The UN Special
Rapporteur on Extrajudicial Summary or Arbitrary Executions, Christof
Heyns, in a letter to The Socio-Economic Rights and Accountability
Project, said, “Appropriate action, including communication to the
government of President Goodluck Jonathan, is being considered regarding
the imminent execution of 54 soldiers in Nigeria.”The
United Nations has said it will take appropriate action over the
execution of 54 soldiers sentenced to death by the Nigerian Army on
December 17.
A General
Court-Martial set up by the Army authorities had sentenced the 54
soldiers to death by firing squad for alleged offences of mutiny and
conspiracy.
SERAP, in a
petition dated December 23 and addressed to a group of five UN special
human rights rapporteurs and the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights,
Mr. Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein, described the mass death sentences on the
soldiers as “unjust and incompatible with fundamental human rights.”
The rights group
had urged the rapporteurs to use their good offices and positions to
prevail on the Federal Government and the Army authorities not to carry
out the mass death sentences imposed on the 54 soldiers.
In a statement
by the Executive Director of SERAP, Adetokunbo Mumuni, on Sunday, SERAP
expressed satisfaction over the decision of the UN to intervene in the
execution of the soldiers.
“Given his
longstanding human rights commitment and achievements, we have
absolutely no doubt that Mr. Heyns will work assiduously to ensure that
justice is done in this matter and we wish him well as he strives to do
that,” Mumuni stated.
SERAP said, “The
General Court-Martial, held in secret, was a mockery of justice and
ignored issues raised by the condemned men that suggest lack of
transparency, accountability and general deficiencies in the handling of
the security budget and arms purchases.”
The statement
read, “The UN has also acknowledged the discriminatory and arbitrary
nature of judicial processes and the danger of the death penalty being
used as a tool of repression. It has documented evidence to show that
the death penalty is no deterrent, stressing that ‘depriving a human
person of his or her life is incompatible with the trend in the 21st
Century.”
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