S
SPACES FOR CHANGE’s just-released research study,
“Demolishing Foundations of Peace” documents
and critically examines the systematic
pattern of forced evictions and house demolitions in Nigeria, perpetrated by
both city planners and security forces, in the name of “improving national
security”. Across many states of Nigeria, especially in the northern part of
the country, buildings where improvised explosive devises (IEDs) and other
dangerous weapons were found are punitively demolished following violent
military raids. Mere suspicion of harboring the members of the dreaded
Islamic fundamentalist sect, Jama’atu Ahlis Sunna Lidda’awati wal-Jihad, also
known as Boko Haram have consistently been used to justify arson and the
habitual burning of private residences, properties and businesses of citizens.
Areas inhabited by the poor are often labeled as hideouts of Boko Haram, and
are on that basis, demolished without recourse to due process, inflaming the
population of un-housed and inadequately housed persons in Nigeria. These
security-linked demolitions continue to occur in many northern states,
especially those areas where the Nigerian government declared a state of emergency.
Recognizing
that tough choices have to be made and resolute action must be sustained in the
name of security, SPACES FOR CHANGE notes with great concern, the involvement of the constituted
anti-terror security outfits, notably the Joint Task Force and Special Task
Force (JTF/STF) in widespread human rights
derogations in the volatile states. The JTF and STF have executed, and continue
to execute extremely violent demolitions and forced evictions in the name
of countering terror attacks. In unguarded exercise of power and discretion,
armed security forces have attacked, burnt and demolished private residences in
contravention of state, national and international due process provisions.
Families who lose their homes to punitive demolitions are not given the
right to rebuild their homes even after an error of the demolishing act has
been established.
Generally speaking, security officials perceive human rights as
obstacles to effective intelligence, police and military action, resulting in
the current procedures to fight terrorism in a “war” mentality. “Persons who allow their surroundings
or frontage to be used by the Boko Haram sect to attack people or security
agencies would be considered as collaborators, and will be treated as
criminals, says the JTF. On point, people whose homes
or fences have been used (with or without their knowledge) to launch terrorist
attacks have been viciously killed, and their homes demolished. Gripped by the fear of being unfoundedly labeled off
as militants or collaborators of the Boko Haram sect, hundreds of thousands
have fled their homes and businesses, a situation which has further pushed the
majority of the city’s impoverished populations deeper into poverty. The
massive exodus from the north has destroyed businesses, deterred future
investments, and frustrated important gains made in the realization of the
rights to life, work, housing and food in particular. The forced movements and
relocations have devastated communities and disintegrated key social ties and
networks.
SPACES
FOR CHANGE’s study found that these demolitions are often hinged on the
erroneous belief that the demolished houses either belong to the perpetrators
of terrorist attacks, or to individuals and communities supportive of the
attacks, whether by planning it, or providing some sort of assistance to the
terrorists. Punitive house demolitions have curiously, and in a baseless
manner, justified attacks on women, children and the youth across the volatile
states. Nearly all reported incidents of anti-insurgency-based house
demolitions are accompanied by the unlawful arrests and detention of these
categories of people, gravitating towards a veiled policy of substituting
fleeing crime suspects with their wives, their sons, and members of their
family.
At present, North East Nigeria is the
most dangerous place in the world to be a youth, especially a male teen.
From Borno, to Kano, Jos, and Bauchi, young people have been disproportionately
targeted with violence. Slum neighbourhoods and other areas with very high
concentration of youth populations are often criminalized, and on that basis,
raided repeatedly under the cover of manhunt exercises for Boko Haram members.
Frequent house-to-house searches conducted without warrants, often serve as
preludes to demolition exercises, followed by indiscriminate arrests or
shootings of young people.
Our study found no
evidence showing that house demolitions effectively deter terrorist groups.
Instead, evidence shows that the counter-terror demolitions increase local
population’s support for terrorist groups, while fuelling hatred and animosity
towards security forces. SPACES FOR CHANGE’s regular feedback from, and
interactions with local residents in the volatile states reveal that the
greater the force employed by the JTF in the areas designated as military
targets, the greater the sympathy affected communities have for the Boko Haram
sect, to the extent that majority of locals are hesitant, or unwilling, to
provide information to security operatives about the hideouts and activities of
the sect members.
“For
every home demolished, the foundations of peace are further threatened”, says
Victoria Ohaeri, executive director of SPACES FOR CHANGE who led the research
team and compiled the report. Continuing, she said that, “punitive house
demolitions frustrate gains made towards closing Nigeria’s housing deficit
currently towering at about 16 million housing units. It clogs the wheel of
progress in multi-sectoral efforts aimed at improving the housing stock in a
sustainable fashion…Furthermore, such demolitions constitute major violations
of the right to adequate housing enshrined in several standard-setting human
rights instruments voluntarily ratified by the Nigerian government.
SPACES FOR CHANGE strongly
condemn the rapidly increasing number of internally displaced persons which
currently towers above 200,000 persons, who have been forced to flee their
homes as a direct result of the violent activities of both the terror
organizations, and counter-terror security outfits.
As the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights has so clearly
stated, “the very object and purpose of anti-terrorist initiatives in a
democratic society is to protect democratic institutions, human rights and the
rule of law, not to undermine them”. Accordingly, we urge the Nigerian government to end
the violence, particularly by halting the ongoing demolition and violent raids
on homes, Islamic schools, communities and the accompanying destruction of
lives and properties. We are also demanding an independent investigation into
the allegations of excessive use of force and extra-judicial killings by
members of the Joint Task Force and Special Task Force and bring those who are
alleged to have perpetrated crimes to justice. We further demand for the
establishment of complaint mechanisms and grievance procedures that allows the
evicted, the injured, or aggrieved persons affected by counter-terrorism
operations to express themselves freely and demand redress, without fear of
reprisals or arrests.
Importantly,
we urge the Nigerian government and the various state governments to reform the
juvenile and criminal justice systems to better prepare youth for second
chances. While acknowledging the bravery and commitment of the Nigerian
security forces toward containing the mounting insecurity and fundamentalism
witnessed in the northern part of the country, concrete steps must be taken to
integrate respect for human rights into their engagement strategies,
peacekeeping and peace-building efforts.
To download a free version of the full report, please click here: DEMOLISHING FOUNDATIONS OF PEACE. JUNE 2012. SPACES.FOR.CHANGE
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