NHRC probes Kano toddler’s torture
The National Human Rights Commission
said on Thursday that it had ordered a preliminary investigation into
the alleged torture of a 20-month-old baby, Musa Murtala, in Kano State.
A statement by the commission’s Chief
Press Officer, Mrs. Fatimah Mohammed, said the disturbing picture of the
baby’s condition appeared in a newspaper on Wednesday.
Mohammed said the baby was lying critically ill at the Murtala Muhammed Specialist Hospital in Kano State.
She said the baby’s mother, Bilkisu,
“disclosed that her baby was brought to the hospital, following multiple
fractures on his arms and legs, a cut on the tongue and testes as well
as an injury to his right eye.”
She disclosed that the Executive
Secretary of the NHRC, Prof. Bem Angwe, had ordered a preliminary
investigation into the incident.
The statement said the intervention by
the Kano State Commissioner of Police, Mr. Abbati Dikko, led to the
arrest of the suspects who were said to have been handed over to the
State Criminal Investigation Department in the state.
The statement by the NHRC spokesperson
did not disclose the number of the suspects, the nature of the torture
meted out to the baby and the motive behind the act.
But the NHRC spokesperson said the
directive of the commission to investigate the elements of right
violations in the case was made on the strength of the Standing Order
and Rules of Procedures of the commission.
The statement read in part, “The
Executive Secretary of the Commission, Prof. Bem Angwe, stated this in
Abuja while reacting to the gruesome picture of the baby on the front
page of a national newspaper.
“He (Angwe) disclosed that the
commission had received preliminary reports on the incident from its
zonal office in Kano, stressing that he would ensure that all those
involved in the dastardly act would be made to face the wrath of the
law.
“He said a preliminary investigation
conducted by the officials of the commission indicated that the alleged
violators were now being detained at the State Criminal Investigation
Department in Bompai.
Angwe said, “No cause justifies human
rights abuse,” adding that the section 34(a) of the Constitution of the
Federal Republic of Nigeria 1999, states that “no person shall be
subjected to torture or to inhuman and degrading treatment.”
Meanwhile, the executive secretary has
commended the Kano State Police Commissioner for his quick intervention
leading to the arrest of the suspects.
Angwe also urged Nigerians to desist from hiring underaged children for house chores or menial work.
SOURCE
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