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Derniers articles : No to Mass Sack of Oyo State Workers - - 25 September 2007 Hands off OAU Students Union Now! - - 10 September 2007 Violence in Port Harcourt escalates - - 22 August 2007 Escalade de la violence à Port-Harcourt - - 22 août 2007 Ongoing Shell Spill puts community at Risk - - 15 August 2007 Chevron’s nigeria pipeline under investigation - - 13 July 2007 NLC And TUC Salute Nigeria People and Calls for Renewed Resolve As The Strike Continues - - - 21 June 2007 Demand For Reversal of A Number of Policies And Actions Effected at The Twilight of President Obasanjo’s Administration - - 1 June 2007 Stay-at-Home Protest By LASCO - - 23 May 2007 Monday May 28 and Tuesday May 29 2007, are days of national protests - - - 17 May 2007 Communiqué Issued At The End Of The Emergency Meeting Of The National Executive Council (Nec) Of The Nigeria Labour Congress - - 12 May 2007 Presidential Election Marred by Fraud, Violence - - 25 April 2007 Voir également : Habitat : Forced evictions reach crisis levels Habitat : Les expulsions forcées atteignent un niveau critique Environnement : Resolution of FoEI Conference on Climate Change Habitat : A Joint Appeal to African Ministers on urban housing Lutte contre l’impunité : Will This End Impunity In West Africa? Pillage des ressources : Sao Tomé et Nigeria : Une enquête révèle un manque de transparence et des fautes graves dans la concession des blocs pétroliers Pillage des ressources : São Tomé and Nigeria: Inquiry finds lack of transparency and serious flaws in oil licensing round Habitat : Les expulsions forcées : un scandale en termes de droits humains Habitat : Forced evictions are a human rights scandal Afrique de l’Ouest : New african gas pipeline worries civil society Droits Humains - Démocratie : Halte à la destabilisation des Institutions de l’Union Africaine et de la CEDEAO par le Président Olusegun Obansanjo Travail - Emploi - Syndicalisme : Déclaration commune du Congrès du travail du Nigeria (NLC), de la Confédération des syndicats sud-africains (COSATU) et du Congrès des syndicats du Ghana (TUC) Travail - Emploi - Syndicalisme : Joint Statement on the Trade Union Situation in Africa issued at the end of a Tree-Nation Strategy by Congress of South African Trade Unions (COSATU), Ghana Trade Union Congress (GTUC) and the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) Site(s) web : Environmental Rights Action - Friends of the Earth Nigeria (ERA) : Nigerian Labour Congress (NLC) : African Network for Environment and Economic Justice : Campaign for Democratic and Workers’ Rights in Nigeria (CDWRN) : Remember Saro-Wiwa : BAOBAB For Women’s Human Rights : Nigeria Social Forum : Dernier(s) document(s) : The Human Rights Impact of Local Government Corruption and Mismanagement in Rivers State, Nigeria - A report by Human Rights Watch - 31 January 2007 (PDF - 1 Mb) Fuelling the Niger Delta Crisis - Africa Report by International Crisis Group - 28 September 2006 (PDF - 1.3 Mb) The Shell Report: Continuing Abuses-10 Years After Ken Saro-Wiwa - by Environmental Rights Action (ERA)/Friends of the Earth Nigeria (FoEN) - 8 November 2005 (PDF - 2.4 Mb) Violence in Nigeria’s Oil Rich Rivers State in 2004 - A Human Rights Watch Briefing Paper - February 2005 (PDF - 258.3 kb) La crise de Warri: le combustible de la violence - Un rapport d’Human Rights Watch sur le conflit dans l’Etat du Delta du Nigeria - December 2003 (PDF - 124.8 kb) The Niger Delta : No Democratic Dividend - Un rapport d’Human Rights Watch sur les violations des Droits de l’Homme liées à l’exploitation pétrolière du Delta du Niger - October 2002 (PDF - 4.4 Mb) |
World-wide embassy protests on Tuesday 23 October Student leaders framed on charges of conspiracy to murder Release Saburi Akande Akinola, Taiwo Hassan Soweto and Olatunde Dairo now! 18 October 2007 - http://www.nigeriasolidarity.org The Campaign for Democratic and Workers’ Rights in Nigeria is appalled at the news that three student leaders of a major Nigerian university are being held in prison on trumped up charges of conspiracy to murder. They were elected by the students of Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile Ife, to fight against plans of the university and state authorities to commercialise and undermine education provision and to attack the students’ rights to organise and resist. The Osun State Director of Public Prosecutions, hand in glove with the university authorities and with the fraudulently elected state government, ordered the latest arrests to try and break the union and head off campus protests agreed at a mass meeting on October 11. The authorities have closed the university and suspended a total of 13 student activists – many of who are members and supporters of the Education Rights Campaign. Boycotts of lectures and other actions were due to start this week to demand the release of the release of the president of their union who has been held since the end of July on a whole series of similarly trumped up charges, and including conspiracy to murder the former Vice Chancellor in 2004. Looters and thieves Those behind this attack on the students’ democratic rights are closely linked with the looters of Nigeria’s oil wealth. They resent any money being spent on education. Their true colours have been shown in the massively rigged elections earlier this year, which in Osun state, brought Brigadier General Oyinlola of the ruling party to power. After stealing the elections, he presided over the arrest of 400 supporters of the main opposition candidate in Osun. Now Oyinlola is extending the same arbitrary repressive methods to student activists. Amongst others, European Union observers have published first hand evidence of ballot-rigging and corruption, but he and many like him across the country keep their lucrative posts. Students and working people in Nigeria are in a daily struggle for survival while a corrupt and bloated elite continues to receive international backing. They need support from every possible quarter. In the case of the OAU three - Saburi Akande Akinola, Taiwo Hassan Soweto and Olatunde Dairo - the Campaign for Democratic and Workers’ Rights in Nigeria is calling for an avalanche of protests to be sent to the authorities demanding their immediate release and the dropping of all charges against them. CDWR campaigners in Nigeria are calling for world-wide protest pickets and solidarity demonstrations to take place at embassies and High Commissions on Tuesday, 23 October. On that day, a mass procession is planned to go to the Court in Oshogbo where the bail application of Akinola Saburi, the students’ union president, is due to be heard. They are also appealing desperately for funds to pay for lawyers and to sustain the student leaders as long as they are held in prison. They are conducting a postering and leafleting campaign to back up their demands for justice on the following lines:- Release student campaigners now! Drop all charges against them. Re-open the OAU. Reinstate the suspended students. Defend public education against the privatisers and their corrupt business friends. For the right to organise student and worker’ unions unmolested. Remove the real criminals from office; for democratic control by elected representatives in the universities and in society! Please contact us for further information and news of publicity that has been given, using the above address. DETAILS FOR PROTESTS AND DONATIONS Protests should be sent to:
We are recommending supporters to also contact directly their local Nigerian Embassy since very often e-mails are blocked. Please send news of pickets and copies of messages to:
Donations please to : Campaign for Democratic and Workers’ Rights in Nigeria, P.O. Box No. 44485, London SE1 OXB, England Or directly to: Lloyds TSB, sort code 30-95-03, Account no. 0563697 - IBAN: GB13loyd30950300563697 |
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