Dear Mr President
Muhammadu Buhari,
This article
is fully powered by HR Lawyer/Activist Femi Aborisade a “must read”. Please I
am not Very Learned Author FA who wrote it. He did not consult anyone before he
wrote his verses as he is a learned man of legal conscience and learned
thoughts. I am just sharing country post.
Leave me out of it, I am innocent. Duke
with Aborisade man-to-man; bet from SW not SE or SS, touch him your Excellency
and your bond with SW would come to an abrupt end, this minute.
Trust me!
CA
A breakup of Nigeria will not solve any of the social
problems confronting Nigeria … – Femi Aborisade
December 4, 2015
The continued peaceful co-existence of
peoples and societies internationally lies in the continued collective defence
of universally recognised human rights. No room should be given for tyranny to
triumph under the pretext of protecting ‘national interest’. It is at the
background of this principled position that I wish to contribute to the debate
on the constitutionality or legality of some states of the Nigerian Federation
that have adopted own flags, anthems, and so on. Some leaders of the civil
society have declared that such phenomena as states adopting independent flags
and anthems are unconstitutional and therefore illegal. I wish to differ on the
following grounds.
Under the Nigerian Constitution and
under international human rights law, there is recognition of the right to the
protection, promotion of the existence of national, ethnic, cultural,
religious, and linguistic identities in individual geographic units. It is
trite to state categorically that international law recognizes the right to
self determination of peoples, contrary to the views that have been peddled.
What needs to be clarified is that there are two aspects of self-determination,
namely: external and internal self-determination. It is the internal form of
self-determination that international law recognizes. To my knowledge, the
States of the Nigerian Federation that have adopted their own flags, anthems,
etc, do so, not in an attempt to exercise external form of self-determination
(that is not to secede) but in an exercise of the right to internal
self-determination (that is to exercise the right to community or collective
self-expression) within the Federal Republic of Nigeria.
Articles 1 and 55 of the UN Charter
(that is UN Constitution) expressly recognize the rights of peoples to
self-determination. The self-determination here is to be understood as internal
self-determination. For the avoidance of any doubt, the UN Charter defines
‘peoples’ as a group of human beings, who may or may not comprise States or
nations.
The verbatim provisions of the UN
Charter and the African Union are reproduced below.
Article 1 sub (2) of the UN Charter provides:
Article 1 sub (2) of the UN Charter provides:
The purposes of the United Nations are:
(2). To develop friendly relations among nations based on respect for the principle of equal rights and SELF-DETERMINATION of peoples, and to take other appropriate measures to strengthen universal peace.
(2). To develop friendly relations among nations based on respect for the principle of equal rights and SELF-DETERMINATION of peoples, and to take other appropriate measures to strengthen universal peace.
Also Article 20(1) of the African
Charter, which has been domesticated, provides:
All peoples shall have the right to
existence. They shall have the unquestionable and inalienable right to
self-determination. They shall freely determine their political status and
shall pursue their economic and social development according to the policy they
have freely chosen.
A basic requirement for membership of
the international society of nations is acceptance of the aims and objectives
of the Charter, which includes three main obligations with regard to human
rights: respect, protect and fulfill. Any nation state that is not prepared to
accept or accommodate the right to self determination is not fit to belong to
the international society of modern nation-states.
I may appreciate the concern of those
who condemn states’ initiative at expressing their unique identity. It may be
that they are concerned that Nigeria should not break. I share that concern
because a breakup of Nigeria will not solve any of the social problems
confronting Nigeria. A breakup may just result into a formal replication of the
problems in the individual nation-states that may emerge.
However, the recognition of the right
to self-determination, whether internal or external, is recognition that no
force can permanently hold a country together. The continued existence of the
various ethnic groups making up Nigeria can only be conditional, conditioned on
recognition of fundamental human rights of individuals, peoples, and ethnic
groups, their cultural, religious, linguistic and political rights. In a
situation in which genocide is being committed with impunity on a daily basis,
a consensus must be reached that those committing such mass criminal atrocities
do not deserve to live in the community of the human race of the 21st century.
Where it is becoming difficult to reach such a basic consensus, ultimate
disintegration of Nigeria will be inevitable. It will not be a question of ‘if’
but a question of when and how? Though that would, unfortunately, be at huge
costs.
Whatever happens, societies can only be
taken forward by recognizing, advocating, respecting, protecting and fulfilling
basic human rights. No organisation or individual who has had the opportunity
of leading credible organizations that enjoy public confidence should support
views or perspectives that could empower wielders of political power to
suppress peaceful expression or exercise of preferences by individuals,
communities, ethnic groups, states or ‘peoples’.
I hope the various leaders of the civil
society organisations would continue to defend peaceful exercise of basic human
rights, including the right to self-determination, where and when circumstances
compel such choices. Therein lies the guarantee for the continued existence of
non-state organisations.
Mr. Femi Aborisade is a Labor Law
practitioner and a human rights advocate
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