NHRC calls for an end to torture by security agencies, asks government to put mechanism in place against terrorism, banditry

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The National Human Rights Commission NHRC has spoken against torture of suspects and citizens by security and other law enforcement officials in the country.

The Commission called on government and stakeholders at all levels to work harder to ensure that torture, inhuman and degrading treatment or punishment meted out on citizens by security and law enforcement personnel was completely eradicated in the society.

It called on government to immediately put mechanism in place to check against terrorism, kidnapping and banditry.

The Executive Secretary of the Commission, Chief Tony Ojukwu, made the call in Abuja during the celebration of the 2022 International Day in Support of Victims of Torture.

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Speaking at the weekend at the event commemorating the day that is observed globally on 26 June of every year, the Executive Secretary called on security agencies to desist from any form of torture, inhuman and degrading treatment while carrying out their operations, urging them to embrace international best practices in conducting investigations which according to him gives high regard to respect for human rights.

Ojukwu equally expressed concerns over private citizens’ involvement in this ugly practice, describing it as deeply disturbing to the Commission.

According to him, “the international event is significant because it provides the opportunity to reassess the conduct of law enforcement agencies, groups, and individuals in order to ensure that they operate within the ambit of national, regional, or international law.”

While expressing worries over the spate of torture and other related human rights violations “which come in various forms especially police brutality, domestic violence, assault, rape, kidnap, etc.,” the Learned Silk lamented that “although Nigeria has ratified several major international human rights treaties and has also passed the Anti- Torture Act 2017 into law, torture still remains a tool used by security agents for interrogating and intimidating suspects.”

He lamented that violation of the right to freedom from torture and ill-treatment had remained one of Nigeria’s highest recorded human rights violations.

He said: “A good number of the complaints treated by the Commission during the Independent Investigative Panel on Alleged Human Rights Violations by Officers of the disbanded Special Anti-Robbery Squad and other Units of the Nigeria Police relates to several incidents of torture, cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment by the Police, our records are there to show.”

He further stated that the Commission had conducted several trainings and developed manuals on mainstreaming human rights in the operations of the law enforcement officials including those involved in counter-insurgency operations in the northeast.

Similarly, he said the Commission had embarked on a series of advocacy visits and conducted inspections in detention facilities across the country to ensure that their operations were in line with international human rights standards.

He added that: “Where we are not satisfied with what we observe, we make recommendations to appropriate authorities for improvement.”

He equally called on the government to up its game in providing the needed security to everyone living in Nigeria in order to protect them from falling victims of the dreaded kidnap activities which had recently become the order of the day, expressing concerns that many victims had lost their lives as a result of the inhuman treatment which they were subjected to.

He said: “The government must put a mechanism in place to get rid of these syndicates and prosecute those of them that have been arrested to serve as a deterrent to others.”

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