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Governments: Take concrete steps to reverse trends of shrinking and closing civic spaces in Nigeria, By Tola Winjobi

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Governments: Take concrete steps to reverse trends of shrinking and closing civic spaces in Nigeria, By Tola Winjobi

Akinwande Soji-Ojo by Akinwande Soji-Ojo
January 10, 2021
in Opinion
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Governments: Take concrete steps to reverse trends of shrinking and closing civic spaces in Nigeria, By Tola Winjobi
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Being a text of a press conference organised by CAFSO-WRAG for Development and Civil Society Partnership for Development Effectiveness as part of activities of CPDE National Level Campaigns against shrinking Civic Space 2020 held on Friday 7th January 2021 in Ibadan Nigeria, West Africa

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According to the Belgrade Call to Action (2019), over six billion people are living in countries where there are serious constraints on civic space: the conditions are closed for civil society in 23 countries; civil society is highly repressed in 35 countries while civil society faces substantial legal and political obstacles in 53 countries. Civic actors across many sectors are being threatened and persecuted – including those supporting and representing rural communities, indigenous peoples, journalists, trade unions, women’s rights activists, LGBTQ activists, youth, people living with disabilities, and environmentalists.

Despite promises of action by many United Nations Member States (including Nigerian State) to “reverse the trend of shrinking civic space wherever it is taking place,” (Nairobi Outcome Document, GPEDC) attacks on CSOs, social leaders and human rights defenders, and the deterioration of enabling environment for CSOs (GPEDC 2019:8) continue unabated. Nigerian NGOs, Community Development Association, Academia, Human rights activists, LGBT group, National Youth Council, opposition politicians all have been engaging governments on the need to make governance participatory, open and accountable and respect the rights of the citizens.

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In Nigeria, there is much impunity and violation of the rule of law as governments are adamant to court rulings against them. Many civilians like Sambo Dasuki, and Ibrahim El-Zakisaky, some journalists and civil society actors that campaigned for them are kept behind bars despite court injunction to release them on bail. Human rights abuses are common especially as being perpetrated by the state.

Reminiscing, Nigeria boiled as civil society actors had taken to the streets protesting against police brutality as being perpetrated by Federal Special Anti-Robbery Squad (F-SARS). Scores of citizens were killed as a result of this protest which started around September 2020. Systemic repressive and oppressive actions have been taken by government against the civil society. Some of these actions required mandatory registration with difficult requirements for CSO operations; regulatory restrictions and nebulous legislation including hate speech attracting N50 million penalty or death penalty; measures banning public demonstrations and processions except for the Nigerian state; poor and limited spaces available for CSO participation; and lack of technical and financial support for CSOs’ effective engagement and operations coupled with donor’s fatigue.

Alas, not only Nigeria’s fledgling democracy is being threatened, the attainment of Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) is also being jeopardised in Nigeria through the action of governments. Upholding human rights is core to development; and human rights-based approach (HRBA) is a fundamental principle for development effectiveness. It represents a paradigm shift crucial in achieving the SDGs as it enables the poor and marginalized people to chart their own destiny by empowering them as rights-holders instead of mere beneficiaries of charity.

The maginalised and vulnerable are so pauperised to the extent that they could not discern their rights let alone to stand for them. Thus they are being left behind. Real and transformative progress in achieving core SDGs – including eradicating poverty (SDG1), eliminating hunger (SDG2), addressing gender and all forms of discrimination (SDG5) reducing inequalities (SDG10), promoting decent work and sustainable livelihoods for all (SDG8) – will not be possible without a fully engaged civil society and population.

In view of this shrinking civic space, we therefore call on Nigerian governments:
• To take concrete steps to reverse the trends of shrinking and closing civic spaces in development, to protect and enable space for civil society, including enabling laws and regulations, democratic accountability based on human rights norms and human rights standards, and the full protection of civil society under attack – such as social leaders, human rights defenders and gender rights activists;
• To repeal and halt all obnoxious laws, policies, and bills stifling operations of civil society including CAMA and social media bill and Hate Speech Bill that metes out death penalty on the violator especially the press as these policies are reminiscent of the Satanic Decree 2 of 1984;
• To respect democratic country ownership of national development plans, and recognize the importance of the inter-connected themes in achieving Agenda 2030 — civil society voice, eradicating poverty, women’s empowerment, fighting inequality, decent work, climate action and environmental justice — without which the realisation of the SDGs would be a mirage in Nigeria;
• To hold effective, inclusive and transparent consultations with CSOs regarding national development priorities and guarantee meaningful inclusive CSO participation in decision-making and creation of public policies all in tandem with the UN Agenda 2030 mantra of “Leave no one behind”; and implement public policies to promote and strengthen CSOs;
• To uphold the rule of law, shun impunity, respect human rights, promote the right to initiative of citizens, and uphold all fundamental rights and freedoms including, but not limited to, freedom of association, of expression, and political participation, the rights to peaceful assembly and information; and release unconditionally all the political prisoners and prisoners of conscience including the activists and journalists kept behind bars despite court injunction to release them on bail.

Our multi-stakeholders’ action is about organizing social (using Twitter, intagram, Facebook, web updates, whatsapp) and traditional (newspapers) media campaigns against the shrinking space for the CSOs and the press in Nigeria. This is to heighten the concerns and broaden activism on advancing CSO enabling environment, and monitoring EDC principles and implementation. The strengths of civil society are its diversity, its rootedness in communities and territories, its direct development experience, and its capacity for public engagement. We enjoin our pressmen to give this campaign widest publicity it deserves.

CAFSO-WRAG for Development is a humanitarian, not for profit, and non-governmental organization established in 1994 in Ibadan, Nigeria. Its main task is to challenge the structures and institutions that perpetuate poverty, hunger and preventable diseases, and campaign for the fulfilment of all socio-economic and human rights for sustainable human and ecological development. It is deploying a series of activities including a press conference, capacity building, and social media action to tackle the issue of the shrinking civic space in commemorating the 2020 CPDE National Level Campaigns against Shrinking Civic Space. We are hopeful that governments would reverse the trend of the repressive shrinking space with the understanding that the realisation of the 2030 Agenda is hinged on freedom of speech, respect for human rights, and upholding the rule of law.

Thank you, gentlemen of the press.

Dr. Tola Winjobi (PhD)
Principal Coordinator, CAFSO-WRAG for Development
African Representative, Civil Society Partnership for Development Effectiveness (CPDE)

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