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Nigeria: Government failings leave rural communities at the mercy of gunmen

Nigeria: Government failings leave rural communities at the mercy of gunmen

  • At least 1,126 villagers killed by bandits from January to June 2020 
  • Attacks pose threats to food security in rural areas 
  • Failure to bring killers to justice fuels impunity

The Nigerian authorities have left rural communities at the mercy of rampaging gunmen who have killed at least 1,126 people in the north of the country since January, Amnesty International said today.

The organization interviewed civilians in Kaduna, Katsina, Niger, Plateau, Sokoto, Taraba and Zamfara states, who said they live in fear of attacks and abductions as insecurity escalates in rural areas. Many of those interviewed described how security forces often arrive hours after attacks have ended, even when officers have been given information about impending attacks. During one attack in Unguwan Magaji in Kaduna state, security forces arrived at the scene but left when they saw the sophisticated ammunition the attackers were using. By the time they returned, at least 17 people had been killed.

Amnesty International has documented an alarming escalation in attacks and abductions in several states in north west and north central Nigeria since January 2020. Worst affected are villages in the south of Kaduna State, where armed men killed at least 366 people in multiple attacks between January and July 2020.

«Terrifying attacks on rural communities in the north of Nigeria have been going on for years. The ongoing failure of security forces to take sufficient steps to protect villagers from these predictable attacks is utterly shameful.»

“In addition to the security forces’ failure to heed warnings or respond in time to save lives, the fact that no perpetrators have been brought to justice leaves rural communities feeling completely exposed. The President claims he has repeatedly tasked security agencies to end the killing so that Nigerians can go to bed with their eyes closed, but clearly nothing has changed.”

Houses burned, villagers abducted 

At least 77 people have been killed since January 2020 in the ongoing communal clashes between the Jukun and Tiv ethnic groups in Taraba state, northeast Nigeria. The ethnic conflict between Jukun and Tiv ethnic groups has been on and off since the early 1990’s as authorities consistently failed to end the conflict.

On 28 May, at least 74 people were reportedly killed in Sokoto state, when gunmen attacked four villages in Sabon Birni Local Government Area.

According to witnesses interviewed by Amnesty International in Kaduna, Plateau and Katsina states, the attacks are well coordinated. Attackers stormed villages on motorcycles and heavily armed. They shoot sporadically at people, set houses on fire, steal cattle, destroy farm produce and abduct villagers for ransom.

Most villagers told Amnesty International that the government left them at the mercy of their attackers. They complained of receiving little or no help from security officials during attacks, despite informing them prior or calling for help during attacks. They lamented that, in most cases, the security forces arrived hours after attacks.

A witness to an attack in Unguwan Magaji in southern of Kaduna said:

“During the attack, our leaders called and informed the soldiers that the attackers are in the village, so the soldiers did not waste time and they came but when they came and saw the type of ammunitions the attackers had they left. The following morning so many soldiers came with their Hilux pick-up trucks to see the dead bodies.”

Escalating violence in southern Kaduna 

In response to increasing violence in the south of Kaduna State, the State Governor imposed a 24-hour curfew in affected communities in June 2020, but attacks have continued. Violence has been on and off in southern Kaduna since the aftermath of 2011 elections and authorities have failed to both end the violence or bring the perpetrators to justice.

On 6 August at least 22 people were reported killed when gunmen suspected to be herders attacked four communities in Zangon Kataf Local Government Area of the state.

More than 100 people were killed in July during 11 coordinated attacks in Chikun, Kaura and Zangon-Kataf Local Government Areas of the state. At least 16 people were killed in Kukum-Daji on 19 July 2020, in an attack that lasted for five minutes, when attackers shot sporadically at villagers.

A farmer in Kukum Daji whose son was killed during the attack informed Amnesty International:

“My son was 20 years old, he had just gotten admission at University of Jos. He was at home due to the Corona pandemic, then the attack happened. When I saw his dead body, my body became very weak, I started feeling dizzy, I thought I was going to fall, my whole body was on fire but there was nothing I could do, I just told myself that am leaving everything to God. I will never be happy again in this life for losing this boy. His death has really affected me”.

Some victims of the recent attacks in southern Kaduna told Amnesty International that security forces were absent during most of the attacks, arriving only hours after the attackers had left. In rare cases when security forces arrived during attacks, they often came with inadequate intervention.

Humanitarian crisis looms 

The violence has forced many farmers and their families to flee their homes. In Katsina state, at least 33,130 people are now in displacement camps, and others have gone to stay with relatives in urban areas. Thousands of farmers could not cultivate their farms during the 2020 rain season because of fear of attacks or abduction.

«These attacks have caused massive displacement and food insecurity in the affected states. The majority of the people in these communities depend on farming for their livelihoods, but they are now too afraid to go to their fields.»

“This is pushing the region to the brink of a major humanitarian crisis. The Nigerian authorities’ failure to stem the violence is costing people’s lives and livelihoods, and without immediate action many more lives may be lost.”

A 50-year-old farmer in Batsari Local Government Area of Katsina State told Amnesty International:

Abductions

At least 380 people have been abducted for ransom during attacks in Kaduna, Niger, Katsina, Nasarawa and Zamfara states in 2020, mostly women and children. Largely, relatives of those abducted sell all their belongings to pay ransom to the gunmen and those unable to pay are mostly killed.

Arrested for Daring to Seek for Better Protection

Not only has the government failed to take the steps needed to stop these attacks, police regularly punish those who dare to ask for more protection. Amnesty International has documented how farmers, rights groups, and activists are subjected to intimidation, arrest and torture for speaking out against the attacks or asking government to help protect the people.

On 8 August at least 3 people were arrested during a peaceful protest at Refinery Junction, Kaduna South, and on 18 June, at least 20 protesters were arrested and detained for days by police in Katsina State.

On 17 June, Nastura Ashir Sharif – an activist was arrested for speaking out against the killings and leading protests calling for an end to the rising insecurity in the country.

On 10 April, a youth from the Oureedam community in the Bassa area of Plateau State was arrested after complaining that security forces had arrived late to an attack. He said he was beaten and was made to roll on a wet floor. He was eventually released when a lawmaker representing his community intervened.

«In their response to these attacks, the Nigerian authorities have displayed gross incompetence and a total disregard for people’s lives. Arresting people who dare to ask for help is a further blow. Instead of arresting critics, the   authorities should be seeking urgent solutions to this crisis and doing all they can to prevent further attacks.»

Amnesty International is calling on Nigerian authorities to independently investigate all these deaths and ensure accountability by bringing the perpetrators to justice. Spate of these killings is an evidence of failure of authorities to protect the people. Inability of authorities to bring attackers to justice is fueling dangerous conspiracy theories that only escalate the violence.

“The government has an obligation to protect its population. The rising death toll in the north of Nigeria shows just how badly the authorities are failing in this responsibility.”

Rising insecurity in several states in the north of Nigeria, including Kaduna, Katsina, Niger, Plateau, Sokoto, Taraba and Zamfara states, has left thousands dead.

Amnesty International Nigeria has been monitoring the banditry attacks and clashes by herders and farmers since 2016. In December 2018 we published a report, based on years of research, that documents the violent clashes between members of farmer communities and members of herder communities in parts of Nigeria, particularly in the northern parts of the country.

Fuente de la Información: https://www.amnesty.org/en/latest/news/2020/08/nigeria-government-failings-leave-rural-communities-at-the-mercy-of-gunmen-1/

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Londres: WikiLeaks’ Assange to fight US extradition bid in UK court

WikiLeaks’ Assange to fight US extradition bid in UK court

LONDON — WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange is set to fight for his freedom in a British court after a decade of legal drama, as he challenges American authorities’ attempt to extradite him on spying charges over the site’s publication of secret U.S. military documents.

Lawyers for Assange and the U.S. government are scheduled to face off in London Monday at an extradition hearing that was delayed by the coronavirus pandemic.

American prosecutors have indicted the 49-year-old Australian on 18 espionage and computer misuse charges adding up to a maximum sentence of 175 years. His lawyers say the prosecution is a politically motivated abuse of power that will stifle press freedom and put journalists at risk.

Assange attorney Jennifer Robinson said the case “is fundamentally about basic human rights and freedom of speech.”

“Journalists and whistle-blowers who reveal illegal activity by companies or governments and war crimes – such as the publications Julian has been charged for – should be protected from prosecution,” she said.

American prosecutors say Assange is a criminal, not a free-speech hero.

They allege that Assange conspired with U.S. army intelligence analyst Chelsea Manning to hack into a Pentagon computer and release hundreds of thousands of secret diplomatic cables and military files on the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. They also say he conspired with members of hacking organizations and sought to recruit hackers to provide WikiLeaks with classified information.

“By disseminating the materials in an unredacted form, he likely put people — human rights activists, journalists, advocates, religious leaders, dissidents and their families — at risk of serious harm, torture or even death,” James Lewis, a British lawyer acting for the U.S. government, told a hearing in February.

Assange argues he is a journalist entitled to First Amendment protection, and says the leaked documents exposed U.S. military wrongdoing. Among the files released by WikiLeaks was video of a 2007 Apache helicopter attack by American forces in Baghdad that killed 11 people, including two Reuters journalists.

His lawyers argue the prosecution is an abuse of process by a Trump administration that wants to make an example of Assange. They say he would be held in inhuman conditions and would not get a fair trial in the United States.

Journalism organizations and human rights groups have called on Britain to refuse the extradition request. Amnesty International said Assange was “the target of a negative public campaign by U.S. officials at the highest levels.”

“If Julian Assange is prosecuted it could have a chilling effect on media freedom, leading publishers and journalists to self-censor in fear of retaliation,” said Amnesty’s Europe Director, Nils Muižnieks.

The four-week extradition hearing is part of a twisting saga rife with competing claims of hacking, spying and subterfuge. Assange’s lawyers claim the U.S. intelligence services directed a private security firm to spy on him while he was living in Ecuador’s London embassy — a case currently being heard in a Spanish court.

Assange also alleges he was offered a pardon by the Trump administration if he agreed to say Russia wasn’t involved in leaking Democratic National Committee emails that were published by WikiLeaks during the 2016 U.S. election campaign. The White House denies that claim.

Assange’s legal troubles began in 2010, when he was arrested in London at the request of Sweden, which wanted to question him about allegations of rape and sexual assault made by two women. He refused to go to Stockholm, saying he feared extradition or illegal rendition to the United States or the U.S. prison camp at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

In 2012, Assange sought refuge inside the Ecuadorian Embassy, where he was beyond the reach of U.K. and Swedish authorities — but also effectively a prisoner, unable to leave the tiny diplomatic mission in London’s tony Knightsbridge area.

The relationship between Assange and his hosts eventually soured, and he was evicted from the embassy in April 2019. British police immediately arrested him for jumping bail in 2012.

Sweden dropped the sex crimes investigations in November 2019 because so much time had elapsed, but Assange remains in London’s high-security Belmarsh Prison as he awaits the extradition decision. Supporters say the ordeal has harmed Assange’s physical and mental health, leaving him with depression, dental problems and a serious shoulder ailment.

Assange’s partner Stella Moris, who had two sons with him while he lived in the embassy, said he looked thinner and was in “a lot of pain” when she visited him in prison in late August for the first time since March.

The extradition hearing opened in February but was put on hold when the U.K. went into lockdown in March to slow the spread of the coronavirus. It is resuming with social distancing measures in court and video feeds so that journalists and observers can watch remotely.

Assange is expected to be brought by prison van from Belmarsh to the Old Bailey criminal court for the hearing, which is due to run until early October. District Judge Vanessa Baraitser is likely to take weeks or even months to consider her verdict, with the losing side likely to appeal.

Fuente de la Información: https://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory/wikileaks-assange-fight-us-extradition-bid-uk-court-72847683

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Etiopía: Two OMN Journalists Freed on Bail but Colleagues Remain in Ethiopian Jail

Two OMN Journalists Freed on Bail but Colleagues Remain in Ethiopian Jail

After over 45 days in prison, Ethiopian journalist Guyo Wario was finally released on bail Tuesday. But at least three of his Oromia Media Network (OMN) colleagues remain in custody.

«I am so happy for being with family now. [The] prison situation was very tough, but the court investigated my case and approved my bail. I am so happy,” he told VOA’s Horn of Africa service.

A lower court ordered Wario’s release on bail a week ago, and the higher court gave the final order Monday, but paperwork delayed the release, a family member said.

Wario and his colleagues were arrested as authorities cracked down after protests and violence erupted in several Oromia cities and abroad over the killing of Hachalu Hundessa, an Oromo cultural and political singer who was shot dead in Addis Ababa on June 29.

Media and civil rights groups have raised concerns about Ethiopia’s responses to the unrest, including internet blocks, and the arrests of journalists, protesters, and members of the opposition, including Jawar Mohamed, from the Oromo Federalist Congress and members of the Oromo Liberation Front.

By mid-August, nearly 180 people, including demonstrators and some law enforcement, had been killed and 9,000 arrested as protesters and security forces clashed, Human Rights Watch said. Authorities cut off access to the internet for weeks and suspended at least three news networks, including OMN.

Wario, who interviewed Hundessa shortly before the killing, was one of four OMN journalists arrested, along with an IT technician, the news outlet’s lawyer Tokuma Dhaba said. They are being investigated on accusations of incitement, according to the press freedom organization Committee to Protect Journalists.

OMN journalist Mohamed Siraj was released on bail Saturday but Mellese Diribsa and camera operator Nasir Adem, along with Minnesota resident IT technician Misha Adem Cirrii, remain in detention, the lawyer said.

Dhaba said a court had ordered Diribsa to be released on bail, but the journalist remains in jail.

Fekadu Tsega, who directs the Office of the Attorney General, told VOA that Wario was suspected of incitement, but did not specify what led to the allegation.

VOA Horn of Africa’s attempts to reach officials including Tesega for further comment were not successful.

Risks of contracting COVID-19 in detention

CPJ’s sub-Saharan chief Muthoki Mumo said that the health of these journalists is put at risk if authorities hold them for long periods in pretrial detention during the coronavirus pandemic.

Kenyan journalist Collins Juma Osemo, also known as Yassin Juma, told VOA he contracted COVID-19 while in a detention center, after being accused of multiple charges including inciting violence. Juma was released from a quarantine facility last week.

Mumo said that at least three other reporters, including journalists from the privately owned ASRAT Media, were also arrested in July.

Reporter suspensions

As well as the arrests, authorities at the end of June suspended OMN along with the broadcasters ASRAT and Dimtsi Weyane.

Some reports said the outlets were suspended for three months over allegations of hate speech, inciting violence and misinformation. At least one report said the ASRAT suspension was related to a registration issue. The outlets denied the accusations.

In early July, CPJ reported that the office of the federal attorney general alleged that the media outlets were fomenting conflict among ethnic communities.

If OMN and other media outlets want to continue reporting, they have choices, Ethiopian Broadcasting Authority (EBA) Deputy Director-General Wondwosen Andualem was quoted as saying in a BBC Afan Oromo report.

The authority advised some private media companies on several occasions to correct mistakes, Andualem said, adding, “We don’t want to ban them forever.”

VOA was unable to reach EBA for comment via phone. Calls either didn’t go through because of a bad connection or were unanswered.

Quoting family members and persons familiar with the situation, OMN lawyer Dhaba said authorities have also blocked the station’s bank accounts and frozen its journalists’ assets. “But we are still trying to find out which department has blocked (the) accounts,” he said.

“Following Hachalu’s assassination, several documents and studio equipment were taken away by police from our Addis Ababa studio and OMN bank accounts are blocked,” Dhaba said.

Individuals inside Ethiopia told VOA Horn of Africa this week that OMN is broadcasting from abroad and people can still access the station from inside Ethiopia.

The arrests and shutdowns appear to signal a worrying trend just two years after what media rights groups had described as a turning point in Ethiopia’s press freedom record.

In 2018, CPJ noted that no journalists were in custody for their work and that Ethiopian authorities had restored access to over 200 websites.

Mumo said incidents that have taken place are concerning when it comes to “a trajectory of press freedom in Ethiopia.”

In the past two years, authorities have detained journalists, passed restrictive laws, and cut internet access during periods of unrest, civil rights groups say.

VOA’s calls to the federal police commission and federal attorney general office for comment were not successful.

The parliament in February passed a law that punishes “hate speech” and disinformation with hefty fines and lengthy jail terms.

In a statement in December, Human Rights Watch called for Ethiopia to revise the bill, which it warned could “significantly curtail freedom of expression.”

This report originated in VOA’s Horn of Africa service.

Fuente de la Información: https://www.voanews.com/press-freedom/two-omn-journalists-freed-bail-colleagues-remain-ethiopian-jail

 

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Kenya, COVID-19: Embu University rolls out virtual learning platform

Africa/Kenya/06-09-2020/Autor(a):Muraya Kamunde/Fuente: www.kbc.co.ke

La Universidad de Embu ha lanzado una plataforma de aprendizaje virtual en un intento por hacer terreno para la interrupción del aprendizaje en la universidad.

Vice-Chancellor Prof Daniel Mugendi says the university has already enrolled over 2,400 first-year students for the online classes set to begin Monday next week.

Embu University has conducted a virtual orientation for its 2,475 new students in readiness for online classes set to begin on Monday.

The university says it has chosen to go the digital way in a bid to solve the challenges brought about by the COVID-19 pandemic.

Professor Mugendi says the online classes will help the institution implement safe social distancing and minimize personal contact between the students.

The government said that schools will only reopen when it is safe to do so, though pressure continues to mount on the government to allow institutions of higher learning resume classes.

This comes as Education Cabinet Secretary Prof George Magoha said that the purpose of reopening schools was mainly because of equipping learners with actual and practical skills.

The Education CS spoke after touring the Meru National Polytechnic to assess the preparedness for reopening schools said as much as the government encourages virtual learning some skills were better achieved through actual classroom activities.

“For these institutions, it is of paramount importance for them to serve the country using their hands they also going virtual but they are not like universities where you can give and monitor a lot of content virtually,” he explained.

The CS has urged in technical and other higher learning institutions to expedite in attaining the minimum recommended Covid-19 health guidelines so that students can resume their classes as quickly as possible.

Source and Image: https://www.kbc.co.ke/covid-19-embu-university-rolls-out-virtual-learning-platform/

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Estados Unidos: Escuelas públicas enseñan al aire libre

América del Norte/Estados Unidos/06-09-2020/Auttor(a) y Fuente: lahora.com.ec

La ciudad de Nueva York anunció que atrasaría 10 días el inicio de clases en todo el sistema público para dar más tiempo a maestros y administradores a prepararse.

Mientras tanto, algunos maestros se organizan ya para ensayar al aire libre con aulas de prekinder, como en esta imagen en el barrio de Brooklyn. EFE

Fuente e Imagen: https://lahora.com.ec/quito/noticia/1102326758/escuelas-publicas-ensenan-al-aire-libre

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El Salvador: Colegios privados apoyan la eliminación de la Paes

América Central/El Salvador/06-09-2020/Auttor(a) y Fuente: www.elsalvador.com

La ministra de Educación ha reiterado que se desarrollará una prueba en el mes de noviembre para evaluar los conocimientos adquiridos por los estudiante de Educación Media.

“La PAES no nos merece respeto y los colegios privados estamos a favor de su eliminación y en su lugar implementar una evaluación integral escolar”, declaró este sábado, Javier Hernández, presidente de la Asociación de Colegios Privados (Acpes).

Con esas declaraciones el representante de colegios privados apoya la decisión del Ministerio de Educación (Mined) de no desarrollar para este año la Prueba de Aprendizaje y Aptitudes para Egresados de Educación Media (PAES), sin embargo la titular de la cartera de Educación sí recalcó que harán una prueba para evaluar los conocimientos adquiridos.

“He repetido que no va haber PAES, pero sí vamos a hacer una prueba diferente que nos permita honrar el esfuerzo que han estado haciendo los docentes. No realizar ninguna prueba significaría desconocer todo esto, estaríamos dejando a los padres de familia en el aire sin saber cuánto han aprendido sus hijos”, dijo Carla Hanania de Varela, ministra de Educación.

Además Hananía de Varela señaló que es probable que se programe una evaluación  para noviembre y la prueba no sería presencial, además, tendría una ponderación diferente y no se llamaría PAES.

En la  entrevista radial,  Hernández explicó que  los titulares del  Mined no han dado mayor información a los colegios privados sobre la finalización del año escolar 2020 y el inicio del año 2021 y argumentó que los representantes de colegios están claros que clases presenciales no habrán durante los primeros meses del próximo año.
“Habrá que resolver situaciones a partir del año escolar 2021, tendremos que atender los protocolos de los Ministerios de Salud y Educación, hemos sugerido un regreso a clases selectivo considerando el retorno los estudiantes más vulnerables”,  dijo Hernández.
Tras la suspensión de clases presenciales a causa de la pandemia de coronavirus, los estudiantes han continuado con el aprendizaje a través del micrositio web, las plataformas digitales, la televisión, la radio y guías impresas.

Acpes presentó el pasado jueves una propuesta de retorno a clases presenciales de forma selectiva para los estudiantes.

“La pandemia obligó a convertir los hogares de estudiantes y maestros en aulas virtuales utilizando la tecnología. Hay que hacer los ajustes necesarios para poder iniciar el año escolar 2021”, puntualizó  Javier Hernández
Hernández explicó que hay muchos estudiantes que se están frustrando por la modalidad de clases virtuales, “en muchos casos el estudiante no tiene el auxilio del padre de familia en su apoyo para garantizar la educación, hay descuido y prefieren que el estudiante pierda su año escolar”, lamentó.
Fuente e Imagen: https://www.elsalvador.com/eldiariodehoy/presidente-de-la-asociacion-colegios-privados-acpes/750048/2020/
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Trabajadores de la salud en Bolivia demandan mejoras laborales

América del Sur/Bolivia/06-09-2020/Auttor(a) y Fuente: www.telesurtv.net

Luego de cinco meses de pandemia en Cochabamba, el personal sanitario no ha sido beneficiado en ninguna medida.

Miembros de la Federación Sindical de Trabajadores en Salud Pública de Cochabamba (Fstspc) y la Central Obrera Departamental (COD) se congregaron este viernes en esa ciudad boliviana para exigir a las autoridades gubernamentales, departamentales y municipales, la aprobación del diez por ciento del presupuesto nacional para el sector.

Los trabajadores de la salud también demandaron estabilidad laboral en tiempos de la pandemia de la Covid-19, así como que se respetaran sus derechos laborales al salario y la contratación.

De acuerdo con el representante de la Fstspc, Adalit Gutiérrez, la asignación del seguro por parte de las autoridades puede calificarse como “discriminatoria”, pues entre los fallecidos por la Covid-19 no sólo se encuentran quienes atendían a los pacientes, sino que se registran también trabajadores administrativos y manuales.

“El seguro de vida sólo se le pretende dar a aquél que ha estado directamente; ya no al administrativo ni al auxiliar”, resaltó Gutiérrez, quien añadió que «luchamos en la primera línea contra la pandemia. No podemos estar en estas condiciones. Requerimos la respuesta inmediata de las autoridades».

El titular del Fstspc alertó además que a cinco meses de reportarse los primeros contagios de Covid-19 en Cochabamba, el trabajador de la salud no ha sido beneficiado en ninguna medida.

Mientras, rechazó la nueva convocatoria del Colegio Médico para calificación de méritos de 350 ítems, pues explica que estos ya fueron otorgados de acuerdo con una revisión del Servicio Departamental de Salud (Sedes) y el Sindicato de Ramas Médicas de Salud Pública (Sirmes).

Fuente e Imagen: https://www.telesurtv.net/news/bolivia-trabajadores-salud-demandan-mejoras-laborales-20200905-0012.html

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