Nigeria won’t drop death penalty –FG...
Federal Government has sealed the fate
of homosexuals and those clamouring for the abolition of the death
penalty in the Criminal Code.
It has rejected the recommendation by
the United Nations Human Rights Council on the protection of same sex
marriage and abolition of the death penalty.
This is contained in the draft report to
the United Nations Human Rights Council on resolution 16/20 discussed
at a Stakeholders’ Consultative Forum on the second cycle of Nigeria’s
Universal Periodic Review in Abuja on Friday.
Minister of Foreign Affairs, Ambassador
Olugbenga Ashiru, said same sex marriage was against the tradition and
customs of Nigeria, so it could not be imposed on the country by
external forces.
Addressing the representatives of
Nigeria, Ashiru, who wondered why gay rights had generated interest from
the United Nations, queried the negative campaign against polygamy,
which, according to him, was allowed in African tradition.
He said, “You should not shy away from
defending what you believe is right. Whatever is in our constitution,
you must defend it. We must stand by our constitution. We must stand by
our customs and tradition.
“If you want to have gay right in your
constitution; fine, but we have our own constitution. The same human
rights they want to protect for gay people; how about people that want
to go into polygamy if they so desire and women are willing to marry
them. Polygamy is human rights in our tradition.”
On the abolition of death penalty, the
minister said Nigeria should not be blamed because the Criminal Code in
use was enacted by the colonial masters, saying, “If anything is wrong
about it, why are they blaming us?”
Ashiru also denied allegations of
extra-judicial killings by the military against the Boko Haram
insurgents in Borno, Yobe and Adamawa states, where emergency rule had
been proclaimed by President Goodluck Jonathan.
Challenging those with credible evidence
to come forward, Ashiru maintained that the record of Nigeria’s
military in peace keeping mission was unassailable.
The Executive Secretary of the National
Human Rights Commission, Prof. Bem Angwe, said Nigeria had done
creditably well in Human Rights.
Although he noted that the country had
some obligations to the United Nations, he said no country could dictate
to another because as a sovereign nation, Nigeria has the right to
protect the interests of its citizens.
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