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Monday, 23 October, 2000, 17:31 GMT
Human rights commission opens in Nigeria
A commission to investigate human rights abuses in Nigeria over the past thirty-five years has opened in the capital, Abuja. The head of the panel a retired judge, Justice Chukwudifu Oputa said it had received ten-thousand petitions alleging abuses from members of the public. However, he said, the commission would concentrate on only the two-hundred cases which appeared to involve gross abuses of human rights. He said a list would be made available tomorrow at the start of the public hearings. People will be invited to answer charges against them, and witnesses will be called. The inquiry -- which is modelled on South Africa's Truth and Reconciliation Commission -- has no power to sentence, but can determine responsibility. From the newsroom of the BBC World Service |
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