Keep Us Strong WikiLeaks logo

Currently released so far... 251287 / 251,287

Articles

Browse latest releases

Browse by creation date

Browse by origin

A B C D F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W Y Z

Browse by tag

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
AEMR ASEC AMGT AE AS AMED AVIAN AU AF AORC AGENDA AO AR AM APER AFIN ATRN AJ ABUD ARABL AL AG AODE ALOW ADANA AADP AND APECO ACABQ ASEAN AA AFFAIRS AID AGR AY AGS AFSI AGOA AMB ARF ANET ASCH ACOA AFLU AFSN AMEX AFDB ABLD AESC AFGHANISTAN AINF AVIATION ARR ARSO ANDREW ASSEMBLY AIDS APRC ASSK ADCO ASIG AC AZ APEC AFINM ADB AP ACOTA ASEX ACKM ASUP ANTITERRORISM ADPM AINR ARABLEAGUE AGAO AORG AMTC AIN ACCOUNT ASECAFINGMGRIZOREPTU AIDAC AINT ARCH AMGTKSUP ALAMI AMCHAMS ALJAZEERA AVIANFLU AORD AOREC ALIREZA AOMS AMGMT ABDALLAH AORCAE AHMED ACCELERATED AUC ALZUGUREN ANGEL AORL ASECIR AMG AMBASSADOR AEMRASECCASCKFLOMARRPRELPINRAMGTJMXL ADM ASES ABMC AER AMER ASE AMGTHA ARNOLDFREDERICK AOPC ACS AFL AEGR ASED AFPREL AGRI AMCHAM ARNOLD AN ANATO AME APERTH ASECSI AT ACDA ASEDC AIT AMERICA AMLB AMGE ACTION AGMT AFINIZ ASECVE ADRC ABER AGIT APCS AEMED ARABBL ARC ASO AIAG ACEC ASR ASECM ARG AEC ABT ADIP ADCP ANARCHISTS AORCUN AOWC ASJA AALC AX AROC ARM AGENCIES ALBE AK AZE AOPR AREP AMIA ASCE ALANAZI ABDULRAHMEN ABDULHADI AINFCY ARMS ASECEFINKCRMKPAOPTERKHLSAEMRNS AGRICULTURE AFPK AOCR ALEXANDER ATRD ATFN ABLG AORCD AFGHAN ARAS AORCYM AVERY ALVAREZ ACBAQ ALOWAR ANTOINE ABLDG ALAB AMERICAS AFAF ASECAFIN ASEK ASCC AMCT AMGTATK AMT APDC AEMRS ASECE AFSA ATRA ARTICLE ARENA AISG AEMRBC AFR AEIR ASECAF AFARI AMPR ASPA ASOC ANTONIO AORCL ASECARP APRM AUSTRALIAGROUP ASEG AFOR AEAID AMEDI ASECTH ASIC AFDIN AGUIRRE AUNR ASFC AOIC ANTXON ASA ASECCASC ALI AORCEUNPREFPRELSMIGBN ASECKHLS ASSSEMBLY ASECVZ AI ASECPGOV ASIR ASCEC ASAC ARAB AIEA ADMIRAL AUSGR AQ AMTG ARRMZY ANC APR AMAT AIHRC AFU ADEL AECL ACAO AMEMR ADEP AV AW AOR ALL ALOUNI AORCUNGA ALNEA ASC AORCO ARMITAGE AGENGA AGRIC AEM ACOAAMGT AGUILAR AFPHUM AMEDCASCKFLO AFZAL AAA ATPDEA ASECPHUM ASECKFRDCVISKIRFPHUMSMIGEG
ETRD ETTC EU ECON EFIN EAGR EAID ELAB EINV ENIV ENRG EPET EZ ELTN ELECTIONS ECPS ET ER EG EUN EIND ECONOMICS EMIN ECIN EINT EWWT EAIR EN ENGR ES EI ETMIN EL EPA EARG EFIS ECONOMY EC EK ELAM ECONOMIC EAR ESDP ECCP ELN EUM EUMEM ECA EAP ELEC ECOWAS EFTA EXIM ETTD EDRC ECOSOC ECPSN ENVIRONMENT ECO EMAIL ECTRD EREL EDU ENERG ENERGY ENVR ETRAD EAC EXTERNAL EFIC ECIP ERTD EUC ENRGMO EINZ ESTH ECCT EAGER ECPN ELNT ERD EGEN ETRN EIVN ETDR EXEC EIAD EIAR EVN EPRT ETTF ENGY EAIDCIN EXPORT ETRC ESA EIB EAPC EPIT ESOCI ETRB EINDQTRD ENRC EGOV ECLAC EUR ELF ETEL ENRGUA EVIN EARI ESCAP EID ERIN ELAN ENVT EDEV EWWY EXBS ECOM EV ELNTECON ECE ETRDGK EPETEIND ESCI ETRDAORC EAIDETRD ETTR EMS EAGRECONEINVPGOVBN EBRD EUREM ERGR EAGRBN EAUD EFI ETRDEINVECINPGOVCS EPEC ETRO ENRGY EGAR ESSO EGAD ENV ENER EAIDXMXAXBXFFR ELA EET EINVETRD EETC EIDN ERGY ETRDPGOV EING EMINCG EINVECON EURM EEC EICN EINO EPSC ELAP ELABPGOVBN EE ESPS ETRA ECONETRDBESPAR ERICKSON EEOC EVENTS EPIN EB ECUN EPWR ENG EX EH EAIDAR EAIS ELBA EPETUN ETRDEIQ EENV ECPC ETRP ECONENRG EUEAID EWT EEB EAIDNI ESENV EADM ECN ENRGKNNP ETAD ETR ECONETRDEAGRJA ETRG ETER EDUC EITC EBUD EAIF EBEXP EAIDS EITI EGOVSY EFQ ECOQKPKO ETRGY ESF EUE EAIC EPGOV ENFR EAGRE ENRD EINTECPS EAVI ETC ETCC EIAID EAIDAF EAGREAIDPGOVPRELBN EAOD ETRDA EURN EASS EINVA EAIDRW EON ECOR EPREL EGPHUM ELTM ECOS EINN ENNP EUPGOV EAGRTR ECONCS ETIO ETRDGR EAIDB EISNAR EIFN ESPINOSA EAIDASEC ELIN EWTR EMED ETFN ETT EADI EPTER ELDIN EINVEFIN ESS ENRGIZ EQRD ESOC ETRDECD ECINECONCS EAIT ECONEAIR ECONEFIN EUNJ ENRGKNNPMNUCPARMPRELNPTIAEAJMXL ELAD EFIM ETIC EFND EFN ETLN ENGRD EWRG ETA EIN EAIRECONRP EXIMOPIC ERA ENRGJM ECONEGE ENVI ECHEVARRIA EMINETRD EAD ECONIZ EENG ELBR EWWC ELTD EAIDMG ETRK EIPR EISNLN ETEX EPTED EFINECONCS EPCS EAG ETRDKIPR ED EAIO ETRDEC ENRGPARMOTRASENVKGHGPGOVECONTSPLEAID ECONEINVEFINPGOVIZ ERNG EFINU EURFOR EWWI ELTNSNAR ETD EAIRASECCASCID EOXC ESTN EAIDAORC EAGRRP ETRDEMIN ELABPHUMSMIGKCRMBN ETRDEINVTINTCS EGHG EAIDPHUMPRELUG EAGRBTIOBEXPETRDBN EDA EPETPGOV ELAINE EUCOM EMW EFINECONEAIDUNGAGM ELB EINDETRD EMI ETRDECONWTOCS EINR ESTRADA EHUM EFNI ELABV ENR EMN EXO EWWTPRELPGOVMASSMARRBN EATO END EP EINVETC ECONEFINETRDPGOVEAGRPTERKTFNKCRMEAID ELTRN EIQ ETTW EAI ENGRG ETRED ENDURING ETTRD EAIDEGZ EOCN EINF EUPREL ENRL ECPO ENLT EEFIN EPPD ECOIN EUEAGR EISL EIDE ENRGSD EINVECONSENVCSJA EAIG ENTG EEPET EUNCH EPECO ETZ EPAT EPTE EAIRGM ETRDPREL EUNGRSISAFPKSYLESO ETTN EINVKSCA ESLCO EBMGT ENRGTRGYETRDBEXPBTIOSZ EFLU ELND EFINOECD EAIDHO EDUARDO ENEG ECONEINVETRDEFINELABETRDKTDBPGOVOPIC EFINTS ECONQH ENRGPREL EUNPHUM EINDIR EPE EMINECINECONSENVTBIONS EFINM ECRM EQ EWWTSP ECONPGOVBN
KFLO KPKO KDEM KFLU KTEX KMDR KPAO KCRM KIDE KN KNNP KG KMCA KZ KJUS KWBG KU KDMR KAWC KCOR KPAL KOMC KTDB KTIA KISL KHIV KHUM KTER KCFE KTFN KS KIRF KTIP KIRC KSCA KICA KIPR KPWR KWMN KE KGIC KGIT KSTC KACT KSEP KFRD KUNR KHLS KCRS KRVC KUWAIT KVPR KSRE KMPI KMRS KNRV KNEI KCIP KSEO KITA KDRG KV KSUM KCUL KPET KBCT KO KSEC KOLY KNAR KGHG KSAF KWNM KNUC KMNP KVIR KPOL KOCI KPIR KLIG KSAC KSTH KNPT KINL KPRP KRIM KICC KIFR KPRV KAWK KFIN KT KVRC KR KHDP KGOV KPOW KTBT KPMI KPOA KRIF KEDEM KFSC KY KGCC KATRINA KWAC KSPR KTBD KBIO KSCI KRCM KNNB KBNC KIMT KCSY KINR KRAD KMFO KCORR KW KDEMSOCI KNEP KFPC KEMPI KBTR KFRDCVISCMGTCASCKOCIASECPHUMSMIGEG KNPP KTTB KTFIN KBTS KCOM KFTN KMOC KOR KDP KPOP KGHA KSLG KMCR KJUST KUM KMSG KHPD KREC KIPRTRD KPREL KEN KCSA KCRIM KGLB KAKA KWWT KUNP KCRN KISLPINR KLFU KUNC KEDU KCMA KREF KPAS KRKO KNNC KLHS KWAK KOC KAPO KTDD KOGL KLAP KECF KCRCM KNDP KSEAO KCIS KISM KREL KISR KISC KKPO KWCR KPFO KUS KX KWCI KRFD KWPG KTRD KH KLSO KEVIN KEANE KACW KWRF KNAO KETTC KTAO KWIR KVCORR KDEMGT KPLS KICT KWGB KIDS KSCS KIRP KSTCPL KDEN KLAB KFLOA KIND KMIG KPPAO KPRO KLEG KGKG KCUM KTTP KWPA KIIP KPEO KICR KNNA KMGT KCROM KMCC KLPM KNNPGM KSIA KSI KWWW KOMS KESS KMCAJO KWN KTDM KDCM KCM KVPRKHLS KENV KCCP KGCN KCEM KEMR KWMNKDEM KNNPPARM KDRM KWIM KJRE KAID KWMM KPAONZ KUAE KTFR KIF KNAP KPSC KSOCI KCWI KAUST KPIN KCHG KLBO KIRCOEXC KI KIRCHOFF KSTT KNPR KDRL KCFC KLTN KPAOKMDRKE KPALAOIS KESO KKOR KSMT KFTFN KTFM KDEMK KPKP KOCM KNN KISLSCUL KFRDSOCIRO KINT KRG KWMNSMIG KSTCC KPAOY KFOR KWPR KSEPCVIS KGIV KSEI KIL KWMNPHUMPRELKPAOZW KQ KEMS KHSL KTNF KPDD KANSOU KKIV KFCE KTTC KGH KNNNP KK KSCT KWNN KAWX KOMCSG KEIM KTSD KFIU KDTB KFGM KACP KWWMN KWAWC KSPA KGICKS KNUP KNNO KISLAO KTPN KSTS KPRM KPALPREL KPO KTLA KCRP KNMP KAWCK KCERS KDUM KEDM KTIALG KWUN KPTS KPEM KMEPI KAWL KHMN KCRO KCMR KPTD KCROR KMPT KTRF KSKN KMAC KUK KIRL KEM KSOC KBTC KOM KINP KDEMAF KTNBT KISK KRM KWBW KBWG KNNPMNUC KNOP KSUP KCOG KNET KWBC KESP KMRD KEBG KFRDKIRFCVISCMGTKOCIASECPHUMSMIGEG KPWG KOMCCO KRGY KNNF KPROG KJAN KFRED KPOKO KM KWMNCS KMPF KJWC KJU KSMIG KALR KRAL KDGOV KPA KCRMJA KCRI KAYLA KPGOV KRD KNNPCH KFEM KPRD KFAM KALM KIPRETRDKCRM KMPP KADM KRFR KMWN KWRG KTIAPARM KTIAEUN KRDP KLIP KDDEM KTIAIC KWKN KPAD KDM KRCS KWBGSY KEAI KIVP KPAOPREL KUNH KTSC KIPT KNP KJUSTH KGOR KEPREL KHSA KGHGHIV KNNR KOMH KRCIM KWPB KWIC KINF KPER KILS KA KNRG KCSI KFRP KLFLO KFE KNPPIS KQM KQRDQ KERG KPAOPHUM KSUMPHUM KVBL KARIM KOSOVO KNSD KUIR KWHG KWBGXF KWMNU KPBT KKNP KERF KCRT KVIS KWRC KVIP KTFS KMARR KDGR KPAI KDE KTCRE KMPIO KUNRAORC KHOURY KAWS KPAK KOEM KCGC KID KVRP KCPS KIVR KBDS KWOMN KIIC KTFNJA KARZAI KMVP KHJUS KPKOUNSC KMAR KIBL KUNA KSA KIS KJUSAF KDEV KPMO KHIB KIRD KOUYATE KIPRZ KBEM KPAM KDET KPPD KOSCE KJUSKUNR KICCPUR KRMS KWMNPREL KWMJN KREISLER KWM KDHS KRV KPOV KWMNCI KMPL KFLD KWWN KCVM KIMMITT KCASC KOMO KNATO KDDG KHGH KRF KSCAECON KWMEN KRIC
PREL PINR PGOV PHUM PTER PE PREF PARM PBTS PINS PHSA PK PL PM PNAT PHAS PO PROP PGOVE PA PU POLITICAL PPTER POL PALESTINIAN PHUN PIN PAMQ PPA PSEC POLM PBIO PSOE PDEM PAK PF PKAO PGOVPRELMARRMOPS PMIL PV POLITICS PRELS POLICY PRELHA PIRN PINT PGOG PERSONS PRC PEACE PROCESS PRELPGOV PROV PFOV PKK PRE PT PIRF PSI PRL PRELAF PROG PARMP PERL PUNE PREFA PP PGOB PUM PROTECTION PARTIES PRIL PEL PAGE PS PGO PCUL PLUM PIF PGOVENRGCVISMASSEAIDOPRCEWWTBN PMUC PCOR PAS PB PKO PY PKST PTR PRM POUS PRELIZ PGIC PHUMS PAL PNUC PLO PMOPS PHM PGOVBL PBK PELOSI PTE PGOVAU PNR PINSO PRO PLAB PREM PNIR PSOCI PBS PD PHUML PERURENA PKPA PVOV PMAR PHUMCF PUHM PHUH PRELPGOVETTCIRAE PRT PROPERTY PEPFAR PREI POLUN PAR PINSF PREFL PH PREC PPD PING PQL PINSCE PGV PREO PRELUN POV PGOVPHUM PINRES PRES PGOC PINO POTUS PTERE PRELKPAO PRGOV PETR PGOVEAGRKMCAKNARBN PPKO PARLIAMENT PEPR PMIG PTBS PACE PETER PMDL PVIP PKPO POLMIL PTEL PJUS PHUMNI PRELKPAOIZ PGOVPREL POGV PEREZ POWELL PMASS PDOV PARN PG PPOL PGIV PAIGH PBOV PETROL PGPV PGOVL POSTS PSO PRELEU PRELECON PHUMPINS PGOVKCMABN PQM PRELSP PRGO PATTY PRELPGOVEAIDECONEINVBEXPSCULOIIPBTIO PGVO PROTESTS PRELPLS PKFK PGOVEAIDUKNOSWGMHUCANLLHFRSPITNZ PARAGRAPH PRELGOV POG PTRD PTERM PBTSAG PHUMKPAL PRELPK PTERPGOV PAO PRIVATIZATION PSCE PPAO PGOVPRELPHUMPREFSMIGELABEAIDKCRMKWMN PARALYMPIC PRUM PKPRP PETERS PAHO PARMS PGREL PINV POINS PHUMPREL POREL PRELNL PHUMPGOV PGOVQL PLAN PRELL PARP PROVE PSOC PDD PRELNP PRELBR PKMN PGKV PUAS PRELTBIOBA PBTSEWWT PTERIS PGOVU PRELGG PHUMPRELPGOV PFOR PEPGOV PRELUNSC PRAM PICES PTERIZ PREK PRELEAGR PRELEUN PHUME PHU PHUMKCRS PRESL PRTER PGOF PARK PGOVSOCI PTERPREL PGOVEAID PGOVPHUMKPAO PINSKISL PREZ PGOVAF PARMEUN PECON PINL POGOV PGOVLO PIERRE PRELPHUM PGOVPZ PGOVKCRM PBST PKPAO PHUMHUPPS PGOVPOL PASS PPGOV PROGV PAGR PHALANAGE PARTY PRELID PGOVID PHUMR PHSAQ PINRAMGT PSA PRELM PRELMU PIA PINRPE PBTSRU PARMIR PEDRO PNUK PVPR PINOCHET PAARM PRFE PRELEIN PINF PCI PSEPC PGOVSU PRLE PDIP PHEM PRELB PORG PGGOC POLG POPDC PGOVPM PWMN PDRG PHUMK PINB PRELAL PRER PFIN PNRG PRED POLI PHUMBO PHYTRP PROLIFERATION PHARM PUOS PRHUM PUNR PENA PGOVREL PETRAEUS PGOVKDEM PGOVENRG PHUS PRESIDENT PTERKU PRELKSUMXABN PGOVSI PHUMQHA PKISL PIR PGOVZI PHUMIZNL PKNP PRELEVU PMIN PHIM PHUMBA PUBLIC PHAM PRELKPKO PMR PARTM PPREL PN PROL PDA PGOVECON PKBL PKEAID PERM PRELEZ PRELC PER PHJM PGOVPRELPINRBN PRFL PLN PWBG PNG PHUMA PGOR PHUMPTER POLINT PPEF PKPAL PNNL PMARR PAC PTIA PKDEM PAUL PREG PTERR PTERPRELPARMPGOVPBTSETTCEAIRELTNTC PRELJA POLS PI PNS PAREL PENV PTEROREP PGOVM PINER PBGT PHSAUNSC PTERDJ PRELEAID PARMIN PKIR PLEC PCRM PNET PARR PRELETRD PRELBN PINRTH PREJ PEACEKEEPINGFORCES PEMEX PRELZ PFLP PBPTS PTGOV PREVAL PRELSW PAUM PRF PHUMKDEM PATRICK PGOVKMCAPHUMBN PRELA PNUM PGGV PGOVSMIGKCRMKWMNPHUMCVISKFRDCA PBT PIND PTEP PTERKS PGOVJM PGOT PRELMARR PGOVCU PREV PREFF PRWL PET PROB PRELPHUMP PHUMAF PVTS PRELAFDB PSNR PGOVECONPRELBU PGOVZL PREP PHUMPRELBN PHSAPREL PARCA PGREV PGOVDO PGON PCON PODC PRELOV PHSAK PSHA PGOVGM PRELP POSCE PGOVPTER PHUMRU PINRHU PARMR PGOVTI PPEL PMAT PAN PANAM PGOVBO PRELHRC

Browse by classification

Community resources

courage is contagious

Viewing cable 01ABUJA2709, DRAFT 2001 COUNTRY HUMAN RIGHTS REPORT FOR NIGERIA

If you are new to these pages, please read an introduction on the structure of a cable as well as how to discuss them with others. See also the FAQs

Understanding cables
Every cable message consists of three parts:
  • The top box shows each cables unique reference number, when and by whom it originally was sent, and what its initial classification was.
  • The middle box contains the header information that is associated with the cable. It includes information about the receiver(s) as well as a general subject.
  • The bottom box presents the body of the cable. The opening can contain a more specific subject, references to other cables (browse by origin to find them) or additional comment. This is followed by the main contents of the cable: a summary, a collection of specific topics and a comment section.
To understand the justification used for the classification of each cable, please use this WikiSource article as reference.

Discussing cables
If you find meaningful or important information in a cable, please link directly to its unique reference number. Linking to a specific paragraph in the body of a cable is also possible by copying the appropriate link (to be found at theparagraph symbol). Please mark messages for social networking services like Twitter with the hash tags #cablegate and a hash containing the reference ID e.g. #01ABUJA2709.
Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
01ABUJA2709 2001-10-24 21:17 2011-08-30 01:44 UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Embassy Abuja
This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 25 ABUJA 002709 
 
SIPDIS 
 
 
NOFORN 
SENSITIVE 
 
 
DEPARTMENT FOR DRL/CRT, AF/W AND AF/RA 
AF/W FOR EPSTEIN, PARK 
 
 
E.O. 12958: N/A 
TAGS: PHUM ELAB KSEP NI
SUBJECT: DRAFT 2001 COUNTRY HUMAN RIGHTS REPORT FOR NIGERIA 
 
1. Sensitive but Unclassified--NOFORN--entire text. 
 
 
2. Following is the 2001 Country Report on Human Rights for 
Nigeria 
 
 
3. Introduction 
 
 
Nigeria is a federal republic composed of 36 states and a 
capital territory, with an elected president and a bicameral 
legislature.  On May 29, 1999, President Olusegun Obasanjo of 
the Peoples Democratic Party was inaugurated to a 4-year term 
after winning elections in February 1999 that were marred by 
fraud and irregularities perpetrated by all contesting 
parties, but most observers agreed the elections reflected 
the will of the majority of voters.  These elections marked 
the end of 16 years of military-led regimes.  On May 5, 1999, 
the Abubakar Government signed into law a new Constitution 
based largely on the suspended 1979 Constitution; the new 
Constitution entered into effect on May 29, 1999.  The 
Constitution provides for an independent judiciary; however, 
in practice the judicial remains susceptible to executive and 
legislative branch pressure, is influenced by political 
leaders at both the state and federal levels, and suffers 
from corruption and inefficiency. 
 
 
The Federal Nigeria Police Force (NPF) is tasked with law 
enforcement.  The Constitution prohibits local and state 
police forces.  Internal security is the duty of the State 
Security Service (SSS).  The SSS's profile remained poor 
under the Obasanjo regime.  Until the advent of the civilian 
administration in May 1999, special paramilitary anticrime 
squads called "Rapid Response Teams" operated in every state. 
 Under Obasanjo, the military personnel dispatched to these 
units returned to their barracks, but the units remained 
intact in most states, staffed by regular policemen and with 
a reduced role and a less menacing presence.  The Obasanjo 
Government increased its reliance on the army to quell 
internal disorder.  The degree of civilian control over the 
Rapid Response Teams and the national police force improved 
during the course of the year.  Despite these new controls, 
members of the security forces, including the police, 
anticrime squads, and the armed forces committed numerous, 
serious human rights abuses. 
 
 
The economy has declined for much of the last three decades. 
Most of the population of approximately 120 million was rural 
and engaged in small-scale agriculture. Agriculture accounted 
for less than 40 percent of gross domestic product but 
employed more than 65 percent of the work force.  The 
agriculture and manufacturing sectors deteriorated 
considerably during the oil boom decades.  The collapse of 
market agriculture contributed significantly to the country's 
urbanization and increased unemployment. Although the great 
bulk of economic activity is outside the formal sector, 
recorded gross domestic product per capita was $250.  Much of 
the nation's wealth continued to be concentrated in the hands 
of a small elite mostly through corruption and nontransparent 
government contracting practices.  During the year, petroleum 
accounted for over 98 percent of the country's export 
revenues, most of the government's revenues, and almost all 
foreign investment. During the year economic growth was 
modest, with growth still impeded by inadequate 
infrastructure, endemic corruption, and general economic 
mismanagement.  The Obasanjo Administration inherited ports, 
roads, water, and power infrastructure in a state of 
collapse.  Both the Federal Government and various states 
have focused on improving infrastructure with some success. 
Chronic fuel shortages which afflicted the country for 
several years have been alleviated.  Food production has 
improved, due in part to record rainfalls, but post-harvest 
loss remains a significant problem due to poor transportation 
infrastructure.  An estimated two-thirds of the country's 
population live in poverty and are subject to malnutrition 
and disease.  In 2001, the Government has made progress in 
reducing controls on the private sector, and increasing 
expenditures for key social sectors. 
 
 
The Government's human rights record was mixed; although 
there were improvements in several areas during the year, 
serious problems remain.  While the national police, army, 
and security forces continued to commit extrajudicial 
killings and used excessive force to quell civil unrest and 
ethnic violence, the frequency of these abuses has declined 
as compared to the record under the previous military 
governments.  The military was called on to restore order in 
four incidents of civil unrest or conflict--Jos, Tafawa 
Balewa, Kano and in the Tiv-Jukun conflict in Benue, Nasarawa 
and Taraba states.  The containment of severe ethnic conflict 
has been important to restoration of order in these areas, 
and the military has done so without many of the excesses 
seen in previous military regimes.  Nevertheless, Army, 
police, and security force officers regularly beat 
protesters, criminal suspects, detainees, and convicted 
prisoners; however, there were no reports of torture of 
political dissidents. The Government took steps to curb 
torture and beating of detainees and prisoners, including the 
dismissal and arrest in 2000 of senior officials known for 
such practices.  Shari'a courts sentenced persons to harsh 
punishments including amputations and death by stoning.  Of 
many amputation sentences, only two were carried out, and the 
sentences for stoning have not been implemented.  Prison 
conditions were harsh and life threatening, and along with 
the lack of food and medical treatment, contributed to the 
death of numerous inmates.  At different times in the year, 
the Government released several hundred prisoners in an 
attempt to ease prison congestion.  In May 1999, the 
Government repealed the State Security (Detention of Persons) 
Decree of 1984 (Decree 2), which allowed arbitrary detention 
without charge; however, police and security forces continued 
to use arbitrary arrest and detention.  Prolonged pretrial 
detention remains a major problem. The judiciary is subject 
to political influence, and is hampered by corruption and 
inefficiency.  The judicial system was incapable of providing 
citizens with the right to a speedy, fair trial. The 
Government continued to infringe on citizens' privacy rights; 
however, there were no reports of members of the armed forces 
looting property, destroying buildings, or driving persons 
away from their homes.  The Government generally respected 
freedom of speech and of the press; however, there were some 
exceptions.  The Government continued to relax its 
restrictions on the rights of freedom of association and 
assembly.  The Government occasionally restricted freedom of 
movement.  The Government generally respected freedom of 
religion, however, the expansion of Shari'a law in the North 
raised regional and ethnic tensions and threatened religious 
freedom for minority religionists.  The 
Government-established Human Rights Violations Investigation 
Panel (HRVIP), continued its work throughout the year 
reviewing cases of human rights violations since 1966. 
 
 
Domestic violence against women remained widespread and some 
forms were sanctioned by traditional, customary, or Shari'a 
law.  Discrimination against women remained a problem. 
Female genital mutilation (FGM) remained widely practiced, 
and child abuse and child prostitution were common. 
Localized discrimination and violence against religious 
minorities persisted. Ethnic and regional discrimination 
remained widespread and interethnic, religious, and regional 
tensions increased significantly. Thousands of persons were 
killed in various local ethnic and religious conflicts 
throughout the country.  Some members of the Ijaw ethnic 
group in the oil-producing Niger Delta region who seek 
greater local autonomy continued to commit serious abuses, 
including killings and kidnappings.  The police often could 
not protect citizens from interethnic, interreligious, 
communal, and criminal violence, and, due to the inability of 
the police, the Government called upon the army to restore 
order following unrest in three cities during the course of 
the year.  The Government took steps to improve worker 
rights; however, some restrictions continued.  Some persons, 
including children, were subjected to forced labor. Child 
labor continued to increase.  Trafficking in persons for 
purposes of forced prostitution and forced labor was a 
problem and collusion of government officials in trafficking 
was alleged.  Vigilante violence increased throughout the 
country, particularly in Lagos and Onitsha, where suspected 
criminals were apprehended, beaten, and sometimes killed. 
 
 
Respect for Human Rights 
 
 
Section 1. Respect for the Integrity of the Person, Including 
Freedom From 
 
 
a. Political and Other Extrajudicial Killing 
 
 
National police, army, and security forces committed 
extrajudicial killings and used excessive force to quell 
civil unrest under the Obasanjo Government, although their 
record of managing civil unrest improved from last year and 
was much better that under the military regimes of the past. 
 The Government did not use lethal force to repress 
nonviolent, purely political activities; however, lethal 
force was used when protests or demonstrations were perceived 
as becoming violent or disruptive, or in the apprehension and 
detention of suspected criminals.  There was marginal 
improvement in security force accountability as misconduct 
was investigated in a few instances.  However in most cases, 
neither the state anticrime task forces, the police, nor the 
armed forces were held accountable for excessive, deadly use 
of force or the death of individuals in custody.  They 
operated with impunity in the apprehension, illegal 
detention, and sometimes execution of criminal suspects. 
Since taking office, President Obasanjo largely resisted 
pressure to call in military troops to quell domestic unrest, 
which reduced the risk that the armed forces would overreact 
or harass civilians.  Instead, Obasanjo preferred to let the 
police deal with civil disturbances, only sending in military 
reinforcements when the police were unable to restore order. 
Inter-ethnic clashes in June and July in Nasarawa, Bauchi and 
Taraba States were handled with a police response.  In 
September the military was deployed in Plateau State to quell 
a major outburst of ethno-religious violence between 
Christians and Muslims.  By October army troops were 
responsible for maintaining order in Kaduna, Jos, Tafawa 
Balewa, Kano and a significant part of eastern Benue, eastern 
Nasarawa and western Taraba states.  Nigerian military unit 
commanders were briefed that international humanitarian laws 
must be respected, &except when the security of troops is in 
jeopardy.8  Multinational oil companies and Nigerian oil 
producing companies subcontract police and soldiers from area 
units particularly to protect the oil facilities in the 
volatile Niger Delta region.  A significant portion of the 
strong upsurge in violent crime during the year was 
attributable to criminal freelancing by current or former 
security forces. 
 
 
Police and military personnel used excessive and sometimes 
deadly force in the suppression of civil unrest, property 
vandalization, and interethnic violence, primarily in the oil 
and gas regions of the Delta States.  Confrontations between 
increasingly militant "youths" (who tend to be unemployed 
males between the ages of 16 and 40), oil companies, and 
government authorities continued during the year.  In June 
mobile police in Khana local government area fatally shot an 
Ogoni man who was allegedly unarmed at the time.  In July a 
police officer protecting oil contractors in Bayelsa State 
killed a local youth, reportedly after he tried to disarm a 
police officer. 
 
 
In February Police attempts to disperse Muslim protesters 
outside the main mosque in Gombe resulted in violence with 
protestors damaging buildings and attacking the police 
barracks.  Reports of fatalities varied between three and 
eight killed. 
 
 
On many occasions during the year the Government authorized 
the use of deadly force to combat crime, and police, 
military, and anticrime taskforce personnel committed 
numerous extrajudicial killings in the apprehension and 
detention of suspected criminals.  Police were instructed to 
use deadly force against suspected vandals near oil pipelines 
in the Niger Delta Region, against the Oodua Peoples Congress 
(OPC) vigilante group in Lagos State and, allegedly, against 
participants in the Jos and Kano riots that took place in 
September and October, respectively. In a widely publicized 
case, a police raid aimed at apprehending armed robbers 
resulted in the death of at least four unarmed Igbo traders. 
Violence and lethal force at police roadblocks and 
checkpoints was reduced during the year; however, some 
instances of such violence continued.  During the year an 
upsurge in violent crime in Lagos led to an increase in the 
number of roadblocks and checkpoints at major intersections, 
without an increase in police misconduct or violence. 
 
 
Harsh and life threatening prison conditions and denial of 
proper medical treatment contributed to the death of numerous 
inmates (see Section 1.c.).  Criminal suspects died from 
unnatural causes while in official custody, usually as the 
result of neglect and harsh treatment. 
 
 
By the end of the year the case concerning a member of Lagos 
Deputy Governor's security detail had yet to be transferred 
to a court of competent jurisdiction.  The individual 
allegedly killed a young woman in May, 2000 when she 
obstructed the Deputy Governor,s motorcade. 
 
 
The Government continued to investigate and detain former 
Abacha government officials and family members.  The Lagos 
High Court prosecution of Hamza al-Mustapha, Mohammed Abacha, 
Mohammed Rabo Lawal, Lateef Shofalan, Mohammed Aminu and 
Sergeant Rogers Mshiella for the 1996 murder of Kudirat 
Abiola, a prominent prodemocracy activist and the wife of 
Moshood Abiola, was adjourned pending a ruling from the 
Supreme Court on an application by defense lawyers.  Colonel 
Ibrahim Yakassai, was being held for alleged involvement in 
the death of Shehu Musa Yar,Adua, a case which has not yet 
been formally been brought before a court.  In addition to 
the above Hamza Al Mustapha, Muhammed Rabo Lawal, Lateef 
Shofolahan, Mohammed Aminu, Col. Yakubu, Ishaya Bamaiyi, 
James Danbaba and Rogers Mshiella were in detention, charged 
with the attempted murder in 1996 of Guardian newspaper 
publisher Alex Ibru.  The Ibru case was postponed when 
Bamaiyi and Mustapha were summoned to appear before the Human 
Rights Violations Investigation Panel (HRVIP). 
 
 
On August 19 Rivers State House of Assemblyman Monday Ndor 
was shot and killed by unknown actors outside his residence. 
 
 
On October 4, violent clashes between the APP and the PDP in 
Gusau, Zamfara State left four dead and 19 critically 
injured. 
 
 
During the year, lethal interethnic and intra-ethnic violence 
escalated.  In September, rioting broke out between the 
Muslim Hausa and various predominantly Christian ethnic 
groups in to Plateau State. Explanations for the initial 
cause of the riot vary.  Approximately 2,300 people may have 
lost their lives in the disturbances, with many of the 
victims buried in mass graves.  Religious and ethnic violence 
resulted in deaths in other communities as well.  In June, 
ethnic clashes in Nassarawa State between Tivs, Jukuns, 
Hausa-speakers and Kwala led to several hundred deaths and 
the displacement of approximately 40,000 people into 
neighboring Benue State.  This conflict resulted in the 
kidnapping and murder of 23 army soldiers who were patrolling 
the area to enforce the peace between the ethnic groups.  In 
Taraba State a dispute between Fulani herders and Tiv farmers 
reportedly resulted in eight deaths.  Hours after a peaceful 
demonstration against U.S. military action in Afghanistan, 
rioting broke out on 12 October in Kano, resulting in over 
100 dead and significant property damage 
 
 
The scale of communal violence in the Niger Delta area 
lessened but ethnic rivalries and disputes between local 
communities over resources still led to deadly clashes.  In 
July, serious fighting took place between the Akaeze and Osso 
Edda communities in Ebonyi State.  Reports indicated that 27 
people had been killed. 
 
 
In the Kalabari region of Rivers State, fighting between 
three Ijaw communities: the Ke, Bille and Krakrama, led to 
the reports of the deaths of between 20 and 100 people. 
Violent border disputes between Cross River and Akwa Ibom 
states continued. 
 
 
Organized vigilante groups in large cities, particularly 
Lagos and Onitsha, committed numerous killings of suspected 
criminals.  These vigilante groups engage in lengthy and 
well-organized attempts to apprehend criminals after the 
commission of the alleged offenses. 
 
 
In Anambra State, the state government supported the 
extrajudicial activities of the vigilante group known as the 
Bakassi Boys.  Like most vigilante groups, the Bakassi Boys 
kill suspected criminals rather than turn them over to 
police.  The Bakassi Boys tortured and then executed between 
25 and 36 suspected criminals at main intersections in 
Onitsha on May 29th. 
 
 
In Lagos State, the vigilante group known as the OPC clashed 
repeatedly with the police over their protection of Yoruba 
neighborhoods and over political issues.  The organization 
continued to function as a vigilante anti-crime force despite 
the continuing operation of a &shoot-on-sight8 order issued 
against them by President Obasanjo in November of 1999.  The 
number of vigilante killings of suspected criminals carried 
out by OPC was less than in recent years.  Among the more 
prominent incidents, in August, the OPC reportedly beheaded 
four suspected robbers in Lagos before burning the bodies. 
The crucifixion of a man in the Surelere district of Lagos 
was also attributed to the OPC by the local community. 
 
 
There were occasional killings in several universities 
carried out by rival student organizations, commonly referred 
to as &cults8. 
 
 
Extrajudicial killing carried out by organized gangs of armed 
robbers remained commonplace throughout the year.  Multiple 
sources reported that a gang of at least 30 armed robbers 
killed 22 residents of the town of Awkuzu, allegedly as 
revenge for Bakassi Boy executions of suspected criminals 
earlier in the year. 
 
 
There also were numerous reports of street mobs apprehending 
and killing suspected criminals. The practice of "necklacing" 
criminals (placing a gasoline-soaked tire around a victim's 
neck or torso and then igniting it, burning the victim to 
death) caught in the act occurred in several cities. 
 
 
b. Disappearance 
There were no reports of politically motivated 
disappearances.  Members of minority ethnic groups in the 
oil-producing areas kidnapped foreign and local oil company 
employees to press their demands for more redistribution of 
wealth generated by joint ventures with the state-controlled 
petroleum corporation and for specific projects in their 
areas.  In all instances the victims were released unharmed 
after negotiations between the captors and the oil firms; the 
firms usually paid ransoms and promised improved conditions. 
In addition to the political rationale for kidnapping, there 
were numerous instances of strictly criminal kidnapping, in 
which the perpetrators' sole objective was ransom for the 
release of the victims.  During the year, kidnappings by 
criminals to extort money were more numerous than those 
perpetrated for " political" reasons.  There were also 
several reports of different ethnic groups in the Delta 
kidnapping rivals of other ethnicities as part of ongoing 
disputes over resources.  Due to limited manpower and 
resources, the police and armed forces rarely were able to 
confront the perpetrators of these acts, especially in the 
volatile Delta region.  A lack of resources prevented 
judicial investigations from taking place so that kidnappings 
were routinely left uninvestigated. 
c. Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman, or Degrading Treatment 
or Punishment 
 
 
The Constitution prohibits torture and mistreatment of 
prisoners, and the law provides for punishment for such 
abuses; however, although there were no reports of torture of 
political dissidents during the year, army, police, and 
security force officers regularly beat protesters, criminal 
suspects, detainees, and convicted prisoners.  Police 
regularly physically mistreated civilians in attempts to 
extort money from them. Detainees often were kept 
incommunicado for long periods of time.  The 1960 Evidence 
Act prohibits the introduction into trials of evidence 
obtained through torture. 
 
 
With different versions of criminal Shari'a law now in place 
in 12 Northern states, Shari'a courts delivered "hadd" 
sentences such as amputation for theft, caning for various 
offenses, and death by stoning.  The courts have yet to 
decide whether such punishments conflict with the 
constitutional provision banning "torture or... inhuman or 
degrading treatment."  Caning, a punishment available under 
Nigerian common law, the Northern Nigerian Penal Code, and 
Shari'a law, does not appear to conflict with the 
Constitution and has not been successfully challenged in the 
court system as a violation of the constitutional provision 
banning "torture or... inhuman or degrading treatment." 
Stoning and amputation also have not been challenged under 
the 1999 Constitution.  There were only two amputations 
carried out in 2001, despite a much larger number of 
sentences. Lawal Isa had his right hand amputated in Zamfara 
on May 3 for stealing 3 bicycles.   Umaru Aliyu suffered the 
same punishment in Sokoto on July 6, for stealing a goat. 
Bariya Ibrahim Magazu, a 17-year old girl, was given 100 cane 
strokes, following her conviction of fornication and slander. 
 Baobab, a Nigerian human rights NGO, had filed an appeal on 
her behalf prior to the execution of the sentence.  The case 
generated a great deal of attention among international human 
rights organizations, and the execution of a reduced 
sentence, underscored likely political intervention to 
dispose of the case. In 2001 Shari'a courts handed down the 
first death sentences.  Attahiru Umar was sentenced to death 
by stoning for sodomy by a Kebbi Shari'a court.  In Sokoto, 
Safiya Hussaini, was convicted of adultery because she could 
not prove who was responsible for her pregnancy.  The Federal 
Government has instituted a panel of legal scholars to draft 
a uniform Shari'a criminal statute for all Northern states, 
to replace hastily drafted, unconstitutional and often 
self-contradictory Shari'a statutes adopted by the states. 
 
 
In the numerous ethnic clashes that occurred throughout the 
year, hundreds of persons were beaten and injured severely. 
Police and security forces failed to respond to most criminal 
acts in a timely manner.  During a year that saw a 
significant increase in criminal activity and civil unrest in 
Lagos, Kano and elsewhere, police generally were outgunned 
and outmaneuvered by criminals, or overwhelmed by mobs trying 
to foment civil unrest.  (See sections 1.a and 1.b). 
Security forces occasionally beat and/or detained journalists 
(see Section 2.a.). 
 
 
Prison and detention conditions remained harsh and life 
threatening.  Most prisons were built 70 to 80 years ago and 
lack functioning basic facilities. Lack of potable water, 
inadequate sewage facilities, and severe overcrowding 
resulted in unhealthy and dangerous sanitary conditions. Many 
prisons held 200 to 300 percent more persons than they were 
designed to hold, and many of the pretrial detainees held 
without charge had been detained for periods far longer than 
the maximum allowable sentence for the crimes for which they 
were being held.  Disease was pervasive in the cramped, 
poorly ventilated facilities, and chronic shortages of 
medical supplies were reported.  Prison inmates were allowed 
outside their cells for recreation or exercise only 
irregularly and many inmates had to provide their own food. 
Only those with money or whose relatives brought food 
regularly had sufficient food; petty corruption among prison 
officials made it difficult for money provided for food to 
reach prisoners.  Poor inmates often relied on handouts from 
others to survive.  Beds or mattresses were not provided to 
many inmates, forcing them to sleep on concrete floors, often 
without a blanket.  Prison officials, police, and security 
forces often denied inmates food and medical treatment as a 
form of punishment or to extort money from them.  Harsh 
conditions and denial of proper medical treatment contributed 
to the deaths in detention of numerous prisoners.  A 
reputable human rights organization estimated in 1999 that at 
least one inmate died per day in the Kiri Kiri prison in 
Lagos alone.  According to Prisoners Rehabilitation and 
Welfare Action (PRAWA) a nongovernmental organization (NGO), 
dead inmates promptly are buried on the prison compounds, 
usually without their families having been notified.  A 
nationwide estimate of the number of inmates who die daily in 
the country's prisons is difficult to obtain because of 
record keeping by prison officials. PRAWA alleged that prison 
conditions were worse in rural areas than in urban districts. 
 
 
PRAWA and the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) 
have regular access to the prisons and publish newsletters on 
their work.  The Government admits that there are problems 
with its incarceration and rehabilitation programs and worked 
with groups such as these to address those problems. 
d. Arbitrary Arrest, Detention, or Exile 
 
 
The Constitution prohibits arbitrary arrest and detention; 
however, the Government rarely observed these prohibitions 
and the police and security forces continued to use arbitrary 
arrest and detention. 
 
 
Police and security forces were empowered to make arrests 
without warrants if they believed that there was reason to 
suspect that a person had committed an offense; they often 
abused this power.  Under the Fundamental Rights Enforcement 
Procedures Rules of the Constitution (based on those of the 
1979 Constitution), police may arrest and detain persons for 
24 hours before charging them with an offense.  The law 
requires an arresting officer to inform the accused of 
charges at the time of arrest and to take the accused persons 
to a station for processing within a reasonable amount of 
time.  By law police must provide suspects with the 
opportunity to engage counsel and post bail.  However, police 
generally did not adhere to legally mandated procedures. 
Suspects routinely were detained without being informed of 
the charges, denied access to counsel and family members, and 
denied the opportunity to post bail for bailable offenses. 
Sheik Yakubu Musa, a Katsina-based Islamic scholar, was 
arrested and detained by security agents for 27 days without 
being charged until he was ordered released by the Abuja High 
Court.  There was no functioning system of bail, so many 
suspects were held in investigative detention.  If family 
members attend court proceedings, an additional payment is 
often demanded by police. 
 
 
Lengthy pretrial detention remained a serious problem. 
According to the Constitution, persons charged with offenses 
have the right to an expeditious trial; however, in practice 
this right was not respected (see Section 1.c.).  Serious 
backlogs, endemic corruption, and undue political influence 
continued to hamper the judicial system (see Section 1.e.). 
In January the Minister of State for Internal Affairs was 
quoted in the press as saying there were 45,000 inmates of 
the Nigerian prison system, seventy-five percent of whom were 
awaiting trial. Police cited their inability to securely 
transport detainees to trial on their scheduled trial dates 
as one reason why so many of the detainees were denied a 
trial. 
 
 
Persons who happen to be in the vicinity of a crime when it 
is committed normally are held for interrogation for periods 
ranging from a few hours to several months.  After their 
release, those detained frequently are asked to return 
repeatedly for further questioning.  Police continued the 
practice of placing relatives and friends of wanted suspects 
in detention without criminal charge to induce suspects to 
surrender to arrest, although this was done much less often 
than under the Abacha regime (see Section 1.f.).  Security 
forces occasionally beat and detained journalists (see 
Section 2.a.). 
 
 
Many students have been detained for allegedly taking part in 
cult or criminal activities on university campuses. 
The 1999 Constitution prohibits the expulsion of citizens, 
and the Government does not use forced exile. 
e. Denial of Fair Public Trial 
 
 
The Constitution provides for an independent judiciary; 
however, in practice, the judiciary remained subject to 
executive and legislative branch pressure, was influenced by 
political leaders at both the state and federal levels, and 
suffered from corruption and inefficiency.  Understaffing, 
underfunding, inefficiency, and corruption continued to 
prevent the judiciary from functioning adequately.  Citizens 
encountered long delays and frequent requests from judicial 
officials for small bribes. 
Under the Constitution, the regular court system is composed 
of federal and state trial courts, state appeals courts, the 
Federal Court of Appeal, and the Federal Supreme Court. 
There also are Shari'a (Islamic) and customary (traditional) 
courts of appeal for each state and for the federal capital 
territory (Abuja).  Courts of the first instance include 
magistrate or district courts, customary or traditional 
courts, Shari'a courts, and for some specified cases, the 
state high courts.  The nature of the case usually determines 
which court has jurisdiction.  In principle customary and 
Shari'a courts have jurisdiction only if both plaintiff and 
defendant agree.  However, in practice fear of legal costs, 
delays, and distance to alternative venues encouraged many 
litigants to choose the customary and Shari'a courts over the 
regular venues.  Shari'a courts have begun to function in 
thirteen northern states. 
 
 
Criminal justice procedures call for trial within 3 months of 
arraignment for most categories of crimes.  Understaffing of 
the judiciary, inefficient administrative procedures, petty 
extortion, bureaucratic inertia, poor communication between 
police and prison officials, and inadequate transportation 
continued to result in considerable delays, often stretching 
to several years, in bringing suspects to trial (see Section 
1.d.). 
 
 
Trials in the regular court system are public and generally 
respect constitutionally protected individual rights, 
including a presumption of innocence, the right to be 
present, to confront witnesses, to present evidence, and to 
be represented by legal counsel.  However, there is a 
widespread perception that judges easily are bribed or 
"settled," and that litigants cannot rely on the courts to 
render impartial judgements.  Most prisoners are poor and 
cannot afford to pay the costs associated with moving their 
trials forward, and as a result they remain in prison. 
Wealthier defendants employ numerous delaying tactics and in 
many cases used financial inducements to persuade judges to 
grant numerous continuances.  This, and similar practices, 
clogged the court calendar and prevented trials from 
starting. 
 
 
Some courts are understaffed.  Judges frequently fail to 
appear for trials, often because they are pursuing other 
means of income.  In addition court officials often lack the 
proper equipment, training, and motivation to perform their 
duties, again due in no small part to their inadequate 
compensation. 
 
 
There are no legal provisions barring women or other groups 
from testifying in civil court or giving their testimony less 
weight; however, the testimony of women and non-Muslims is 
usually accorded less weight in Shari'a courts (see Section 
5). 
 
 
There were no reports of political prisoners. 
f. Arbitrary Interference with Privacy, Family, Home or 
Correspondence 
 
 
The Constitution prohibits arbitrary interference with 
privacy, family, home, or correspondence; however, although 
government authorities generally respect these prohibitions, 
authorities continued at times to infringe on these rights. 
 
 
Police and security forces continued the practice of placing 
relatives and friends of wanted suspects in detention without 
criminal charge to induce suspects to surrender to arrest, 
although this was done much less frequently than under 
previous military regimes. There were calls by human rights 
groups for the police to end the practice. 
 
 
Unlike in several previous years, there were no reports of 
members of the armed forces looting property, destroying 
buildings, and driving persons away from their homes. 
 
 
Section 2. Respect for Civil Liberties, Including: 
Freedom of Speech and Press 
 
 
There is a large and vibrant private domestic press that is 
frequently critical of the Government as well as Government 
-owned and controlled publications. 
 
 
On May 26, 1999, in the last days of Abubakar regime, Decree 
60 was signed into law and created the Nigerian Press Council 
which was charged with the enforcement of professional ethics 
and the sanctioning of journalists who violated these ethics. 
 The Nigerian Press Council immediately criticized it as "an 
undisguised instrument of censorship and an unacceptable 
interference with the freedom of the press."  Decree 60 
attempted to put control of the practice of journalism into 
the hands of a body of journalists who were appointed by and 
received payment from the Government.  In 1999 the NUJ, the 
professional association of all Nigerian journalists, and the 
Newspaper Proprietors Association of Nigeria (NPAN) rejected 
the creation of the Press Council.  The NPAN called the 
decree unconstitutional and a violation of press freedom, 
because there were already enough laws concerning the 
operation of the press.  The decree, which virtually made 
members of the council employees of the Government, also 
contained a number of provisions inimical to the operation of 
a free press.  Among other provisions, Decree 60 gave the 
Press Council the power to accredit and register journalists 
and the power to suspend journalists from practicing.  Decree 
60 required publications be registered by the council 
annually through a system entitled "Documentation of 
Newspapers."  In applying for registration, publishers were 
expected to submit their mission statements and objectives 
and could be denied registration if their objectives failed 
to satisfy the Council.  The penalties for practicing without 
meeting the Council's standards were a fine of $2,200 
(250,000 Naira) or imprisonment for a term not to exceed 3 
years.  The decree also empowered the Council to approve a 
code of professional and ethical conduct to guide the press 
and to ensure compliance by journalists.  Under the decree, 
publishers were expected to send a report of the performance 
of their publications to the Council; failure to do so was an 
offense that carried a fine of $900 (100,000 Naira).  The 
Council has set up office and hired staff in Abuja, but is 
yet to taken any official action.  Many journalists believe 
that the existence of the decree and council create a 
significant limitation on freedom of the press in Nigeria. 
 
 
During the year there were a few cases of threats against and 
attacks on the press.  In June, Nnamdi Onyeuma, editor of a 
weekly magazine Glamour Trends was arrested and detained for 
libel in connection with a story alleging that President 
Obasanjo received a $1 million allowance for each of his many 
foreign trips.  Onyeuma is on bail awaiting court action. 
 
 
In May, Imo State security personnel raided newsstands where 
they seized and burned publications that carried stories on 
activities of the Movement for the Actualization of the 
Sovereign State of Biafra (MASSOB), an Igbo youth group 
advocating the revival of the break away Biafran Republic 
that was defeated in the Nigerian Civil War of 1967-70. 
 
 
In April, Police beat a photographer and destroyed the film 
in his camera when he attempted to photograph a suspect 
leaving the Lagos High Court. 
 
 
The National Broadcasting Commission (NBC), the body 
responsible for the regulation and monitoring of broadcast 
media, threatened to take private television and radio 
stations off the air in a dispute concerning the regulatory 
body,s demand that the private stations pay 2.5 per cent of 
their gross income to the NBC.  The Independent Broadcasters 
Association of Nigeria (IBAN) challenged the fees in court 
and in October, President Obasanjo interceded, setting the 
annual fee for the broadcasters at Naira 150,000 or U.S. 
$1,300.  During the course of the year, the NBC also 
prevented the commissioning of the Here and There television 
station in Oyo State claiming the original license had 
expired.  The NBC is challenging expansion plans by African 
Independent Television (AIT), a part of Daar Communications, 
claiming that AIT,s global and terrestrial licenses do not 
allow them to act as a network. This year the NBC again 
issued no new private radio or television licenses.  Ten 
applications pending from 1999 are still awaiting NBC 
approval. 
 
 
State Governors from Kano, Imo, and Zamfara States became 
embroiled in disputes with journalists and publicly 
threatened the media.   A journalist temporarily lost his 
accreditation to cover the State House in Imo State because 
of an article critical of the Governor,s wife. 
 
 
There are two national, government-owned daily newspapers in 
English, the New Nigerian and the Daily Times. The New 
Nigerian publishes an additional Hausa edition.  Several 
states own daily or weekly newspapers that also are published 
in English.  They tend to be poorly produced, have limited 
circulation, and require large state subsidies to continue 
operating.  Several private newspapers and magazines have 
begun publication since the inauguration of the civilian 
government. 
 
 
Because newspapers and television are relatively expensive 
and literacy levels are low, radio remains the most important 
medium of mass communication and information. There is a 
national radio broadcaster, the Federal Radio Corporation of 
Nigeria, which broadcasts in English, Hausa, Yoruba, Igbo, 
and other languages.  Fifty-one state radio stations 
broadcast in English and local languages. For many years, the 
Government prohibited nationwide private radio broadcasting, 
but the Abacha regime granted broadcasting rights to local 
and regional private radio stations in 1994.  There were six 
private radio stations operating at the beginning of the 
year.  International broadcasters, principally the Voice of 
America (VOA) and British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC), as 
well as Deutsche Welle and others, broadcast in English and 
Hausa and represent an important source of news for 
Nigerians. 
 
 
The National Television Station, NTA, is federally owned, 
while 30 states also operate television stations.  There are 
nine privately owned television stations that broadcast 
domestic news and political commentary.  There are two 
private satellite television services.  The 1993 Press Law 
requires local television stations to limit programming from 
other countries to 40 percent.  The 1993 Press Law also 
restricts the foreign content of satellite broadcasting to 20 
percent, but the Government does not restrict access to, or 
reception of, international cable or satellite television. 
The Government did not restrict Internet access, although 
unreliable and costly telephone service limited access and 
hindered service providers.  NITEL, the Nigerian PTT, 
competed with dozens of privately owned Internet service 
providers. 
 
 
While private television and radio broadcasters remained 
economically viable on advertising revenues alone, despite 
the restrictions that the Government imposed on them, 
government-sponsored broadcasters complained that government 
funding and advertising were inadequate for their needs. 
 
 
Even though editors report that government security officers 
sometimes visit or call to demand information about a story 
or source, journalists and editors no longer fear suspension 
or imprisonment for their editorial decisions.  State 
broadcasters and journalists remain important tools for 
civilian governors; these officials use the state-owned media 
to showcase the state's accomplishments and to promote their 
own political fortunes. 
 
 
Since the May 1999 elections, foreign journalists who sought 
to enter the country to cover political developments 
generally have been able to obtain visas, and many of the 
obstacles that previously frustrated foreign journalists were 
removed.  Officials within the Ministry of Information became 
more accommodating to requests from foreign journalists. 
 
 
Under Obasanjo's government, concrete steps have been taken 
to address the problems in the education sector and to 
restore academic freedom.  In 1999, Obasanjo approved the 
establishment of four new private universities.  Student 
groups alleged that numerous strikes, inadequate facilities, 
and the rise of cultism (or gangs) on campuses continue to 
hamper educational progress.  On several occasions during the 
year, protests by students resulted in harassment and arrest 
by police forces. 
 
 
Twenty-five wounded soldiers were sentenced to life 
imprisonment for "mutiny" and "disobedience" by a court 
martial after publicly protesting their treatment by military 
officials.  The soldiers had alleged medical neglect, 
substandard treatment and non-payment of allowances after 
they returned wounded from serving in the Nigerian contingent 
of ECOMOG forces in Liberia and Sierra Leone. 
 
 
Freedom of Peaceful Assembly and Association 
 
 
The 1999 Constitution provides citizens with the right to 
assemble freely; and the Government generally respected this 
right, although some limits remained. 
Throughout the year, the Government nominally required 
organizers of outdoor public functions to apply for permits, 
although both government authorities and those assembling 
often ignored this requirement.  The Government retained 
legal provisions banning gatherings whose political, ethnic, 
or religious content might lead to unrest.  Open-air 
religious services away from places of worship remained 
prohibited in most states due to religious tensions in 
various parts of the country.  For example, various Northern 
states, including Plateau, Kano, Zamfara and Kaduna 
instituted bans on public gatherings immediately following 
periods of violent unrest.  This was done in consultation 
with a number of religious and traditional groups, and local 
governments in order to prevent a recurrence of unrest. 
Kaduna state government extended its ban on processions, 
rallies, demonstrations, and meetings in public places in 
order to prevent repetition of the violence that followed the 
establishment of Shari'a law (see Sections 1.a. and 2.c.).  A 
political rally in Zamfara State degenerated into violence in 
September, prompting a temporary ban on public political 
rallies.  Because of heightened inter-ethnic, inter-religious 
and purely political tensions in 2001, various state 
governments balance requests for public gatherings with their 
potential for creating unrest, and generally permit them to 
go forward when possible. 
 
 
Generally, the police do not break up or cancel scheduled 
meetings unless there is a compelling security reason. 
Following the APP/PDP riot in Gusau, a PDP rally for the 
Northwest Zone, scheduled to take place in Sokoto October 
4-5, was cancelled by police for security reasons.  A group 
known as the Fourth Dimension, led by former Vice President 
Augustus Aikhomu, was prevented from meeting in July because 
of violence that occurred at a prior meeting in Benin City. 
Police also cancelled a planned meeting of southern governors 
in Enugu, called to counter a meeting of the 19 northern 
governors, because it was "capable of creating disharmony." 
Police regularly disrupt meetings of the OPC, and maintain a 
ban on the organization. 
 
 
C. Freedom of Religion 
 
 
The Constitution provides for freedom of religion, including 
freedom to change one's religion or belief, and freedom to 
manifest and propagate one's religion or belief in worship, 
teaching, practice, and observance; however, the Government 
restricted these rights in practice in certain respects. 
Respect for religious freedom remained limited during the 
year due to the implementation of an expanded version of 
Shari'a law in a total of 13 northern states, which 
challenged constitutional protections for religious freedom 
and occasionally sparked interreligious violence. 
 
 
The Nigerian Constitution prohibits state and local 
governments from adopting an official religion.  The 
Constitution also provides that states may elect to use 
Islamic (Shari'a) customary law and courts.  Federal, state 
and local governments fund various religious activities, 
including pilgrimages to Mecca for Muslims and Jerusalem for 
Christians, as well as requiring Christian or Islamic 
religious knowledge to be taught in public schools. About 
half of the population is Muslim, about 40 percent Christian, 
and about 10 percent practice traditional indigenous religion 
or no religion. Since independence, the jurisdiction of 
Shari'a courts has been limited to family or personal law 
cases involving Muslims, or to civil disputes between Muslims 
and non-Muslims who consent to the courts' jurisdiction. 
However, the Constitution states that a Shari'a court of 
appeal may exercise "such other jurisdiction as may be 
conferred upon it by the law of the State."  Some states have 
interpreted this language as granting them the right to 
expand the jurisdiction of existing Shari'a courts to include 
criminal matters.  Several Christians have alleged that, with 
the adoption of an expanded Shari'a law in several states and 
the continued use of state funds to fund the construction of 
mosques, teaching of Alkalis (Muslim judges), and pilgrimages 
to Mecca (Hajj), Islam has been adopted as the de facto state 
religion of several northern states.  However, state funds 
also are used to fund Christian pilgrimages to Jerusalem. In 
general states with a clear Christian or Muslim majority 
tailor state-funded services to favor the majority faith. 
The Constitution also provides that the Federal Government is 
to establish a Federal Shari'a Court of Appeal and Final 
Court of Appeal; however, the Government had not yet 
established such courts by year's end. 
 
 
The Government continued to enforce a ban on the existence of 
religious organizations on campuses of primary schools, 
although individual students retain the right to practice 
their religion in recognized places of worship.  Many states 
allow the teaching of Kuranic or Biblical knowledge in 
primary and secondary schools; however, in almost all states 
with religious minorities, there are reports that students 
are forced to take classes that violate their religious 
principles.  Islamic religious knowledge (IRK) is a mandatory 
part of the curriculum in public schools in the North, while 
Christian religious knowledge (CRK) is mandatory in the 
South.  State authorities claim that students are permitted 
to decline to attend these classes or to request a teacher of 
their own religion to provide alternative instruction.  In 
practice, where the population of a state is evenly divided, 
CRK and IRK are equally available.  Where there is a 
predominant faith, the minority faith may or may not be 
offered in the schools.  For example, in many southern states 
CRK is taught in the schools and IRK is not offered to Muslim 
students in the public schools.  Conversely, the opposite is 
true in northern states with an overwhelming Muslim majority. 
 
 
 
 
The law prohibits religious discrimination; however, reports 
were common that government officials discriminated against 
persons practicing a religion different from their own, 
notably in hiring or awarding contracts. Christians in the 
northern, predominantly Muslim part of the country accused 
local government officials of attempting to use zoning 
regulations to stop or slow the establishment of non-Muslim, 
usually Christian, churches.  Muslims in parts of the South 
have suffered similar discrimination. 
 
 
Purdah continued in parts of the country leading to continued 
restrictions on the freedom of movement of women (see Section 
5). 
 
 
In October 1999, the governor of Zamfara state signed into 
law two bills aimed at instituting Islamic Shari'a law in his 
state.  Implementation of the law began on January 22. 
Zamfara's law adopted traditional Shari'a in its entirety, 
with the exception that apostasy was not criminalized. 
Following Zamfara's lead, other northern states began to 
implement varying forms of expanded Shari'a; by year's end 13 
states had adopted variations of Shari'a law: Sokoto, Niger, 
Kano, Kebbi, Jigawa, Yobe, Zamfara, Katsina, Borno, Bauchi, 
Gombe and Kaduna states.  Previously, Shari'a law had been 
practiced in the north in the areas of personal law, only if 
both litigants agreed to settle their disputes in Shari'a 
courts. Elements of Shari'a also had been present in the 
northern penal code, which had been applicable in the north 
since independence. 
 
 
As the result of ethnic and religious violence attendant to 
the expansion of Shari'a criminal law in various Northern and 
Middle-Belt states, (see Section 5), several northern state 
governments banned open air preaching and public religious 
processions. (#) Katsina and Plateau state governments have 
enacted and maintained a ban on public proselytizing for 
security reasons.  Kaduna has maintained a ban on all forms 
of "processions, rallies, demonstrations, and meetings in 
public places."  Such bans were viewed as necessary public 
safety measures after the deaths of thousands in 
predominantly ethno-religious conflicts, sparked in part by 
the expansion of Shari'a since 2000, in Kaduna, Plateau, 
Kano, Gombe and Bauchi.  However, large outdoor religious 
gatherings continued to be quite common, especially in the 
southern part of the country. 
 
 
The Federal Government has tacitly acknowledged the ability 
of states to implement criminal Shari'a.  However, the 
Federal Government has instituted a committee charged with 
the responsibility to draft uniform Shari'a criminal and 
procedural laws that could be adopted by all states, instead 
of the current state-drafted statutes that differ in many 
respects (see Section 1.c.). 
 
 
Although the expanded Shari'a laws technically do not apply 
to Christians, the Christian minority in some states has been 
subjected to many of the social provisions of the law, 
primarily the ban on the sale of alcohol.  Consumption of 
alcohol by Christians has not been criminalized, however, its 
sale and public consumption have been restricted throughout 
most of the North, except on Federal Government installations 
such as military and police barracks.  All Muslims were 
subjected to the new Shari'a provisions in the states that 
enacted them.  Various human rights groups have challenged 
the constitutionality of criminal Shari'a, but these suits 
have failed for lack of a plaintiff with adequate legal 
standing.  Safiya Hussaini, a divorcee who was convicted of 
adultery and sentenced to death by stoning, has indicated her 
intention to appeal, challenging the constitutionality of the 
conviction (see Section 1.c.). 
 
 
Distribution of religious publications remained generally 
unrestricted, however, the Government continued to enforce 
lightly a ban on published religious advertisements.  There 
were reports by Christians in Zamfara State that the state 
government restricted the distribution of Christian religious 
literature.  Many Christians in the North complain that they 
are not provided adequate radio time on state-owned radio 
stations while Islamic religious programs are aired without 
charge.  Six Pakistani Muslim scholars were arrested in Benue 
State September 23 without being charged, and were later 
questioned by Federal Government officials in Abuja. 
 
 
Following violence in relation to the expansion of Shari'a 
laws in Kaduna in February 2000, several northern state 
governments banned any type of proselytizing, in spite of the 
fact that it is permitted by the Constitution.  With 
Shari'a-attendant violence recurring in Plateau, Bauchi and 
Gombe states, such bans have remained in place.  In Jos, 
Missionaries reported that law enforcement officials harassed 
them when they proselytized outside of majority Christian 
neighborhoods.  Proselytizing did not appear to be restricted 
in the southern part of the country. 
 
 
The Federal Government continued to settle property claims by 
Muslim Brotherhood leader Ibrahim El-Zakzaky for compensation 
for his home and mosque, which were razed by law enforcement 
in 1997.  All 96 of the Muslim Brotherhood followers jailed 
under the previous regime were released during the year. 
 
 
 
 
Freedom of Movement Within the Country, Foreign Travel, 
Emigration, and Repatriation 
 
 
The Constitution entitles citizens to move freely throughout 
the country and reside where they wish, and in general, the 
Government respected this right; however, police occasionally 
restricted this right by enforcing curfews in areas struck by 
civil unrest, setting up roadblocks and checkpoints.  These 
are routinely used by law enforcement agencies to search for 
criminals, and to prevent the transport of bodies from areas 
of conflict to other parts of the country where their 
presence might instigate retaliatory violence. 
Unfortunately, security and law enforcement officials often 
used such checkpoints to engage in extortion and occasional 
violence (see Sections 1.a. and 1.c.).  Unlike last year, 
there were no reports of government officials restricting 
mass movements of individuals fleeing ethnic unrest.  In 
March 2000, however, the Governor of Niger State instructed 
state police to install roadblocks to prevent southerners 
from returning to their homes.  In that incident, 
southerners, particularly Igbo traders, were attempting to 
return home because they feared violent reprisals in response 
to the deaths of Hausas in Aba and Owerri (see Section 1.a.). 
 
 
Violent clashes between ethnic Hausa and various non-Muslim 
ethnic groups in Jos, Tafawa Balewa, and Kano resulted in the 
imposition of dusk-to-dawn curfew following the deaths of as 
many as 50 persons (see Sections 1.a. and 5).  In September 
and October, Tiv youths set up roadblocks in eastern Benue to 
harass and kill ethnic Jukuns (see Section 1.a.). 
 
 
The Constitution also prohibits the denial of exit or entry 
to any citizen, and the Government generally respected this 
law; however, the law also provides that women are required 
to obtain permission from a male family member before having 
an application for a passport processed.  Some men take their 
wives' and children's passports and other identification 
documents with them while traveling abroad to prevent their 
family from leaving the country (see Section 5).  General 
Jeremiah Useni, a retired general and former Minister of the 
Federal Capital Territories under the Abacha regime, was 
prevented in August from traveling outside Nigeria and his 
passport was confiscated.  No reason was given by the FG for 
this action. 
 
 
Prominent human rights and prodemocracy activists who fled 
the country during the regime of General Sani Abacha 
continued to return to the country as did many economic 
refugees.  There were no reports that the Government denied 
passports to political figures or journalists or interrogated 
citizens who were issued visas to foreign countries; however, 
there have been sporadic reports that persons still were 
questioned upon entry or exit to the country at Murtala 
Muhammed international airport. These persons, all of whom 
were opponents of the Abacha regime, were identified in 
immigration computer systems as individuals to be questioned 
by immigration or security officers.  For example, Dr. Olua 
Kamalu, deputy president of MOSOP, reported that the SSS 
seized his passport on July 25, 2000.  Dr. Kamalu was 
planning a trip to Ghana to attend a visa interview at a 
foreign embassy. 2001 example available. 
 
 
During periods of civil unrest, numerous persons were 
displaced from their places of residence.  Thousands of 
persons, both Christian and Muslim, were displaced internally 
following the Kaduna riots in February and in May, 2000. 
Most had returned by 2001, and in fact, Kaduna became a place 
of refuge for people of all ethnic groups fleeing violence in 
Jos, Tafawa Balewa and Kano.  Up to 500,000 persons were 
displaced following the ethnic conflict between Tiv, Jukun 
and Hausa in Nasarawa State (see Section 2.c.).  Several 
thousand Hausa families fled Tafawa Balewa after what was 
essentially a pogrom by the predominant Siyawa ethnic group 
in southern Bauchi State.  Bauchi Governor Mu'azu admitted 
that essentially the entire Hausa community in Tafawa Balewa 
had either departed or had been killed in the conflict (see 
Section 1.a.).  Following civil unrest created largely by 
criminal opportunists in Kano in October, many Igbo and 
Yoruba residents sent their families south. 
 
 
Typically, only the head of household returned to areas of 
unrest after authorities regained control. Most returnees 
remained apprehensive about continuing to work in these areas 
and returned only to finish business contracts or to sell 
their homes in order to arrange a more organized departure. 
 
 
A few hundred residents of the Odi village, razed by soldiers 
in 1999, have returned to the area; however the federal 
Government has not provided them with assistance to 
reconstruct their village (see Section 1.a.). 
 
 
Nigerian law contains provisions for the granting of refugee 
and asylum status in accordance with the 1951 U.N. Convention 
Relating to the Status of Refugees and its 1967 Protocol. 
The Government cooperated with the Lagos office of the U.N. 
High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) and other humanitarian 
agencies in assisting refugees through the National 
Commission for Refugees and its Federal Commissioner. The 
Eligibility Committee established under Decree 52 of 1989, 
which governs the granting of refugee status, asylum, and 
resettlement, reviews refugee and resettlement applications. 
A representative from the UNHCR participates in this 
committee.  The issue of the provision of first asylum has 
not arisen since the establishment of the National Commission 
for Refugees under Decree 52. 
At year's end, there were 6,933 recognized refugees: 13 from 
Angola; 23 from Benin; 4 from Cameroon; 1,703 from Sierra 
Leone; 3,194 from Chad; 74 from Sudan; 1,561 from Liberia; 69 
from Cote d'Ivoire; and 292 from other countries.  The 
Government also resettled in the country 3 Cameroonians, 3 
Chadians, 5 Sudanese, 13 Liberians, and 17 persons from other 
countries. 
 
 
There were no reports of the forced return of persons to a 
country where they feared persecution. 
 
 
Section 3. Respect for Political Rights: The Right of 
Citizens to Change Their Government 
 
 
In 1998 and 1999 citizens had the opportunity to exercise 
their right to change their government.  General Abdulsalami 
Abubakar oversaw a transition to civilian rule that included 
elections for local governments (in December 1998), state 
governors and assemblies (in January 1999), and national 
legislators and the president (in February 1999).  Voter 
apathy and widespread fraud marred the legislative elections; 
however, the turnout increased for the presidential race, 
which proceeded peacefully with reports of only a few violent 
incidents.  The Independent National Electoral Commission 
(INEC) certified former President Olusegun Obasanjo's victory 
over Chief Olu Falae with a reported 62 percent of the votes. 
 
 
Irregularities occurred at each stage of the electoral 
process, particularly the presidential nominating convention 
and election where, for example, large sums of money were 
offered by both political camps to delegates to vote against 
political opponents.  During the presidential election, 
international observers and foreign diplomats witnessed 
serious irregularities in procedures.  All three parties 
engaged in the local purchase of false ballots and fraudulent 
tally sheets so that there were vast discrepancies between 
what observers saw and inflated tallies in some areas.  In 
addition there were administrative problems such as late 
delivery of voting materials at a large number of polling 
stations.  Those areas with the worst problems were the 
southern tier of states in the Niger Delta region, several 
states in Igboland, and a handful of north central states. 
The production of "ghost votes" in these states amounted to 
as much as 70 or 80 percent of the total reported votes. 
Although all parties engaged in attempts to rig the vote, the 
PDP machine in the Delta and Igboland was responsible for the 
worst excesses. These votes may have added an estimated 15 
percent to Obasanjo's total figure; however, observers 
believe that even if they were thrown out, he still would 
have maintained roughly a 15 percent lead over Falae's total. 
 International observers confirmed the results and stated 
that, despite widespread fraud, Obasanjo's victory reflected 
the will of most voters. Although Falae initially protested 
the election results, eventually he dropped his legal 
challenge.  INEC issued a report on the conduct of the 
election in July 1999 that documented the fraud.  Obasanjo, 
109 senators, 360 members of the House of the National 
Assembly, and 36 governors and state assemblies assumed 
office on May 29, 1999. The President, Vice President, and 
other national and state officials serve 4-year terms. The 
next state and national elections are scheduled for 2003, 
while local government elections are scheduled for 2002. 
INEC is working with several international electoral 
assistance organizations to help improve the process in 2003; 
however, no INEC officials have faced disciplinary action as 
result of their involvement in corrupt activities in the 1999 
election.  The Constitution outlaws the seizure of the 
government by force and contains provisions for the removal 
of the President, Vice President, ministers, legislators, and 
state government officials for gross misconduct or medical 
reasons.  In November 1999, Senate President Evan Enwerem was 
removed after another credentials scandal.  His replacement, 
Chuba Okadigbo, was removed in August after an internal 
Senate investigation on contracting procedures resulted in 
his indictment.  Several other public officials were 
subjected to close scrutiny by the press, public, and 
legislative investigators. 
 
 
The political system remains in transition.  The three 
branches of the new government acted somewhat independently 
during the Administration's third year in office.  The 
President was instrumental in removing former Senate 
President Chuba Okadigbo in 2000, and continued to fight to 
remove Speaker Ghali Na'abba in early 2001.  He abandoned 
this approach after evidence came to light of widespread 
fraud and corruption in the attempt to buy votes for 
Na'abba's removal.  The Senate and the House of 
Representatives legislative responsibilities such as budget 
review and oversight, the election reform initiative and 
resource allocation seriously.  Obasanjo created several 
commissions to investigate past government contracts and 
human rights abuses, which were overwhelmed with applications 
to present evidence of wrongdoing (see Section 4).  However, 
the judicial branch remained weakened by years of neglect and 
politicization. 
 
 
Abubakar's military Government, which consulted with a 
selected group of constitutional and legal experts around the 
country to revise the 1979 and 1995 Constitutions, 
promulgated the 1999 Constitution on May 5, 1999.  The 
constitution-writing process was criticized for not being 
open to enough participants and for not being subjected to 
wider debate on the country's federal structure, revenue 
allocation and power-sharing formulas, and minority ethnic 
groups' rights.  Complaints about the Constitution persisted 
and there were continued calls for a national conference, 
many from groups in the southwest.  A bill for a national 
conference was introduced in the Senate late in the year. 
They looked instead to the constitutional reform committee in 
the Senate. 
 
 
Special Advisor to President Obasanjo on Constitutional 
Matters Dr. Maxwell Gidado heads a process which gathered 
information from citizen groups in various parts of the 
country on reform of the 1999 Constitution.  His findings 
will be presented by the President to the National Assembly 
for consideration.  (I am not sure of exact process or 
whether findings have been presented yet.) 
 
 
Although the Constitution allows the free formation of 
political parties, only three parties were registered with 
the INEC.  The Constitution requires parties to have 
membership in two-thirds of the country's 36 states.  In 
anticipation of the 2003 election INEC began preparing a 
draft electoral law for the National Assembly to consider in 
the next legislative session.  In 2000, public fora were held 
during the year in all 36 states and the federal capital 
territory of Abuja to solicit citizens' views on the draft 
law.  Over 10,000 citizens participated, however, the draft 
law was not subject to much public debate outside of this 
exercise.  The proposed law seeks to regulate the timing of 
elections and the eligibility of independent parties to 
register.  Because of the propensity for violence and unrest 
during elections, and in order to prevent an unfair advantage 
accruing to incumbents, there is substantial pressure to 
reschedule local government elections, currently set for 
April 2002, so that presidential, gubernatorial and local 
government occur in 2003.  Conflicting bills regarding both 
timing of elections and eligibility of new parties are 
pending in the Senate and House. 
 
 
Women are underrepresented in government and politics, 
although there were no legal impediments to political 
participation or voting by women. Men continued to dominate 
the political arena.  NGO's continued to protest the 
underrepresentation of women in the political process, and 
women were underrepresented in the new civilian government. 
Only 6 women were appointed as ministers out of a total of 56 
positions.  There were 3 women among the Senate's 109 
members, and only 12 women were elected to the 360-member 
House of Representatives.  Women's rights groups pushed 
local, state, and the Federal Government (and local levels as 
well) to adopt a 30 percent affirmative action program; 
however, these efforts were unsuccessful. 
 
 
There are no legal impediments to participation in government 
by members of any ethnic group.  The Constitution requires 
that government appointments reflect the country's "federal 
character."  However, there are more than 250 ethnic groups, 
and it is difficult to insure representation of every group 
in the Government.  The federal- and state-level ministers 
generally are selected to represent the country's and the 
individual State,s regional, ethnic, and religious makeup. 
President Obasanjo attempted to create an ethnically 
inclusive Government.  The 56-member Cabinet and 109 
ambassadorial slots were allocated to an equal number of 
candidates from each state to achieve a regional balance. 
Despite this effort, northerners and southeasterners 
criticized the Government for favoring westerners or ethnic 
Yorubas, while the southwesterners criticized the Government 
for relying too heavily on northern and southeastern 
appointments. 
Middle-belt and Christian officers dominate the military 
hierarchy.  Military retirements in 2000, few in number, 
appeared to reflect normal political and military 
decision-making, and appeared to be based on the perceived 
needs of the military and country, without reflecting an 
ethnic or religious bias.  Due to the retirement of many 
"political" officers in 1999, there is a perception among 
some in the north that the historical northern Hausa 
influence on the military has been reduced to the point where 
the North is now underepresented. 
 
 
Section 4. Governmental Attitude Regarding International and 
Nongovernmental Investigation of Alleged Violations of Human 
Rights 
 
 
The Government permitted local human rights groups to operate 
and did not interfere with their activities; nor did it 
detain, intimidate, or harass their members.  Criticisms of 
the Government's past human rights record were abundant in 
various media. High-level government officials noted that the 
human rights community assisted in the advancement of 
democracy.  In June President Obasanjo, along with a number 
of cabinet members and National Assembly members, met with a 
number of prominent human rights representatives for 
discussions. 
 
 
The Catholic Secretariat, a local sectarian interest group, 
continued to hold a monthly open forum in Lagos on various 
subjects relating to past and present human rights issues. 
Discussion panels have included a number of NGO's, media, and 
religious leaders.  Each session ended with recommendations 
to the Government on how best to resolve these issues.  The 
Government had not responded to any of these recommendations 
at year's end. 
 
 
The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) is 
active, with offices in Abuja and Lagos under the direction 
of a regional delegate.  Its primary human rights activities 
during the year involved the training of prison officials on 
human rights, sanitation, and prisoner health. 
The National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) was established 
by Decree 22 in 1995 and tasked with monitoring and 
protecting human rights in the country, enjoyed greater 
recognition by and coordination with NGO's.  The NHRC is 
chaired by retired Justice Uche Omo and includes 15 other 
members. The NHRC is establishing zonal affiliates in each of 
the countries six political regions.  The NHRC is supposed to 
work closely with NGO's that are devoted to human rights 
issues.  Since its inception, the NHRC has been denied 
adequate funding to do its job properly.  At year's end, the 
NHRC had created a strategic work plan through 2002, and was 
in the process of developing a national action plan to be 
deposited with the UNCHR.   In 2001, it began actively to 
assist in appealing extreme Shari'a verdicts in the North. 
 
 
The HRVIP, commonly known as the Oputa panel, was established 
in June 1999 by President Obasanjo to investigate human 
rights abuses dating to 1966 and the time of the first 
military coup.  The Oputa panel can recommend courses of 
action to the justice system for perpetrators of past abuses, 
something the NHRC does not do.  According to Justice Oputa, 
the chair, the panel's primary goal is to provide the country 
with a systematic examination of past human rights abuses to 
develop a national consensus on the boundaries of acceptable 
behavior by government entities as well as individuals.  The 
panel has heard cases throughout the year, mostly involving 
allegations of unlawful arrest, detention, and torture as far 
back as the 1966 Biafran War.  The panel has also heard cases 
in which the rights of groups were violated.  The Oputa Panel 
has held extensive hearings in Lagos, Abuja, Port Harcourt, 
and Kano throughout the year, and has taken evidence in the 
claims of over 10,000 petitioners.  The work of the Panel has 
produced some controversy when former Heads of State, Ibrahim 
Babangida, Abdulsalami Abubakar, and Salisu Buhari refused to 
appear to answer questions about human rights abuses under 
their respective regimes.  The Panel will conclude its 
hearings by the end of the year, and will proceed to draft a 
report and issue its findings. 
 
 
Section 5. Discrimination Based on Race, Sex, Religion, 
Disability, Language, or Social Status 
 
 
The 1999 Constitution provides citizens with the right to 
freedom from discrimination based on "community, place of 
origin, ethnic group, sex, religion, or political opinion." 
However, customary and religious discrimination against women 
persisted, occasional religious violence was a problem, 
social discrimination on the basis of both religion and 
ethnicity remained widespread, and ethnic and regional 
tensions continued to contribute to serious violence both 
between groups of citizens and between citizens and the 
security forces. 
 
 
Women 
 
 
Reports of spousal abuse are common, especially those of wife 
beating.  Police normally do not intervene in domestic 
disputes, which seldom are discussed publicly.  The Penal 
Code permits husbands to use physical means to chastise their 
wives as long as it does not result in "grievous harm," which 
is defined as loss of sight, hearing, power of speech, facial 
disfigurement, or other life threatening injuries.  A women's 
rights group has estimated that spousal abuse occurs in 20 
percent of adult relationships. In more traditional areas of 
the country, courts and police are reluctant to intervene to 
protect women who accuse their husbands formally if the level 
of alleged abuse does not exceed customary norms in the 
areas.  Rape and sexual harassment continue to be problems. 
Prostitution is rampant, particularly in urban areas.  A 
number of states, including most northern states which have 
begun the enforcement of Shari'a law, have begun to enforce 
existing laws or to introduce new laws to combat 
prostitution.  All states that have adopted Shari'a have 
criminalized prostitution, which is enforced with varying 
degrees of success.  Prostitution is not illegal in Lagos 
State; however, authorities can use statutes that outlaw 
pandering as a justification for arresting prostitutes (See 
Section 6.c).  The adoption of Shari'a-based legal systems by 
northern states has led to the strong enforcement of laws 
against prostitution for both adults and children (see 
Section 2.c.).  Southern states, like Edo, also are 
criminalizing prostitution and raising the legal age for 
marriage from 16 to 18.  There is an active market for 
trafficking in women to Europe, and elsewhere (see Section 
6.f.).  In some parts of the country, women continue to be 
harassed for social and religious reasons. 
 
 
Purdah, the Islamic practice of keeping girls and women in 
seclusion from men outside the family, continued in parts of 
the far north. 
Women experience considerable discrimination as well as 
physical abuse.  There are no laws barring women from 
particular fields of employment; however women often 
experience discrimination because the Government tolerates 
customary and religious practices that adversely affect them. 
 The Nigerian NGO's Coalition expressed concern about 
continued discrimination against women in the private sector, 
particularly in access to employment, promotion to higher 
professional positions, and in salary inequality.  There are 
credible reports that several businesses operate with a "get 
pregnant, get fired" policy.  Women remain underrepresented 
in the formal sector but play an active and vital role in the 
country's important informal economy.  While the number of 
women employed in the business sector increases every year, 
women do not receive equal pay for equal work and often find 
it extremely difficult to acquire commercial credit or to 
obtain tax deductions or rebates as heads of households. 
Unmarried women in particular endure many forms of 
discrimination. 
 
 
While some women have made considerable individual progress, 
both in the academic and business world, women remain 
underprivileged.  Although women are not barred legally from 
owning land, under some customary land tenure systems only 
men can own land, and women can gain access to land only 
through marriage or family.  In addition many customary 
practices do not recognize a women's right to inherit her 
husband's property, and many widows were rendered destitute 
when their in-laws took virtually all of the deceased 
husband's property.  Widows are subjected to unfavorable 
conditions as a result of discriminatory traditional customs 
and economic deprivation.  "Confinement" is the most common 
rite of deprivation to which widows are subjected, and it 
occurs predominately in eastern Nigeria.  Confined widows are 
under restrictions for as long as 1 year and usually are 
required to shave their heads and dress in black garments. 
In other areas, a widow is considered a part of her husband's 
property, to be "inherited" by his family.  Shari,a personal 
law, in contrast to traditional law and practice in many 
English common law cases, protects widows property rights. 
Polygamy continues to be practiced widely among all ethnic 
groups and among Christians as well as Muslims and 
practitioners of traditional persuasions.  Women are required 
by law to obtain permission from a male family member to get 
a passport (see Section 2.d.).  The testimony of women is not 
equal to that of men in criminal courts.  If one woman 
testifies, a second woman must also to provide testimony to 
equal the weight of the testimony of one man. 
 
 
Women have been affected to varying degrees by the adoption 
of Shari'a in the North.  In Zamfara state, local governments 
instituted laws requiring the separation of Muslim men and 
women in transportation, health care, and primary educational 
services (see Section 2.c.).  Separate transportation and 
health facilities for men and women already have been 
implemented there.  In 2000, a non-Muslim woman was pulled 
from a motorcycle and injured by vigilantes for breaking the 
new rule requiring separate transportation for women in a 
local government area of Zamfara State.  In January, an 
unmarried 17-year-old woman was given 100 strokes of the cane 
lashes for fornication and false testimony (see Sections 
1.c,).  While humiliating, the caning did not appear to cause 
serious injury, and the woman was reported to have walked 
home after the execution of the sentence without aid.  Safiya 
Hussaini was convicted of adultery in Sokoto State because 
she could not prove who was responsible for her pregnancy. 
Procedural irregularities were noted in her case.  In 
apparent violation of traditional Shari'a jurisprudence, some 
Alkali judges appear to deny Shari'a criminal protections to 
women that they provide to men.  This tends to subject women 
to harsh punishments for fornication or adultery based solely 
upon the fact of pregnancy, while men are not convicted 
without the requisite number of witnesses. 
 
 
A national network of women's rights NGO's described the 
Government's 1998 report on the implementation of the 
Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination 
Against Women (CEDAW) for the period 1986-94 as "inaccurate" 
in its positive portrayal of the status of women.  The NGO 
Coalition for a Shadow Report on the Implementation of CEDAW 
(NGO CEDAW Coalition) issued its alternative report in March 
1999, which was critical of the Government's failure to 
remove legal impediments and social discrimination faced by 
women.  During the year, there reportedly was not much 
progress made to rectify the problems described in the NGO 
report. 
Children 
Public schools continued to be inadequate, and limited 
facilities precluded access to education for many children. 
The Constitution's general provisions call for the 
Government, "when practical," to provide free, compulsory, 
and universal primary education; however, despite the 
President's commitment to compulsory education, compulsory 
primary education rarely was provided, particularly in the 
north (see Section 6.d.).  Girls are discriminated against in 
access to education for social and economic reasons. The 
literacy rate for males is 58 percent but only 41 percent for 
females.  Rural girls are even more disadvantaged than their 
urban counterparts.  Only 42 percent of rural girls are 
enrolled in school compared with 72 percent of urban girls. 
In the north, Muslim communities favor boys over girls in 
deciding which children to enroll in secondary and elementary 
schools.  In the south, economic hardship also restricts many 
families' ability to send girls to school and, instead, they 
are directed into commercial activities such as trading and 
street vending.  While the Government increased spending on 
children's health in recent years, it seldom enforced even 
the inadequate laws designed to protect the rights of 
children. 
 
 
Cases of child abuse, abandoned infants, child prostitution, 
and physically harmful child labor practices remained common 
throughout the country (see Sections 6.c and 6.d.).  Although 
the law stipulates that "no child shall be ordered to be 
imprisoned," juvenile offenders are incarcerated routinely 
along with adult criminals.  The Government only occasionally 
criticized child abuse and neglect, and it made little effort 
to stop customary practices harmful to children, such as the 
sale of young girls into marriage (see Section 6.f.).  There 
were credible reports that poor families sell their daughters 
into marriage as a means of supplementing their income. 
Young girls often are forced into marriage as soon as they 
reach puberty, regardless of age, in order to prevent the 
"indecency" associated with premarital sex. 
 
 
A number of states have adopted Islamic (Shari'a) law in 
varying degrees.  While most schools in the north 
traditionally have separated children by gender, it is now 
required by law in Zamfara, Sokoto, and Kebbi state schools 
(see Section 2.c.). 
 
 
There was evidence of trafficking in children (see Section 
6.f.). 
 
 
The Federal Government publicly opposes Female Genital 
Mutilation (FGM), which is widely condemned by international 
health experts as damaging to both physical and psychological 
health; however, it has taken no legal action to curb the 
practice.  (#) A federal law banning FGM is currently before 
the National Assembly.  Because of the considerable problems 
that anti-FGM groups faced at the federal level, most are 
refocusing their energies to combat FGM at the state and 
local government area (LGA) level.  Edo State banned FGM in 
October.  Ogun, Cross River, Osun, Rivers, and Bayelsa states 
banned FGM during the year.  However, the punishments imposed 
are minimal, in Edo state the punishment is a $10.00 (1,000 
Naira) fine and 6 months imprisonment.  In addition once a 
state legislature criminalizes FGM, NGO's have found that 
they must convince the LGA authorities that state laws are 
applicable in their districts. 
 
 
The Women's Centre for Peace and Development (WOPED) 
estimated that at least 50 percent of women are mutilated. 
Studies conducted by the U.N. Development Systems and the 
World Health Organization estimated the FGM rate at 
approximately 60 percent.  However, according to local 
experts, the actual prevalence may be as high as 100 percent 
in some ethnic conclaves in the south.  While practiced in 
all parts of the country, FGM is more predominant in the 
southern and eastern zones.  Women from Northern states are 
less likely to be mutilated; however, those affected are more 
likely to undergo the severe type of FGM known as 
infibulation.  WOPED believes that the practice is 
perpetuated because of a cultural belief that uncircumcised 
women are promiscuous, unclean, unsuitable for marriage, 
physically undesirable, or potential health risks to 
themselves and their children, especially during childbirth. 
The National Association of Nigerian Nurses and Midwives, The 
Nigerian Women's Association, and the Nigerian Medical 
Association worked to eradicate the practice and to train 
health care workers on the medical effects of FGM; however, 
contact with health care workers remains limited. 
Nevertheless, most observers agree that the number of females 
who are currently subjected to FGM is declining. 
 
 
Indigenous forms of FGM vary from the simple removal of the 
clitoral hood or labia minora to excision of the clitoris and 
the most dangerous form, infibulation.  The age at which 
females are subjected to the practice varies from the first 
week of life until after a woman delivers her first child. 
The Ministry of Health, women's groups, and many NGO's 
sponsored public awareness projects to educate communities 
about the health hazards of FGM.  The press repeatedly 
criticized the practice. 
 
 
People with Disabilities 
 
 
While the Government called for private business to institute 
policies that ensured fair treatment for the disabled, it did 
not enact any laws requiring greater accessibility to 
buildings or public transportation, nor did if formulate any 
policy specifically ensuring the right of the disabled to 
work. 
 
 
Religious Minorities 
 
 
The law prohibits religious discrimination; however private 
businesses frequently are guilty of informal religious 
discrimination in their hiring practices and purchasing 
patterns. 
 
 
Religious differences often correspond to regional and ethnic 
differences.  For example, the northern region is 
overwhelmingly Muslim, as are the large Hausa and Fulani 
ethnic groups of the region.  Many southern ethnic groups are 
predominantly Christian, although the Yoruba are roughly 
fifty percent Muslim.  Consequently, at times it is difficult 
to distinguish between religious or ethnic/regional 
discrimination or tension, both of which are pervasive. 
Religious tensions underscored what were predominantly ethnic 
confrontations throughout the year.  The Middle Belt, because 
of its particular historical circumstances, has suffered 
recurring inter-religious and inter-ethnic violence during 
the past two years. 
 
 
The crisis in Kaduna in February and May 2000 was the first 
major Muslim-Christian conflict during Obasanjo's tenure. 
Viewed through the ethnic prism, there were numerous 
conflicts in Southern Kaduna between smaller ethnic groups 
and the Hausa-Fulani who occupied towns, whose names are now 
synonymous in Nigeria with the conflicts that occurred there: 
Zangon-Kataf, Kachia, and Kafanchan.  There has not been a 
similar flare up of violence this year due in part to the 
government sponsored dialogue between the different faiths 
and ethnic groups.  For example when two small churches were 
partially burned in the northern part of Kaduna city in 
October, the fires were put out through the efforts of 
Christian and Muslim neighbors, and the State Government 
promised funds to repair them. 
 
 
A violent ethnic crisis erupted in July between the Sayawa 
ethnic group and Hausa/Fulani residing in Tafawa Balewa in 
southern Bauchi State.  Tafawa Balewa is similar to Kafanchan 
or Zangon Kataf in Kaduna state in that it is inhabited 
primarily by the Muslim Hausa-Fulani, while the indigenous, 
non-Muslim, Sayewa ethnic group dominates the land and 
villages surrounding the town.  It is unclear how the 
violence in Tafawa Balewa commenced, but it may have been 
related to the proposed introduction of Shari'a law by Bauchi 
State.  Most casualties--up to one hundred dead and 
significant property loss--were Hausa-Fulani.  State 
authorities acted quickly to prevent a reprisal by 
Hausa-Fulani against the Sayewa by calling in the military to 
maintain order, but tensions in Tafawa Balewa persists.  By 
mid-September, most of the Hausa-Fulani had left Tafawa 
Balewa. 
 
 
During the weekend of September 7, violence erupted in the 
Jos that eventually claimed more than 2300 lives.  It is 
unclear how the unrest began, but tensions had risen over the 
appointment of an ethnic Hausa to the chairmanship of a local 
Poverty Alleviation Program, and earlier violence between 
Christian Sayewa and Musim Hausa-Fulani in Tafawa Balewa, 
Bauchi, only 60 kilometers away. There were also several 
reports of Hausa-Fulanis being summarily killed in outlying 
villages.  Roughly eighty-percent of the casualties in Jos 
were Hausa-Fulani Muslims, who constitute a significant 
minority in Jos.  The military was able to restore order, but 
thousands of Hausas fled Plateau state for Kaduna, Kano, 
Jigawa and Bauchi.  This conflict appears to have been 
primarily ethnic, and secondarily religious.  Christians of 
different sects were reported to have attacked each other, 
and Yoruba Muslims reportedly joined in the killing of their 
Hausa co-religionists.  The Jos conflict produced 
approximately 11,600 internally displaced persons according 
to the Nigerian Red Cross. 
 
 
In October 12, 600 to 1000 Muslims peacefully demonstrated in 
Kano against U.S. and allied air strikes against Afghanistan. 
 However, several hours after the demonstration two small 
churches were burned.  The following morning, a mob of 
predominantly Hausa youth began attacking shopkeepers and 
looting shops in city,s major market.  The military was 
called in to restore order and did so successfully.  The 
violence appeared to be primarily opportunistic and 
criminally inspired but with religious and ethnic overtones, 
with gangs trying to foment unrest in order to loot. Churches 
and three mosques were reportedly burned during the fighting. 
 After order was restored, Governor Kwankwaso held a series 
of meetings with local ethnic and religious leaders to stem 
further outbreaks and to rebuild trust between the 
communities. 
 
 
National/Racial/Ethnic Minorities 
 
 
The country's population of about 120 million is ethnically 
diverse, and consists of more than 250 groups, many of which 
speak distinct primary languages and are concentrated 
geographically.  There is no majority ethnic group.  The 
three largest ethnic groups, the Hausa-Fulani of the north, 
the Yoruba of the southwest, and the Igbos of the southeast, 
together make up about two-thirds of the population.  The 
Ijaw of the South Delta area, the fourth largest group, claim 
a population of 12 million, roughly the same as the Kanuri 
population in the far northeast and Tiv population in the 
south.  Because of the lack of reliable statistics, it is 
difficult to determine the populations of the various ethnic 
groups. 
 
 
The Constitution prohibits ethnic discrimination by the 
Government.  In addition the Constitution mandates that the 
composition of the federal, state, and local governments and 
their agencies, as well as the conduct of their affairs, 
reflect the diverse character of the country in order to 
promote national unity and loyalty.  This provision was 
designed as a safeguard against domination of the Government 
by persons from a few states or ethnic and sectional groups. 
These provisions were included in response to previous 
domination of the Government and the armed forces by 
northerners and Muslims.  In fact, many argue that the 
informal, though immutable rules of regional and ethnic 
"zoning" substantially outweigh the Constitution, because 
they are the implicit rules by which Nigerians agree to 
remain in one nation.  The Government of Olusegun Obasanjo 
was an example of this diversity. Obasanjo is a Yoruba from 
the southwest, the Vice President is a northerner, and the 
Senate President is an Igbo.  President Obasanjo assiduously 
followed the unwritten rules of zoning in making key 
appointments: essentially, each state must have at least gets 
one minister and one minister of state.  While this makes for 
an unwieldly cabinet and can make geographic or ethnic 
provenance outweigh considerations of competence, this system 
can not be dispensed with easily.  The political parties also 
engaged in "zoning," the practice of rotating positions 
within the party among the different regions and ethnicities 
to ensure that each region and ethnicity is given adequate 
representation.  Nonetheless, claims of marginalization by 
members of southern minority groups and Igbos continued.  The 
ethnic groups of the Niger Delta, in particular, continued 
their calls for high-level representation on petroleum issues 
and within the security forces.  Northern Muslims, who lost 
previously held positions within the military hierarchy, 
accused the Obasanjo Government of favoring  Christians from 
the Middle Belt for those positions.  Traditional linkages 
continued to impose considerable pressure on individual 
government officials to favor their own ethnic groups for 
important positions and patronage. 
 
 
Societal discrimination on the basis of ethnicity is widely 
practiced by members of all ethnic groups and is evident in 
private sector hiring patterns, de facto ethnic segregation 
of urban neighborhoods, and a continuing paucity of marriages 
across major ethnic and regional lines.  There is a long 
history of tension among the diverse ethnic groups (see 
Section 1.a.) 
 
 
Significant inter-ethnic clashes were reported in Delta, 
Anambra, Bauchi, Plateau, Nassarawa, Rivers, Benue, Bayelsa, 
Akwa Ibom, Cross River and Ebonyi States, often resulting in 
fatalities (see Sections 1.a, 5.d). 
 
 
Competing economic aspirations among smaller ethnic groups 
related to the control and powers of subnational governments 
occasionally led to violent conflict. This competition is 
often expressed in terms of "indigene" versus "immigrant." 
 
 
The crisis in Jos, despite its religious overtones, was 
partially precipitated by indigenous ethnic groups in order 
to drive out or deny Hausa-Fulani "immigrants" access to the 
resources of Plateau State--even though immigrant Hausa 
settlers originally founded Jos. 
 
 
A recurring conflict over land rights and status continued 
for several months between the Tiv, the Kwalla, the Jukun and 
the Azara ethnic groups.  These groups all reside in or near 
the convergence of Nasarawa, Benue and Taraba states.    The 
Tiv, who are thought to have originated in the East African 
highlands, migrated to central Nigeria hundreds of years ago. 
 Tivs are regarded as interlopers by the "indigenous" ethnic 
groups, except in parts of Benue State where the Tiv 
predominate.  The conflict began in southeastern Nasarawa 
state June 12 when Alhaji Musa Ibrahim, a chief of the 
Hausa-speaking Azara ethnic group, was assassinated by a 
group of local Tiv.  Hundreds may have been killed in the 
ensuing conflict, which was eventually stopped by the 
military, with nearly 30,000 Tiv migrating south to Benue 
State.  In July, the conflict spread to Taraba State and 
involved the Jukun ethnic group attacking the Tiv. 
Twenty-five people were reported killed and 25,000 Tiv fled 
Taraba for camps on Benue and Nasarawa.  Tensions in Makurdi, 
Benue State, rose over the influx of Tiv, and nearly resulted 
in ethnic conflict there in September. 
 
 
Other ethnic minorities, particularly in Delta, Rivers, 
Bayelsa, and Akwa Ibom states, have echoed the Ogoni ethnic 
group's claims of environmental degradation and government 
indifference to their development in the Delta.  Groups such 
as the Ijaw, Itsekiri, Urhobo, and Isoko continued to express 
their unhappiness about their perceived economic exploitation 
and the environmental destruction of their homelands, and 
incidents of ethnic conflict and confrontation with 
government forces increased in the delta area, particularly 
after the Ijaw Youth Council issued the Kaiama Declaration in 
December 1998 (see Section 1.a.).  Other ethnic groups saw 
the Kaiama Declaration, which claims the entire Delta the 
property of the Ijaw, as threatening their rights. Disparate 
organizations of youths from a variety of ethnic groups 
continued to take oil company personnel hostage in the delta 
region (see Section 1.b.).  For example, in June, an Ijaw 
group took around 60 people hostage at an oil facility at 
Bonny Island, Rivers State.  The group alleged that the land 
where the facility was situated had been obtained illegally. 
As a result of this ongoing violence, many oil companies 
continued to employ local police, and in some cases military 
troops, to protect their facilities and personnel.  Local 
youths claimed that these "militias" engaged in extrajudicial 
killings and other human rights abuses, in some cases with 
the support of foreign oil companies (see Section 1.a.). 
 
 
The Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC), an entity 
created in October 2000 to increase government resources 
committed to the area and grant more local autonomy over 
expenditure of these resources, achieved little while plans 
to source its financing remained contentiously debated. 
 
 
Section 6. Worker Rights 
The Right of Association 
 
 
The 1999 Constitution gives all citizens the right to 
assemble freely and associate with other persons, and to form 
or belong to any trade union or other association.  However, 
several statutory restrictions on the individual's right of 
association, and on trade unions, remain in effect despite 
repeals of most military-era anti-labor decrees.  These 
restrictions include: permitting only a single central labor 
federation (the Nigerian Labour Congress); requiring trade 
unions to be formally registered by the Federal Government; 
requiring a minimum of 50 workers to form a trade union; 
recognizing only 29 trade unions; preventing non-management 
senior staff from joining registered trade unions; and, 
denying senior staff associations a seat on the National 
Labor Advisory Council (NLAC).  Several of these restrictions 
were cited by an ILO committee of experts in 1999.  The 
government has yet to amend these laws, but has conducted 
discussions with senior staff associations concerning formal 
recognition and their accession to the NLAC. 
 
 
Certain categories of Nigerian workers are not permitted to 
join trade unions, including members of the armed forces, and 
government employees in the police, customs, immigration, 
prisons, federal mint, central bank, and telecommunications. 
Certain workers engaged in an "essential service" are 
required to provide advance notice of a strike.  Essential 
services include banking, postal services, transportation, 
public health, and utilities.  Employees working in a 
designated export-processing zone may not join a union until 
ten years after the start-up of the enterprise. 
 
 
According to figures provided by the Nigerian Labour 
Congress, total union membership is approximately four 
million.  Less than ten percent of the total work force is 
organized.  With the exception of a small number of workers 
engaged in commercial food processing, the agricultural 
sector, which employs the bulk of the work force, is not 
organized.  The informal sector, and small and medium 
enterprises, remain largely unorganized. 
 
 
Since 1978 the government has mandated a single trade union 
structure with service and industrial unions grouped under 
the NLC.  The trade union movement is composed of two groups 
consisting of junior and senior staff workers.  The single 
trade union structure and segregation of junior from senior 
staff were intended by government to dilute labor's 
bargaining strength.  Junior staff workers--primarily 
blue-collar workers--are organized into 29 industrial unions 
with a membership of approximately four million persons and 
are affiliated with the NLC.  Twenty-one associations make up 
the senior staff associations of Nigeria, which have renamed 
themselves the trade union congress (TUC).  The TUC has a 
claimed membership of approximately 400,000 to 600,000.  The 
TUC -- primarily white-collar workers--has not been 
officially sanctioned by the government, is prohibited by 
statute from affiliating with the NLC.  Although it lacks a 
seat on the National Labor Advisory Council, the government 
has commenced discussions concerning its accession to the 
body.  Sescan has begun to lay the political groundwork to 
achieve government recognition, which will require formal 
action by the national assembly. 
 
 
Strikes occurred in May and June by the doctors and 
university professors over wages, working conditions, and 
government investment in infrastructure.  Both actions were 
resolved following lengthy negotiations with the relevant 
government ministries, and are significant in that labor 
extracted government commitments to budget greater funds for 
development of the nation's moribund health and education 
infrastructures. 
 
 
Smaller strikes plagued the oil sector, particularly in the 
areas of operation in the Niger delta.  The principal issues 
raised by NUPENG (National Union of Petroleum and Natural Gas 
Workers) and its senior staff counterpart PENGASSAN 
(Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior Staff Association of 
Nigeria) are the increasing use of contract labor and the 
number of indigenous workers in management positions. 
 
 
There are no laws prohibiting retribution against strikers 
and strike leaders.  Lagos State Government terminated an 
important local union leader in Lagos, ostensibly for 
nonperformance, following an extended and acrimonious strike 
by state government workers.  Strikers who believe that they 
are victims of unfair retribution may submit their cases to 
the industrial arbitration panel (IAP), with the approval of 
the Labor Ministry.  The IAP's decisions are legally binding 
on the parties but may be appealed to the Nigerian Industrial 
Court (NIC).  In practice the decisions of these bodies 
infrequently carry the force of law.  Union representatives 
describe the arbitration process as cumbersome and 
time-consuming, and an ineffective deterrent to employer 
retribution. 
B. The right to organize and bargain collectively 
 
 
The labor laws provide for the right to organize and to 
bargain collectively.  Collective bargaining occurs 
throughout the public sector and organized private sector. 
Complaints of anti-union discrimination may be brought to the 
Ministry of Labor for resolution.  The Labor Minister may 
refer unresolved disputes to the IAP and the NIC (see Section 
6.a.).  Union officials have questioned the effectiveness and 
independence of the NIC in view of its refusal in previous 
years to resolve various disputes stemming from the 
government's failure to fulfill contract provisions for 
public sector employees.  The NIC was reconstituted this year 
with several new members, including a formerly imprisoned 
trade unionist, Milton Dabibi.  Union leaders have criticized 
the arbitration system's dependence on the labor minister's 
referrals.  The Labor Minister typically makes few referrals 
to the IAP.  The IAP and NIC are now active following the 
government's appointment of new members, but sorely lacking 
in resources. 
 
 
Under the law, a worker under a collective bargaining 
agreement may not strike unless his union has met the 
requirements of the Trade Disputes Act, including mandatory 
mediation and referral of the dispute to the Government.  The 
act allows the Government in its discretion to refer the 
matter to a labor conciliator, arbitration panel, board of 
inquiry, or the National Industrial Court.  The Act forbids 
any employer from granting a general wage increase to its 
workers without prior government approval.  In practice, 
however, the law is widely ignored.  Public and private 
sector strikes are widespread, and private sector wage 
increases are not submitted to the government for prior 
approval. 
 
 
The government retains broad legal authority over labor 
matters and often intervenes in disputes seen to challenge 
key political or economic objectives.  But the era of 
government domination of unions through handpicked "sole 
administrators" is now over.  The labor movement is 
increasingly active and strident on issues affecting the 
ordinary worker.  During 2001 the Nigeria Labour Congress in 
particular has spoken out often on issues ranging from 
economic reform, fuel price deregulation, privatization, 
globalization, tariffs, corruption, contract workers, and 
political issues. 
 
 
The labor movement in February gathered in Abuja to form a 
"civil-society-based" political party, which would feature 
strong labor representation.  Although the event generated 
much interest and attracted senior government attendance, 
funding for the party remains a sticking point. 
 
 
The government has directed each state administration to 
establish its own salary structure based on its ability to 
pay and in accord with the national minimum wage (see section 
6.e.).  The government's decision, taken without broad 
consultation, caught several states by surprise.  Many state 
governments have found it difficult to pay the approximately 
$60 (6500 Naira) monthly minimum wage to their employees, 
without massive layoffs, and the elimination of "ghost 
workers." 
 
 
An export-processing zone (EPZ) is being developed in 
Calabar, Cross River State, and a second is planned for Port 
Harcourt, Rivers State.  Workers and employers in such zones 
are subject to national labor laws, which provide for a 
ten-year amnesty on trade unions from the startup of an 
enterprise.  This feature of Nigeria's EPZ framework 
attracted negative comment from the ILO. 
c. Prohibition of forced or compulsory labor 
 
 
The 1974 Labor Decree and the 1999 Constitution prohibit 
forced or compulsory labor.  However, trafficking in women 
and children for purposes of forced prostitution and forced 
labor is a problem (see section 6.f), and enforcement of the 
law is not effective. 
 
 
Although employment of persons under 18 years of age 
generally is prohibited, except for agriculture and domestic 
work, the government does not specifically prohibit forced 
and bonded labor by children.  There are occasional reports 
of forced child labor, including child slavery rings 
operating between Nigeria and neighboring countries (see 
sections 5 and 6.f).  The reports suggest that Nigerian 
children are exported to other African countries for domestic 
and agricultural work.  Children from neighboring countries 
are also imported to Nigeria for work as domestic servants. 
d. Status of child labor practices and minimum age for 
employment 
 
 
The 1974 Labor Decree prohibits employment of children less 
than 15 years of age in commerce and industry, and restricts 
other child labor to home-based agricultural or domestic 
work.  The law states that children may not be employed in 
agricultural or domestic work for more than 8 hours per day. 
The decree allows the apprenticeship of youths at the age 13 
under specific conditions. 
 
 
Primary education is compulsory, although this requirement 
rarely is enforced.  Studies indicate declining school 
enrollment due to deteriorated public schools and increased 
economic pressures on families.  The lack of sufficient 
primary schools and the high cost of school fees limits many 
families' access to education, inducing them to place their 
children in the labor market.  Economic hardship leads to 
high numbers of children in commercial activities aimed at 
enhancing meager family income.  Children are frequently 
employed as beggars, hawkers, and bus conductors in urban 
areas.  The use of children as domestic servants is common. 
According to an ILO statement in 1998, and data from UNICEF, 
the incidence of child prostitution is growing (see section 
5). 
 
 
The 1974 Labor Decree and the 1999 constitution prohibit 
forced or compulsory labor, a prohibition that extends to 
children, although they are not mentioned specifically in the 
laws.  There continue to be cases of trafficking in children 
as indentured servants or for criminal activities such as 
prostitution (see section 6.f.). 
 
 
Private and government initiatives to stem the growing 
incidence of child employment exist but are ineffective, 
given the size of the problem, and the need for a 
well-functioning legal system.  UNICEF operates programs that 
remove young girls from the street hawking trade and relocate 
them to informal educational settings.  UNICEF believes it is 
only scratching the surface of the problem. 
 
 
In conjunction with the ILO, the government is building a 
national program of action in support of child rights, 
survival, protection, development and participation. 
 
 
The labor ministry has an inspections department whose major 
responsibilities include enforcement of legal provisions 
relating to conditions of work and protection of workers. 
There are less than 50 inspectors for the entire country. 
The ministry conducts inspections only in the formal business 
sector, in which the incidence of child labor is not 
significant. 
E. Acceptable conditions of work 
 
 
The 1974 Labor Decree set a minimum wage, which is reviewed 
from time to time.  Private sector minimum wages increased 
this year to match the 2000 increase in the public sector 
wage scale.  However, the statutory private sector minimum 
wage is irrelevant because real private sector wages greatly 
exceed the minimum wage.  In early 2001 the national police 
went unpaid for several months. 
 
 
The 1974 Labor Decree calls for a 40-hour workweek, two to 
four weeks annual leave, and overtime and holiday pay.  The 
1974 Labor Decree sets out general health and safety 
provisions, some of which are aimed specifically at young or 
female workers.  It requires that the factory division of the 
Ministry of Labor and Employment inspect factories for 
compliance with health and safety standards, but this agency 
is greatly understaffed, lacks basic resources and training. 
In addition, the labor ministry often fails to reimburse 
inspectors for expenses incurred in traveling to inspection 
sites.  Consequently, safety oversight of many enterprises is 
widely neglected and safety standards are quite low for 
indigenous enterprises. 
 
 
The Decree requires employers to compensate injured workers 
and dependent survivors of those killed in industrial 
accidents.  The Labor Ministry, which is charged with 
enforcement of these laws, has been ineffective in 
identifying violators.  The government has failed to action 
various ILO recommendations since 1991 to update its program 
on inspection and accident reporting.  The Labor Decree does 
not provide workers with the right to remove themselves from 
dangerous work situations without loss of employment. 
F. Trafficking in persons 
 
 
No specific law makes trafficking in persons a crime.  There 
is an active and growing market for trafficking in women and 
children within the region and to Europe for illicit 
purposes.  The full nature and scope of the trade remains 
unknown, but is considered extensive.  Immigration and police 
officials throughout Europe report a steady flow of Nigerian 
women entrapped and sold into prostitution in Europe, 
particularly Italy, the Netherlands, Spain, and the Czech 
Republic.  Italian authorities deported several hundred sex 
workers to Nigeria during the year.  Other European countries 
deported smaller numbers of Nigerian trafficking victims. 
Nigerian Police officials claim that Nigerian women, though 
seeking emigration for economic reasons, are often recruited 
and trafficked to Europe through well-organized trafficking 
syndicates run by Nigerian criminals.   Evidence shows that 
these Nigerian trafficking syndicates use indebtedness, 
threats of beatings and/or rape, and threats of violence to 
the victim,s family back in Nigeria to keep the trafficked 
girls and women enslaved in European sex markets and to 
discourage them from seeking assistance from European police 
agencies or NGOs. 
 
 
Nigerian police report that the families of girls and women 
often condone their entry into the sex trade.  During the 
past year, there was at least one documented case of 
trafficking in children reported in the Lagos metropolis, 
though incidents of trafficking in Lagos and other major 
Nigerian cities are suspected to be commonplace.   The 
absence of more documented reports is believed to be the 
result of ineffective enforcement mechanisms, lack of 
resources, and weak government commitment.  There is evidence 
of trafficking of children to the United States and Europe, 
mostly for the reunification of children with their 
undocumented parents abroad. 
 
 
Basic economic incentives often underlie child trafficking. 
Generally, families who employ children as domestic servants 
(a widespread practice in West Africa) also pay their school 
fees.  Child traffickers receive a monthly payment from the 
employer, part of which is to be remitted to the parents of 
the indentured child servant.  These traffickers take 
advantage of a cultural tradition of child fostering, under 
which it is culturally acceptable to send a child to live and 
work with a more prosperous family in an urban center in 
return for educational and vocational advancement. 
 
 
According to ILO reports, there is an active and extensive 
trade in child laborers, some of whom are exported to 
Cameroon, Gabon, Benin and Equatorial Guinea to work in 
agricultural enterprises.  Other children are coerced into 
prostitution.  Authorities have identified a trade route for 
traffickers of children for labor through Katsina and Sokoto 
to the Middle East and east Africa.   The eastern part of 
Nigeria and some southern states such as Cross Rivers and 
Akwa Ibom have been the sites of trafficking of children for 
labor and, in some cases, human sacrifice.  Nigeria remains a 
destination for the trafficking of Togolese children.  The 
ILO issued a report on child trafficking in the region that 
identified Nigeria as a source area, destination and transit 
area for children trafficking within and the region. 
 
 
The government has conducted few investigations into the 
alleged involvement of government officials in trafficking, 
though this involvement reportedly is widespread. 
 
 
There is draft legislation now under review in the National 
Assembly that would make trafficking a crime.  There is 
government and societal acknowledgement that trafficking in 
women is a continuing problem, particularly to Europe. 
Police attempts to stem the trafficking of persons are 
inadequate and too often focus on the victims of trafficking, 
who are often subjected to lengthy detention and public 
humiliation upon repatriation to Nigeria.  In contrast, 
traffickers are almost never identified and punished. 
 
 
Awareness campaigns, often conducted by spouses of prominent 
politicians or non-governmental entities, have only recently 
begun to garner widespread attention.  There are few 
statistics with which to determine if progress is being made 
with these campaigns.  The development of a reliable, 
statistically-valid base for assessing the child trafficking 
problem has only recently begun under ILO auspices. 
 
 
A rare and high-profile arrest of a suspected trafficker 
occurred in mid-2001.  Bisi Dan Musa, a prominent Lagos 
businesswoman and wife of a former Presidential aspirant, was 
arrested and charged with 19 counts of &child stealing8 
(kidnapping) and slave dealing after 16 children aged between 
one and four years old were found in her custody. 
 
 
In August, 33 Nigerian women and children intercepted in 
Conakry, Guinea, were repatriated to Nigeria following the 
personal intervention of President Obasanjo.  As of this 
writing, the Nigerian Government is planning to extradite and 
prosecute in Nigeria 15 Nigerian traffickers arrested by 
Guinean authorities in connection with the 33 trafficked 
women and girl. 
Jeter