Uproar over Nigeria shoot to kill policy

Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari interacts with country's top military at HQ 1 Brigade in Dansadau Zamfara State, picture, Vanguard

Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari interacts with country’s top military at HQ 1 Brigade in Dansadau Zamfara State, picture, Vanguard

from EMEKA OKONKWO in Abuja, Nigeria
ABUJA, (CAJ News)CIVIL society organisations in Nigeria fear the army could commit extrajudicial killings after President Muhammamadu Buhari ordered the military to “eliminate” bandits.

An extrajudicial killing is carried out without judicial proceeding or legal process.

Buhari gave the order this week and pledged his administration would equip the army so that it would eradicate bandits that are wreaking havoc in the volatile country.

“I don’t want any bandit spared,” Buhari declared.

Some 46 civil society organisations (CSOs) have jointly condemned the order and written to the president to retract.

“This strongly suggests extra-judicial elimination of suspects,” the organisations stated.

This is not the first time Buharihas ordered what human rights groups argue is tantamount to mobilizing state security to carry out extrajudicial killing of suspects.

Ahead of general elections Nigeria held at the beginning of this year, Buhari ordered the police and army to shoot ballot snatchers.

Human rights groups argued this resulted in the state security forces perpetrating violence during the disputed poll.

Buhari, who was elected in 2015 and re-elected this year, is a disciplinarian figure.

He was a military president between 1983 and 1985.

During that tenure, he initiated the so-called War Against Indiscipline.

Civil servants pitching up late for work were forced to do frog jumps while students caught cheating in exams risked a minimum 21 years in jail. Counterfeiting carried a death sentence.

– CAJ News

Chikombedzi mineral rush triggers fears of land degradation

Some of the miners relaxing at the amethyst minefield at Phahlela, Gezani in Chikombedzi under Chief Sengwe. Photo by Patrick Chitongo, CAJ News Africa

Some of the miners relaxing at the amethyst minefield at Phahlela, Gezani in Chikombedzi under Chief Sengwe. Photo by Patrick Chitongo, CAJ News Africa

from PATRICK CHITONGO recently in Gezani, Zimbabwe
GEZANI, (CAJ News) IN scenes reminiscent of over a decade ago, small scale miners have flocked Gezani communal lands, Chikombedzi under Chief Sengwe in Chiredzi district following the discovery of amethyst, a precious stone used in jewelry.

However, there are fears the unregulated mining activities could harm the environment.

The discovery of a gem is set to turn the remote Gezani community in Chikombedzi rural under Chief Sengwe into a mining haven as artisanal miners from all over the country descend on the area.

Three mining companies are already in the area to excavate the purple gem. This has created employment for locals.

The companies are doing open cast mining along Chimbomana Hills and Phahlela area. One of the companies has so far employed over 100 locals. Other mining companies are prospecting for gems at Mahlarini.

International buyers have also pervaded the area. Amethyst is said to fetch US$50 per kilogramme.

Controversy has however trailed the mining of the stones, which are found in some pockets of granite rocks.

Local headman, Ben Gezani, said they were not consulted.

“I know there are some companies who are mining in my area but they never consulted me,” he said in disbelief.

“I sent my aides to check the activities and when they came back they told me that they saw over 100 local people already working on one of the mines. I understand that this has created employment in my area but it is important for investors to come to us first so that we tell them what they must do or not,” Headman Gezani exclusively told Lowveld Post, www.lowveldpost.co.zw.

He feared the lands would be degraded if mining activities were not monitored.

In a separate interview, Chiredzi District Environmental Management Agency (EMA) officer, Peter Mugodhi, told CAJ News Africa the government would probe if the mining firms were compliant.

CAJ News Africa also established that none of the companies were conforming.

“My office received reports of hordes of miners coming to Chikombedzi from as far as Harare and Shurugwi. We are going to do our patrols next week (this week) where we will visit these mines and see if they are mining according to regulations,” Mugodhi said.

Mehluli Moyo, an elder at Kazamula village, also under Chief Sengwe said the gems had been informally mined for a decade but there was not much interest as foreign buyers allegedly misinformed miners the stones were not valuable.

“It’s only recently that we realised that these gems have value. For almost a decade now we used to have people coming here at night to buy the gems but they kept telling us that the stones were of less value. The opening of these three mines is a clear indication that the gems have value abroad,” Moyo said.

A miner who requested anonymity explained why they preferred selling to foreign buyers.

“The local mineral market does not pay handsomely. Foreign buyers buy at an average of $50 per kg,” he said.

Frank Rawlings, a Netherlands national at Mahlarini village, told CAJ News Africa he was in the area to buy amethyst.

There was a mineral rush east of Zimbabwe in 2006 following the discovery of diamonds in Chiadzwa, under Chief Marange in Manicaland province.

Thousands of artisanal miners sparked a water, sanitation and housing crisis.

A 2012 study commissioned by the Zimbabwe Environmental Lawyers Association and conducted by the University of Zimbabwe (UZ) established that operations at the diamond fields were releasing dangerous chemicals into the Save River.

Three diamond mining companies were also found to be at fault.

– CAJ News

Mozambique’s child marriages ban welcomed

Child marriage in Mozambique, photo by UNICEF

Child marriage in Mozambique, photo by UNICEF

from ARIMANDO DOMINGOS in Maputo, Mozambique
MAPUTO, (CAJ News) THE passing of a new bill banning child marriage in Mozambique has been hailed as a historic commitment by the government to uphold the rights of girls.

After a two-and-a half-year campaign by gender equality organisations, government has passed the bill that sets the minimum age for marriage at 18.

This eliminates a loophole in Mozambican family law which made it possible for children to marry at 16, with the consent of their parents.

The bill unanimously passed its second and final reading in the Mozambican parliament and will become law as soon as it has been signed off by President Filipe Nyusi.

Anne Hoff, Country Director of Plan International Mozambique, said the new law paved the way for millions of girls who would have been robbed of their childhoods, to continue their education and reach their potential.

“This could lift a generation of young women out of poverty,” she said.

“Girls have waited long enough for this grave violation of their human rights to end. The new law must come into force as soon as possible,” Hoff said.

Mozambique has one of the highest rates of child marriage in the world.

Almost half of girls marry before 18.

More than one in ten females in the Southern African country are married before their 15th birthday.

– CAJ News

EXCLUSIVE: Jatropha project an inspiring international success

Female black farmer for Jatropha curcas, Julia Thandeka Shungube of Mbangwane, Ehlanzeni district in Mpumalanga, South Africa. Photo by Anna Ntabane, CAJ News Africa

Female black farmer for Jatropha curcas, Julia Thandeka Shungube of Mbangwane, Ehlanzeni district in Mpumalanga, South Africa. Photo by Anna Ntabane, CAJ News Africa

from ANNA NTABANE in Nelspruit, Mpumalanga
MBOMBELA, (CAJ News) BEHIND the thriving essential oils and pharmaceutical sectors in the Mpumalanga Province and neighbouring countries is an enterprise that actually started as a hobby.

Making the success more unimaginable is the fact that the individual spearheading this growth is a woman from a humble background, who was employed as a security guard for 16 years.

“It all started as a hobby,” reminisced Julia Thandeka Shungube (aged 42), the proprietor of Siphandane General Trading.

It is situated in the Mbangwane area in Ehlanzeni District.

The mother of two is involved in the commercial production of Umhlafusha plants (Jatropha curcas).

Established in 2006, inspired by her now-late grandmother, her company is involved in processing the plants to produce castor oils, known for preventing rash and stretch marks, among other benefits.

She supplies her products to various pharmacies around Mpumalanga.

Prominent retail stores are among her clients. Shungube also has agents in Botswana, Mozambique and Swaziland.

“I thought I was just helping my grandmother, who used to do these body oils for us at home when I was young,” she reminisced in an interview with CAJ News Africa.

“She told us not to sell the oil. After she passed on, I then realise that I can make extra cash with this knowledge that she passed to me because the salary from the security job was too small,” Shungube added.

Shungube has through Siphandane General Trading created employment in her community.

Ten workers are permanently employed and a similar number hired seasonally. Among the employed include is a physical challenged man. Overall, there are 11 women, five youth and four men.

“I love empowering women. That is why I have more female employees than men,” Shungube explained.

In addition, her enterprise runs some philanthropic initiatives in the community.

Financial challenges have previously proven a major impediment for the company, but these were eased after the Department of Agriculture, Rural Development, Land and Environmental Affairs to assist with procurement of machinery to grind the Jatropha curcas to oil.

Shungube has won several provincial and national awards- from the first awarded by the departments of Economic Development and Tourism in 2009 and the Sunrise Women Awards in 2018.

She won the Agriculture, Rural Development, Land and Environmental Affairs Female Entrepreneur award, both at provincial and national level, for 2015.

– CAJ News

scroll to top