrupted and
held supplementary elections later. Kano state had supplementary elections on
March 23, and Rivers state on April 13.
“Kano and Rivers
states were probably the worst hit of the six states. They were identified by
both local and international analysts ahead of the elections as holding great
potential for electoral violence. Both are major political strongholds for the
two leading political parties, Buhari’s ruling All Progressives Congress (APC)
and the opposition People’s Democratic Party (PDP). Abdullahi Ganduje of the
APC won the 2019 election in Kano, and Nyesom Wike of the PDP won in Rivers
state.”
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