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Help Make Helen Ukpabio Face Justice

Target: President Umaru Musa Yar'Adua, Inspector-General of Police Sir Mike Mbama Okiro
Sponsored by:

As concerned members of the Nigerian and International community, we have been watching in great horror the activities of Evangelist Helen Ukpabio for some time now.

After having noted the recent great damage done to Nigeria's reputation by this false prophet's un-Christian teachings, we now feel that we have no option but to call upon the Nigerian Federal Government, Inspector General of Police, Akwa Ibom State Government and Cross River State to act to prevent any further embarrassment being caused. We believe that the recent attacks of innocent NGO staff and children at the CRARN children's centre were orchastrated by Mrs Ukpabio in an attempt by her to deflect criticism of her and her church's role in the labeling of children as witches, an act which has led to the widepread abuse of child rights taking place in the South-South region. Such violent abuse and labelling of innocent children is clearly an abuse of the Child Rights Act (2004) and, as such, we therefore call for the following:

1/ Urgent in-depth investigations into the recent attack on the CRARN centre and the activities of Evangelist Mrs Helen Ukpabio and Liberty Foundation Gospel Ministries to take place for breaches of the recently enacted Child Rights Act, which makes it illegal for children to be labeled as witches.

2/ Closure of all churches found to be labeling children as witches through deliverance or other methods. 3/ Seizure of all assets and illegal wealth of all false prophets such as Helen Ukpabio and redistribution of such funds to rehabilitate the victims of child witch stigmatisation.

4/ Successful prosecution of all pastors and parents found to be labeling children as witches.

We do not wish for the world to continue to focus on Nigeria with negative press and we do appreciate that you continue to monitor the response to the child witch crisis in Nigeria. We wish to encourage you to do everything in your power to fight such perpetrators of evil and uphold the rights of Nigeria's children.

As concerned members of the Nigerian and International community, we have been watching in great horror the activities of Evangelist Helen Ukpabio for some time now. After having noted the recent great damage done to Nigeria's reputation by this false prophet's un-Christian teachings, we now feel that we have no option but to call upon the Nigerian Federal Government, Inspector General of Police, Akwa Ibom State Government and Cross River State to act to prevent any further embarrassment being caused. We believe that the recent attacks of innocent NGO staff and children at the CRARN children's centre were orchastrated by Mrs Ukpabio in an attempt by her to deflect criticism of her and her church's role in the labeling of children as witches, an act which has led to the widepread abuse of child rights taking place in the South-South region. Such violent abuse and labelling of innocent children is clearly an abuse of the Child Rights Act (2004) and, as such, we therefore call for the following:

1/ Urgent in-depth investigations into the recent attack on the CRARN centre and the activities of Evangelist Mrs Helen Ukpabio and Liberty Foundation Gospel Ministries to take place for breaches of the recently enacted Child Rights Act, which makes it illegal for children to be labeled as witches.

2/ Closure of all churches found to be labeling children as witches through deliverance or other methods. 3/ Seizure of all assets and illegal wealth of all false prophets such as Helen Ukpabio and redistribution of such funds to rehabilitate the victims of child witch stigmatisation.

4/ Successful prosecution of all pastors and parents found to be labeling children as witches.

We do not wish for the world to continue to focus on Nigeria with negative press and we do appreciate that you continue to monitor the response to the child witch crisis in Nigeria. We wish to encourage you to do everything in your power to fight such perpetrators of evil and uphold the rights of Nigeria's children.

signature goal: 10,000
Please take time to sign Help Make Helen Ukpabio Face Justice. This is in response to the recent campaign of terror that was inflicted upon the staff and children at the CRARN center in Eket, Nigeria and the legal cases that have been sponsored by Helen Ukpabio to make Stepping Stones Nigeria and CRARN face false charges of fraud and "threat to life".
Please do show your support and sign this petition. If you could also forward to any other contacts around the world that would be wonderful. Previous petitions have significantly helped us with our campaign to protect and promote the rights of so-called child witches in Nigeria.
Please do not be cynical about such petitions. We really can use them to affect positive change! More information about the recent campaign of terror at the CRARN center can be found at: http://www.crin.org/violence/search/closeup.asp?infoID=20503 Akwa Ibom State Government Response can be found at: http://www.ngrguardiannews.com/metro/article03//indexn3_html?pdate=130709&ptitle=Akpabio%20donates%20N10%20million%20to%20centre%20for%20stigmatized%20kids&cpdate=130709 Helen Ukpabio response can be found at: http://thenationonlineng.net/web/articles/11667/1/Assassins-are-after-me-Helen-Ukpabio-cries-out/Page1.html
With sincere thanks for all your ongoing support,

Who will save the children of Akwa Ibom?

Who will save the children of Akwa Ibom?
My Naija News - Sunday, 21 December 2008

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I am outraged by the way the children are treated. Labeled as witches by Evangelical pastors to extort money from their parents. Starved, tortured, abandoned and even killed because their parents are afraid. Something needs to be done about this. This needs to stop! PLEASE CONSIDER SIGNING THE PETITIONS FOR THE CHILDREN.

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Thursday, March 26, 2009

Nigerians and jungle justice

By Yemi Ademowo Johnson

The rumble in the Nigerian political jungle, most especially the Appeal Court judgments, seems to have blanketed every other issue that needs urgent atten tion in the polity. While not controverting Nkrumah’s saying of “seeking first the political kingdom”, a discerning mind must likewise know that security and justice are also vital as politics. One of such issues that begs for urgent attention, and if need be, legislative intervention is a form of extra-judicial killing known as jungle justice.

A scene in the Shakespearean epic play, Julius Caesar, gives a classic example of what the improper management of our five minutes psychiatric disorder could do to our sense of sane judgment. In the scene, a “perverted” mob having listened to Mark Anthony’s ode at the funeral of Caesar seized Cinna, and days after; they lynched him only to realize that he didn’t kill Caesar. But the irrevocable harm had already been done. This is a typical example of what is commonplace in many Nigerian cities and towns; the record of the Nigerian Police Force in various divisions across Nigeria speaks volume of this development. Newspapers’ headlines say it all: “Three lynched in Lagos for alleged theft”, “Five burnt alive for robbery”, “Irate youths set suspected witch ablaze”, “Teenager roasted for snatching phone set”. Guilty or not, it is undeniable that countless persons have been sent to the land beyond for being suspected of having committed one offence or the other.

If anyone is still in the dark as to the essence of writing on this topic, let’s define “jungle justice” for more clarification. Jungle justice is a form of extra-judicial killing wherein a suspect on apprehension (or being caught) is condemned to death either by beating or burning. In some cases, some are not even caught in the act but “merely suspected” to have partaken or have the intention of partaking in the act. “Instant judgment” which in most cases is death penalty is the goal of jungle justice. The mob therefore becomes the arrester, the prosecutor, the judge and the executioner. And because it is not easy to combine the duties involved in these roles without conflict, the last role, the executioner role, is prioritized over others. This usually makes the “judgment” very fast to deliver; within ten minutes, (with total disregard for judicial jargons such as fair hearing, procedural objections and cross examination), the judgment is passed and executed without option of appeal. This, undoubtedly, is man’s cruelty against fellow man!

The question is: why turn to instant judgment when there are governmental agencies to take care and possibly prosecute arrested suspects? This question is asked on the premise that it is not wrong for responsible citizens to apprehend suspected criminals. But having the duty to assist the law enforcement agency in arresting does not transcend to prosecution; citizens are simply to arrest and hand over such persons to the agency in charge of the offence for possible prosecution. They are not to beat to death nor set ablaze the suspect. One is, however, mindful of the opinion that is rife in the public arena that policemen are not trustworthy.

Take the case of a middle age man caught with his group while robbing a family and handed over to the police by a popular militia group in Lagos. Two weeks later, the same man was caught while attempting to escape after robbing a whiteman three streets from the last operation. Unfortunately for him, the mob violently resisted the police attempt to rescue him from their “blood thirsty” fury. He was decorated with two unused tyres, bathed with two litres of premium motor spirit (petrol) and then set ablaze. Although the mob that perpetrated this act may appear justified based on the fact that he was earlier spared of the dastard treatment, the fact remains that he should not have been killed! While he should not be spared of maximum shishi (serious beating), if caught in the act, he should not be burnt. Setting him ablaze, or beating him to death, does not correct him but rather it is a kind of vengeance. And since most people agree that the goal of punishment should not be vengeance but correction or reformation, it then follows that jungle justice is wrong.

Two factors are clearly responsible for the prevalence of the act (as could be gleaned from the case cited above): lack of trust in the police and peoples’ frustration. The Nigeria Police pride themselves as the friend of the public but the public seem not to have the feeling of friendship towards the police. Policemen are seen as nothing but a paragon of corruption. This unhealthy feeling of distrust is the result of the dealings of the public with the police; the countless unjustifiable arrests, victimization and prosecution of innocent citizens while criminals walk freely and enjoy police protection. The distrust in the “men in black”, as the Nigeria policemen are erroneously called because of their black uniform, results in lack of public confidence in the manner they handle criminal cases and consequently the people evolve an instant judgment scheme, that is, jungle justice, to counter police corrupt handling of criminal cases. The frustrations experienced by the public in the hands of dare devil robbers and the inability of the law enforcement agents to adequately tackle the cases, have been proffered as the second reason for the resolve to mob justice. According to the argument, the distrust is not a sole factor but also, in some cases, the incapacitation/helplessness of the law enforcement agents. More so, it has been discovered that it is mostly the economically frustrated citizens around, like the unemployed persons and the street urchins, a.k.a Area Boys, that have been battered in the search for daily bread, that vent their anger on the suspect. It then becomes an avenue for such person to ease off the bottled frustration in them.

As plausible as the two reasons might sound, both seem not to have considered innocent victims of the dastard act. Besides, the suspects are also assumed innocent by the Nigerian legal system until found guilty “by a competent court of law”. Whether deliberately shunned or ignorantly done, the law of the land must not be trampled upon for any reason. This is the dictate of the rule of law. Therefore, the law should be allowed to take its course in both directions: on the suspects and the irate mob. The suspect according to the law is innocent, even if caught in the act, until found guilty. So be it! Whoever pronounced him/her guilty in act or deed outside of a “competent court of law” violates the law; and since law is no respecter of persons or group, such should be prosecuted accordingly; such person or group of persons should be charged with manslaughter or complicity in murder.

Our polity surely craves for sanity and the only way we can instill some sanity is to, at least, tame the rampaging increase in mob justice in our polity by enacting a law specifically banning and recommending appropriate jail term/fine to deter the perpetrators. Frankly speaking, the culprits or suspects have wrecked havocs on their victims but since two wrongs don’t make a right, burning or beating them to death surely is no panacea to the problem. Rather, the Nigerian government should be more responsible in providing jobs and opportunities for the commonplace idle hands, the potential devil’s workshops, which can readily become either the suspect or a member of the “mad mob”.

Johnson is Editor, YouthSpeak, Belgium

NIGERIAN TRIBUNE - Opinion


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Witch Children in Nigeria!

Children Learn What They Live (2005)

If a child lives with criticism, he learns to feel discouraged

If a child lives with hostility, he learns to feel angry

If a child lives with violence, he learns to feel afraid

If a child lives with dishonesty, he learns to feel suspicious

If a child lives with judgement, he learns to feel guilty

If a child lives with ridicule, he learns to feel ashamed

If a child lives with disorder, he learns to feel confused

If a child lives with disappointment, he learns to feel helpless

If a child lives with silence, he learns to feel lonely

BUT

If a child lives with protection, he learns to feel safe

If a child lives with honesty, he learns to feel trustful

If a child lives with peace, he learns to feel calm

If a child lives with sharing, he learns to feel thankful

If a child lives with understanding, he learns to feel encouraged

If a child lives with laughter, he learns to feel happy

If a child lives with creativity, he learns to feel inspired

If a child lives with choice, he learns to feel free

If a child lives with community, he learns to feel supported

If a child lives with accomplishment, he learns to feel confident

If a child lives with meaning, he learns to feel fulfilled

If a child lives with love, he learns to feel tender

by Duen Hsi Yen

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