Tuesday 16 November 2021

Foundation engages traditional rulers, religious leaders, others on conflict mitigation process



By Aisha Gambo


 Following reports of violent conflicts in some parts of Northern Nigeria, CLEEN Foundation, on Monday, began an Early Warning and Early Response (EWER) stakeholders’ forum to mitigate violence in the zone.


The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the forum was held in Kaduna, with religious and traditional leaders as well as officials of the Nigerian Police Force in attendance.


Acting Executive Director of the foundation, Chigoziri-Odinkalu Okoro, in her address, said that the workshop was aimed at briefing the selected stakeholders on the group’s project goals, objectives, activities and the expected outcomes.


She said that the workshop was also targeted at cultivating additional inputs into the EWER implementation strategies, securing the buy-in of stakeholders and setting up the EWER collaborative forum in the focal communities.


“As part of the mandate of CLEEN Foundation – promoting public safety and security – this project is designed to mitigate violent conflicts in the already identified local government areas in Kaduna State.


“CLEEN Foundation is committed to providing technical support to security agencies as a form of collaboration to ensure that violent conflicts are mitigated.


“The unique thing about this intervention is the use of technology to generate and collate credible information from community members and amplify same to relevant security agencies for appropriate action.


“The intervention is also designed to empower women in these communities as an integral part of conflict mitigation and peace building,” Okoro said.


She said that Chikun and Kajuru local government areas of the state were selected for the exercise due to their history of communal conflicts.


“Kaduna serves as the pilot state which other focal states on the project can adopt as a model.


“The communities mapped out are: Kasuwan Magani and Maraban Kajuru in Kajuru LGA and Kujama and Maraban Rido in Chikun LGA.


“A major outcome of the mapping exercise was the production of list of stakeholders that would form the Early Warning and Early Response Collaborative Forum and Community Safety Partners (CSP),”she said.


The Permanent Commissioner, Kaduna Peace Commission, Mrs Rebacca Sako-John, commended the foundation for selecting the state for the project.


She said that the project would assist the state government in mitigating violent conflicts as well as resolving farmer-herders clashes in the state.



 


NAN reports that the project, which draws support from University of Toronto, will cover four states, namely: Kaduna, Plateau, Zamfara and Taraba.

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Lagos judicial panel reports that 'there was an attempt to cover up' Lekki shooting

 

According to the panel, what transpired on the night of October 20, 2020, was a massacre.

Lagos State governor, Babajide Sanwo-Olu (left), receives the report of the Judicial Panel of Inquiry from panel chairperson, the retired Justice Doris Okuwobi (right) [LASG]

In its report submitted to Lagos State GovernorBabajide Sanwo-Olu on Monday, November 15, 2021, the 8-member judicial panel of inquiry into the Lekki tollgate shooting of October 20, 2020, writes that:

"There was an attempt to cover up the incident of the 20th of October by the cleaning of the Lekki tollgate and the failure to preserve the scene ahead of the potential investigations."

In its 306-page report, the panel also concluded that "the atrocious maiming and killing of unarmed, helpless and unresisting protesters, while sitting on the floor and waiving their Nigerian flags, while singing the National Anthem, can be equated to a massacre in context."

The panel also said officers deployed to the tollgate “shot at, assaulted and battered unarmed protesters."

According to the panel’s report, police officers tried to cover up their actions by picking up bullets.

“The panel found that the Nigerian Police Force deployed its officers to the Lekki tollgate on the night of the 20th October, 2020 and between that night and the morning of the 21st of October, 2020, its officers shot at, assaulted and battered unarmed protesters, which led to injuries and deaths.

“The police officers also tried to cover up their actions by picking up bullets,” the report reads.

The panel said the Lekki Concession Company (LCC) refused to provide vital evidence that could have aided its investigation.

LCC was also accused of manipulating the CCTV footage presented to the panel during its sitting.

The report reads as follows: “The panel found that LCC hampered the panel’s investigation by refusing to turn over some useful and vital information/evidence as requested by the panel and the forensic expert engaged by the panel, even where such information and evidence was by the company’s admission, available.

“It manipulated the incomplete CCTV Video footage of the Lekki tollgate on the night of the 20th of October 2020, which it tendered before the panel.”

The panel also recommended that officers of the army and police who participated in the “shooting, injuring and killing of unarmed protestors" should be sanctioned.

According to the report: "The denial of ambulances by the soldiers, which could have assisted in the prompt and effective treatment of injured protesters, was cruel and inhuman and it contributed immensely to the large number of deaths and casualties on the part of the protesters, especially those from the Lekki tollgate.

"The panel finds the cases of death or injured protesters as credible and uncontroverted.

"The panel finds that most EndSARS protesters and victims of the Lekki tollgate incident of October 20, 2020 were largely unwilling to be identified in public for fear of persecution or harassment by the security agencies and the government generally.

"Immediately after the protest, there was palpable fear that the Army and Police were visiting hospitals to ‘finish up’ the protesters to the extent that some of them could not return home immediately. Some of the protesters received threats and some were being trailed by unknown persons."

The panel also recommended that a public apology be tendered to #EndSARS protesters who were killed, injured, and traumatised by the incident.

“The panel also found that the conduct of the Nigerian Army was exacerbated by its refusal to allow ambulances render medical assistance to victims who required such assistance. The Army was also found not to have adhered to its own Rules of Engagement.

“The Panel found that the Nigerian Police Force deployed its officers to the Lekki Toll Gate on the night of the 20th October, 2020 and between that night and the morning of the 21st of October, 2020, its officers shot at, assaulted and battered unarmed protesters, which led to injuries and deaths.”

The panel also asked the government to do all it can to bridge the gap of distrust with the youth.

The panel recommends "that all those arrested in the course of the protest should be granted bail, prosecuted for any offence that may be alleged against them or where no prima facie evidence of culpability is disclosed upon due investigation, they should be released forthwith."

The nationwide anti-police brutality protests of October 2020 were quelled by security personnel.

Afterwards, arsonists took advantage of the breakdown in law and order to loot and burn down government property and public facility.

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