Tuesday, 26 July 2016

Fulani herdsmen strike in Benue, kill 14

                                              herdsmen
No fewer than 14 persons have been killed by suspected Fulani herdsmen in a fresh attack on Gaambe-Tiev, Logo Local Government area of Benue State.
The herdsmen were said to have stormed the community at about 7.30am on Monday, shot sporadically, razing buildings and farmland in the area.


An eyewitness told Vanguard that, “The herdsmen, in their usual fashion, stormed Gaambe-Tiev this morning around 7:30a.m. in their numbers, shooting sporadically and shouting. The people never expected it.
“Everybody, including women and children, ran for their lives. Unfortunately, several persons lost their lives and many more were injured. Bodies of some of those killed are being recovered from the farms and we are still counting.
“As we speak, Logo is under siege, people are running away from their homes in their thousands to Anyii and we don’t know when this will end and we are yet to see any concrete response from security agencies.”
The eyewitness added that most of the victims were killed and injured at Adeyohor village along Uwer-Gov Sevav Road.
Confirming the incident, Hon. Kester Kyenge, a member of the state House of Assembly representing Logo constituency, said those killed could be far more than the 14 being circulated.
“By tomorrow, we will have a clearer picture of the number of the dead. I plead with the government to act fast to stop these attacks and killings,” he added‎.


Source: Daily Post

Friday, 22 July 2016

Corrupt individuals should not complain of rights violation – CommonWealth Director

                                                 CommonWealth Director
A Commonwealth representative, Ms Katalaina Sapolu, on Friday declared that those found guilty of stealing Nigeria’s public funds should be ashamed of themselves instead complaining of rights violation in the government’s quest to get back stolen monies from them.
Sapolu, who serves as the Director of Rule of Law Division of the Commonwealth made the declaration while speaking with journalists at the three-day ‘National Stakeholders Workshop on the Recovered Assets Workshop’ in Abuja jointly put together by the Prof. Itse Sagay-led Presidential Advisory Committee against Corruption, PACAC, and the Commonwealth Secretariat.


Sapolu, earlier on Monday and Tuesday, led the Commonwealth delegation to the PACAC’s ‘Workshop on Roles of Judges in the Fight Against Corruption,’ at the National Judicial Institute in Abuja.
The Monday opening ceremony was attended by President Muhammadu Buhari, Justice Mahmud Mohammed, judges at various levels of court, and other notable figures.
Sapolu pointed out that it was not justifiable for looters to complain of rights violation when asked to return their stolen wealth.
She said, “What I can speak of is what was expressed at the workshop which is what I can say is from the horse’s mouth.
“There were lawyers who spoke, there were judges who spoke and they said most of the suspects and their highly-paid lawyers would come to court and they would raise, of course, as any lawyer would, depending on the instruction from their clients, the fundamental rights issue.
“But I think the consensus view is that if you steal money, if you are looting money through corrupt conduct, it’s not yours, and the government is trying to recover the proceeds, what fundamental right is being violated?”
Sapolu assured of the Commonwealth support on Nigeria’s efforts to get back all its assets looted by corrupt officials because President Buhari has demonstrated strong political will to fight corruption.
She noted that moves by previous governments to recover Nigeria’s looted funds failed because various countries lacked trust in the preparedness of the administrations to utilise the funds.
She said, “This international cooperation is very important; and I would have to say that from my own experience it is really that trust.
“This is because much of the reluctance or the reason that is given by other countries is that, ‘are we returning the money to safe hands to be reused for the benefit of the people of the countries?’
“So, I strongly believe that with the new political leadership and the political will that has been demonstrated internationally, it will work. It will help a lot.”
Sapolu said that the new Secretary-General of Commonwealth, Patricia Scotland, had made anti-corruption part of the organisation’s priorities.
She added, “I refer to the ‘tackling corruption together conference’ held by the Commonwealth in London in May. “It was held the day before the London Summit that was hosted by the then Prime Minister David Cameron at the time and President Buhari was our special guest at the Commonwealth conference.
“He spoke very passionately and very inspiringly about the priority his government is giving to combating corruption and he said ‘more importantly we want the recovery of stolen assets.’
“So, it was discussed between him and my Secretary-General; we have a new Secretary-General at Commonwealth, Patricia Scotland (QC), and one of her priorities is tackling corruption.
“We are here to further the agreement between the Secretary-General and the President that the Commonwealth will give its support to Nigeria in fighting corruption.”

Source: Daily Post

Civil societies, APC protest against Judiciary, State Assembly in Rivers

                                 image

A group of protesters drawn from th civil society organisations and the All Progressives Congress in Rivers State have marched to the Judiciary Complex in Port Harcourt to demand the immediate swearing-in of APC members elected into the Rivers State House of Assembly.
The protesters are accusing some members of the Rivers State Judiciary of corruption based on recent pronouncements that stalled the swearing-in of APC’s Victoria Nyeche of Port Harcourt Constituency One and Andrew Miller of Opobo-Nkoro Constituency.
The mass demonstration started around 7 am the General Post Office, adjacent to the judiciary complex.
By 8 am‎, the protesters matched to the gate of the judiciary complex and later moved to the Rivers State House of Assembly Complex where the leaders addressed the crowd.
DAILY POST reports that the protest march was briefly interrupted by security operatives, who later withdrew.
Assistant National Secretary of the APC, Oji Ngorfa, who was among the protest leaders, accused the State High Court judges of allowing themselves to be used to manipulate cases involving APC chieftains, including former Chairman of Asari-Toru Local Government council, Ojukaye Flag-Amachree.
Ngorfa lamented that the people of Port Harcourt Constituency One and Opobo-Nkoro Constituency were being neglected because there was no one to speak for them in the House of Assembly:
By 8 am‎, the protesters matched to the gate of the judiciary complex and later moved to the Rivers State House of Assembly Complex where the leaders addressed the crowd.
DAILY POST reports that the protest march was briefly interrupted by security operatives, who later withdrew.
Assistant National Secretary of the APC, Oji Ngorfa, who was among the protest leaders, accused the State High Court judges of allowing themselves to be used to manipulate cases involving APC chieftains, including former Chairman of Asari-Toru Local Government council, Ojukaye Flag-Amachree.
Ngorfa lamented that the people of Port Harcourt Constituency One and Opobo-Nkoro Constituency were being neglected because there was no one to speak for them in the House of Assembly:
“We are tired of being in a state where the Governor will be dictating what the Judiciary should do.
“We know the people using spurious court orders to truncate the will of the people of PHALGA 1 and Opobo state constituencies. They have contested and won elections properly. INEC has issued certificates of return. Appeal court has cleared Victoria Nyeche and we say no State High Court can sit on that matter anymore.
“We will not accept it anymore. We want the Rivers state House of Assembly to understand that the Legislature is a separate arm of government, they must not allow the Executive to dictate to them what to do,” he said.

Source: Daily Post

Thursday, 7 July 2016

Child labor in the mines of the Democratic Republic of Congo

                                 
                               child-labor

The Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) contains vast and significant mining resources including more than 1100 minerals and precious metals. With such riches, the DRC has the potential to become one of the richest countries in Africa and to guarantee the well-being of its population—including its children. However, despite the availability of these mineral resources, the country is experiencing endemic poverty. Its people live with highly unstable conditions, and children are forced to work in mines, exposed to all sorts of diseases and the possibility of accidental death, while the government and the mining companies that employ them look on in silence.

Working conditions for children in the mines of the DRC

Various mining sites, located principally in the Eastern regions of the DRC (North Kivu and Katanga), employ a significant number of child workers. In fact, the data on Katanga and Copperbelt generally estimate the number of children (under 18 years) at 40% of all workers in the region’s mines.

According to a UNICEF estimate from 2014, roughly 40,000 young boys and girls are used for dangerous mining activities in southern DRC, primarily extracting cobalt.

The working conditions for children at these mining sites is atrocious. Given the same status as adults, they work without breaks and without any basic measures for protection or security. In unbearable heat, with clouds of red dust and weak light, these children dig at depths of 200 to 300 meters and are at constant risk of asphyxiation, rockslides, or other accidental deaths, for a remuneration of 1 to 2 dollars per day.

Mining and communications companies care little about working conditions: cobalt mines case

The world market for cobalt is growing rapidly, and the DRC produces more than half of the world supply on its own. Numerous cobalt extraction companies in the DRC employ children as young as 7 years old to extract this mineral by hand or with rudimentary tools and no protective measures. Although the UN has established trade guidelines which emphasize the primary need for companies to respect internationally recognized human rights while conducting their business activities, these companies care little, if even at all, about the conditions under which the cobalt they use is extracted.

An Amnesty International report revealed that, after contacting several companies that supply this mineral, not a single one maintained the minimum requirements for supplying cobalt. In other words, they did not have any strict policy of transparency with respect to the manner by which the cobalt is extracted, by whom, or the manner in which it is transported to them.

Knowing that this country produces more than half of the world’s cobalt, it is a shame that these companies do not care about the thousands of children who die in the rubble of these mining sites…

Mining is one of the worst forms of child labor and prohibited by international law

Mining labor is harmful for children and certainly constitutes one of the worst forms of child labor. Article 32 of the Convention on the Rights of the Child is clear on this matter: “States Parties recognize the right of the child to be protected from economic exploitation and from performing any work that is likely to be hazardous or to interfere with the child’s education, or to be harmful to the child’s health or physical, mental, spiritual, moral or social development.”

Child labor in mines is carried out under dangerous and unsanitary conditions, exposing them to fatal injuries and diseases. Article 3 of ILO Convention 182 also makes reference to work done by these children in mines, characterizing it as “work which, by its nature or the circumstances in which it is carried out, is likely to harm the health, safety or morals of children.”

Stop child labor in the mines of the DRC
                                                  2014611145555381893_8
Hundreds of children die working in the mines or from pulmonary issues or other diseases caused by their work. A UN study conducted in the DRC showed that between September 2014 and December 2015, more than 80 child laborers met an accidental death in the mines of the old province of Katanga. This number barely touches the reality, since many accidental deaths go unregistered—and not to forget the hundreds of children whose bodies are buried in the rubble.

Child labor in the mines of the DRC is a terrible reality that must be exposed. In spite of various regulations governing mining as announced by the Congolese government and the 2009 law on child protections prohibiting the economic exploitation of children, no concrete or effective measures or policies have been made by the State to eradicate this problem.

Consequently, it is time for the Congolese government and specific mining companies to really look at the issue of child labor in the mines seriously and to establish mechanisms for surveillance and review by inspectors of the mining sites to take bold action to combat this problem, a cancer within the DRC.


Source: http://www.humanium.org/

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