NEWS PROVIDED BY
Jubilee Campaign
Aug. 27, 2021
WASHINGTON, Aug. 27, 2021 /Standard Newswire/ -- As the deadline for the State Department's designation of Countries of Particular Concern (CPC) is swiftly approaching, Jubilee Campaign along with 39 other human rights and religious freedom NGOs - make a final plea to the Secretary of State Antony Blinken to designate Nigeria as a CPC as it has indisputably "engaged in or tolerated particularly severe violations of religious freedom." Such a designation would be a strategic opening by which to leverage diplomatic pressure against the Nigerian government to address its religious freedom violations.
Radical Islamist terrorists active in Northeastern Nigeria continue to viciously attack and kill Christians and Muslims alike who reject its extremist ideology, and recent reports reveal that no fewer than 3,462 Christians have been murdered for faith-related reasons in 2021 so far. Simultaneously, militant groups routinely abduct tens to hundreds of students from schools across the nation, most recently in Kaduna, Kagara, Zamfara, and Benue States; UNICEF estimates that over 1,120 schools have been temporarily closed in northwestern Nigeria as they are unable to offer security to their young students. Those who are kidnapped could be forced into sexual slavery or recruited as child soldiers for the militant groups.
Shariah law and blasphemy laws alike have been applied to arrest numerous individuals on accusations of insulting Islam or the Prophet; two religious prisoners of conscience, Mubarak Bala and Yahaya Sharif-Aminu, are currently in detention in Kano State. The Shariah laws in the Northern states of Nigeria impose the death penalty for blasphemy.
In addition, the Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS) has engaged in police brutality on multiple occasions, and those who have peacefully protested such violence have been swiftly shot at and killed. On 20 October 2020, Nigerian security forces opened fire against protesters at Lekki toll gate in Lagos State, killing at least 12 demonstrators and injuring others. All the while, state actors attempted to minimize the death statistics of individuals who were murdered for simply exercising their rights of expression and assembly.
Our fear that the situation in Nigeria has reached a disastrous breaking point is shared by human rights activists and respected world leaders. In September 2019, United Nations Special Rapporteur on extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions Agnes Callamard expressed her concern that Nigeria has become an "injustice pressure cooker". On 16 August 2021, the Baroness Caroline Cox of Queensbury along with 15 other noteworthy MPs, Lords, Bishops, Archbishops, and NGO presidents sent a letter to MP James Duddridge, Minister of Africa, FCDO, urging "the UK Government to acknowledge the scale of ethno-religious violence" in Nigeria as well as to "press the Nigerian Government to address this violence swiftly, and to ensure protection, justice and recompense for victims of all ethnicities without bias."
The United States, pursuant to the International Religious Freedom Act of 1998, has the duty to "condemn violations of religious freedom, and to promote, and to assist other governments in the promotion of, the fundamental right to freedom of religion." Part of this obligation designating nations whose governments have "engaged in or tolerated systematic, ongoing and egregious violations of religious freedom" as CPCs.
Designating Nigeria as a CPC is the necessary first step in holding the government accountable; not only does a CPC designation send a clear message to that the United States will not stand by and continue to watch these abuses, but it also gives the US government the power to use a wide range of diplomatic and economic tools to make it costly for Nigeria to allow religious persecution to continue unabated.
Jubilee Campaign is a non-profit organization which promotes the human rights and religious liberty of ethnic and faith minorities in the most oppressive countries. We assist individuals seeking asylum from religious persecution as well as promote the care and well-being of larger groups of refugees fleeing persecution.
Jubilee Campaign has been raising concerns about the security, human rights and religious freedom situation in Nigeria for several years, most recently:
- August 2021 | Jubilee Campaign rejoinder to the Nigerian government's remarks discrediting Archbishop Kukah.
- August 2021 | Jubilee Campaign CPC Designation Report
- July 2021 | Jubilee Campaign UN Human Rights Council Submission, "Interactive Dialogue with the Special Rapporteur on Contemporary Forms of Slavery, Including its Causes and Consequences – The Wave of Kidnapping and Slavery in Nigeria"
- November 2020 | Jubilee Campaign International Criminal Court Submission
- July 2020 | Jubilee Campaign Rejoinders to President Buhari
SOURCE Jubilee Campaign
CONTACT: 703-503-2260, information@jubileecampaign.org
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