News

Obi Of Onitsha Urges Collective Effort To Address Violence Against Women, Vulnerable People

image

The Obi of Onitsha, Igwe Nnaemeka Alfred Achebe, has called for collective responsibility in addressing violence against women and vulnerable people. 

He said this on Wednesday during an interview on Channels Television’s The Morning Brief, noting that his community has certain rules to protect women and other vulnerable groups against violence.

“We are using culture to protect not only girls and women, but to protect everybody: the widows, the disabled, the down-and-out, and the unhealthy,” he said on the breakfast show.

“It is about coming together within our community, the way we organize, and taking care of each other. We have our rules, regulations, and guidelines; when people act otherwise, the system calls them to order. It’s working for us.”

READ ALSO: Lagos State Launches Tools For Domestic, Sexual Violence Survivors, Reporters

The traditional ruler said the Onitsha community has discarded “certain elements that don’t make sense today” in a bid to curtail domestic violence and other acts inimical to women.

“We have the authority within our traditional council to make those decisions,” he said. “We have a very robust organization active in transforming our community to effectively bring it into the 21st century.”

‘Culture Has To Be Dynamic’

Igwe Achebe listed enlightenment campaigns and the embracing of dynamism as key ingredients that societies need to be on par with the realities of modern times.

“Culture is the way of life of a people. As has just been said, culture has to be dynamic. People oftentimes misunderstand that dynamism, but it must be there because culture exists to serve the people,” the respected king said.

“From ancient times, our ancestors’ worldview was very limited. The sun rising in the east and setting in the west was a mystery.

VIDEO: I Don’t Need Constitution To Advise President, Governor — Emir Sanusi

image

The Emir of Kano, Muhammadu Sanusi II, has harped on the role of traditional institutions in nation-building and good governance.

Speaking on Channels Television’s Morning Brief, Emir Sanusi said he doesn’t need the constitution to advise the president or a state governor on issues affecting the nation.

According to him, he has the authority to provide counsel to the constituted authorities from the people he leads.

Sanusi said, “Do I need to be told to advise the President? Do I need the Constitution to tell me that if I think there is something the country needs, I should go to the President and say, ‘Mr President, I think this is wrong?’

“I don’t need the Constitution. I don’t need the Constitution to tell the governor that I think this is what we should be doing. I get that authority from being a leader of the people.

“I know there are people who think that we need to have something in the Constitution. What is in the constitution that traditional rulers are there to advise us? We respect that you have executive authority of the governor; times have moved.”

READ ALSO: Thieves Shouldn’t Be Rewarded With Ministerial Appointments – Emir Sanusi

During the show, Sanusi emphasized the importance of inclusive political participation, calling for increased women’s representation in nation-building efforts.

He believes women have crucial roles to enhance more inclusive governance and is calling for more women’s representation in elected positions.

The traditional ruler also condemned domestic violence against women in Nigerian society, saying it is wrong for a man to beat a woman because his culture says so.

He said men take advantage of their power to oppress, noting that women are also humans entitled to protection, regardless of their nature.

“Violence happens in all societies. It’s not about an African culture. It’s about power relations where you have men having power and women are not protected, men will take advantage of that power and oppress them.

“And in our society, the weak and the vulnerable are victims. You have women who are victims of violence. You have young children, you have the poor, you have the disabled. Okay, they’re all victims. If you go to hospital, you find crippled women, blind women, who are victims. You have pediatric sexual abuse.

“So we need to first of all say that as a country, we have citizens and human beings, and they have rights. Those rights are inviolable. You cannot violate them in the name of a culture.

“You cannot beat a woman because your culture says you can beat her. She’s a Nigerian citizen entitled to protection. It doesn’t matter what you think because these are the values that we live by in this time,” Sanusi added.

Watch the video below:

How Israel destroyed Gaza’s health system ‘deliberately and methodically’

After the partial reopening of the Rafah crossing between Gaza and Egypt this week, the world’s attention turned to the process of allowing a small number of wounded and sick Palestinians out of the besieged territory.

But while these medical evacuations are necessary, advocates say, the core priority must be to rebuild the health system in Gaza, which has been ravaged by Israel’s genocidal war against Palestinians in the Strip.

Recommended Stories

list of 3 itemsend of list

“The Israeli occupation has deliberately and methodically destroyed the health system,” Gaza Ministry of Health spokesperson Zaher al-Wahidi told Al Jazeera in a phone interview.

He outlined five key challenges the health system is facing after 28 months of blockade, bombardment and mass killings, which have not stopped after a United States-brokered “ceasefire” came into force in October: near absence of patient evacuations, lack of medical equipment, shortage of medication, destruction of facilities and need for medical workers.

He called on the “people of the free world and anyone who can lend a helping hand” to pressure Israel to fully open the Rafah crossing and allow medication and medical equipment into Gaza, as well as specialised teams to help healthcare workers.

Yara Asi, a Palestinian-American public health expert at the University of Central Florida, said the needs of the devastated health system in Gaza have not changed since the “ceasefire” took effect.

“The problem is just not in the news as much now,” she told Al Jazeera, describing how Gaza’s health and humanitarian sector is a “victim” of the “short attention spans” of donors and international actors.

“The ceasefire took the throttle off,” Asi said.

“A lot of the same needs and conditions still exist. All those tens of thousands of people with injuries still have injuries.”

Lack of medicine

The devastation and lack of access to medical care have killed thousands of Palestinians, experts say.

For example, there were 1,244 kidney patients in Gaza before the start of the war in October 2023. Now that number stands at 622, al-Wahidi said.

While 30 were documented to have been killed in direct Israeli attacks, al-Wahidi estimated that hundreds of others died from lack of access to dialysis services.

And the crisis is ongoing.

Despite the “ceasefire”, al-Wahidi said, thousands of people in Gaza are also at risk of dying due to shortages in medication.

“With medicine, the deficit has grown after the ‘ceasefire’. Although the number of injuries has gone down relatively, the lack of medicine has gotten worse, reaching 52 percent. This is a rate that we did not reach throughout the war,” al-Wahidi told Al Jazeera.

The medicine deficit for chronic illnesses is at 62 percent, he added.

“That means 62 percent of people with chronic conditions are not able to take their medication regularly, which leads to deterioration in health, which leads to death,” al-Wahidi said.

There are 350,000 patients with chronic illnesses in Gaza, according to the Health Ministry.

Al-Wahidi said people with long-term illnesses need regular medical attention, tests and visits with physicians – services that were inaccessible throughout the war due to repeated displacement and Israeli attacks on medical centres.

“I don’t think any hypertension patient has been able to see a doctor regularly since the war started. And if they managed to get medical attention, we don’t have enough medication for everyone,” he said.

According to the Gaza Government Media Office, Israeli attacks have put 22 hospitals in Gaza out of service and damaged 211 ambulances.

So, beyond equipment and doctors, the physical medical buildings in Gaza have also been severely damaged.

Al-Wahidi said there are no functioning hospitals left in northern Gaza. “People have to come to Gaza City, often on foot, walking several kilometres to reach al-Shifa Hospital or al-Ahli Hospital,” he said.

Medical evacuations crucial

Amid this widespread destruction, health advocates say restoring Gaza’s health system should go hand-in-hand with evacuating patients who need urgent care.

Mohammed Tahir, a trauma surgeon who volunteered in Gaza during the war, described the situation of the health sector in the territory as “dire”.

“The hospitals in Gaza have been destroyed. Its doctors, its nurses have been killed, imprisoned, forced to flee,” he told Al Jazeera.

“The facilities are in squalor, really. There is a huge gap in terms of the surgical equipment required – the ICU facilities, the dialysis machines, the diagnostic devices there, the provision of medicines from antibiotics to painkillers to those required for managing chronic conditions.”

Israeli officials and US President Donald Trump have repeatedly expressed plans for removing all Palestinians from Gaza.

Tahir said while concerns about ethnic cleansing in Gaza are valid, medical evacuations are necessary to treat people who need specialised care and lessen the burden on the medical system.

“What we want to do is to take these patients that need evacuation out of Gaza into other healthcare systems and create a method to repatriate them to Gaza,” he said.

Tahir stressed that transferring people with complex injuries and conditions would free up medical resources for routine healthcare services in the territory.

“That allows the people of Gaza to treat the normal, regular conditions,” he said. “People still walk in the streets. They fall over; they break their hip; they break their ankle; that needs treatment, and we need to empower them to manage these day-to-day conditions as well.”

Tarik Jasarevic, a spokesperson for the World Health Organization (WHO), said beyond Rafah, referral pathways must open from Gaza to Jerusalem, the occupied West Bank and across the world.

“What the focus should be now is to rebuild the health system inside Gaza, so we don’t rely so much on evacuations,” Jasarevic told Al Jazeera in a TV interview.

‘De-healthification’ of Gaza

In addition to attacking hospitals across Gaza, Israeli forces regularly ordered the evacuation of medical centres and raided them under the unfounded claim that they were used as command centres by the Palestinian group Hamas.

Public health experts say a functioning medical system is more than a place where people can get treatment; it is a tenet of a viable society – and that is exactly what Israel tried to dismantle.

One of the acts that constitute a genocide, according to the 1948 United Nations Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, is deliberately inflicting on the targeted group “conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part”.

Asi, the public health expert, pointed to footage of Israeli soldiers filming themselves smashing hospital equipment as further evidence that the systemic targeting of the health sector in Gaza was deliberate.

She said the Israeli campaign against the health system “should be, in and of itself, seen as part of the perpetuation of creating” conditions to destroy the Palestinian people.

Asi added that researchers know from past conflicts that many people are pushed to leave their homes and neighbourhoods when the last clinic or hospital is closed.

“People know that they cannot live without healthcare. So it’s a tool of displacement. It’s a tool of ensuring that reconstruction, rebuilding people going back to certain areas is, if not impossible, much more difficult,” Asi said.

The Health Ministry’s al-Wahidi said the medical system in the territory served as a “safety valve” for the people throughout the war.

“In any area, people were finding safety in the functioning hospitals. The medical workers would remain until the last minute in the hospitals until they are forcibly removed or detained by Israeli forces,” he told Al Jazeera.

“So, attacking the hospitals and raiding them was a recipe for displacing people. The resilience of the hospitals became the resilience of the people. As long as the hospitals remained standing, the people remained in their land.”

Layth Malhis, a Georgetown University graduate student, recently wrote a report for Al-Shabaka think tank on what he termed the “de-healthification” of Palestine – a longstanding Israeli policy intended to “render Palestinian life unhealable and perishable”.

Malhis told Al Jazeera the Israeli assault on healthcare workers – as symbols of knowledge and social mobility – aimed to psychologically and physically harm Palestinians in Gaza.

“What we saw in the genocide is that the Israelis have treated doctors and nurses and their institutions as combatants – because they understand that if you really want to eviscerate the Palestinians and remove them from their land, you have to get rid of the people that are keeping them alive and resistant and resilient,” he said.

Rebuilding

Despite the enormous challenges, al-Wahidi said, the health sector in Gaza is trying to recover.

“Under the current standards and data and circumstances, it all seems unmanageable, but we are still providing services to the best of our ability,” he said.

Al-Wahidi said the Health Ministry is starting to restore medical buildings with local efforts and materials available on the market.

He added that officials are launching vaccination campaigns and opening new clinics while expanding services at the still-functioning hospitals daily.

“For the first time since the start of the war, we resumed open-heart surgeries at al-Quds Hospital. This is an achievement under these difficult conditions,” al-Wahidi said.

“We also activated childbirth services at 19 medical centres throughout the Gaza Strip. Humble efforts, but we are trying to rebuild the healthcare system with the resources available.”

Asi said Palestinian health workers embody the best of the profession, voicing disappointment that people in the global medical community have largely overlooked the plight of their peers in Gaza.

“The health sector is such a microcosm of Palestinian resilience,” she said.

The cold, hungry reality of displacement in war-torn Sudan’s Tawila

Montaha Omer Mustafa, 18, was among many people who managed to get out of el-Fasher before the city’s seizure by the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) paramilitary group, but only after paying for passage and going days on foot with little water, moving through villages and scrubland.

As fighting closed in on the last big city held by the government-aligned Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) in North Darfur state, tens of thousands of residents fled westwards, abandoning homes, possessions, and even family members.

Recommended Stories

list of 3 itemsend of list

El-Fasher almost emptied in a matter of days in October.

“Armed men stopped us and stole everything of value, gold, cash and food,” Mustafa told Al Jazeera from the Tawila refugee camp, some 50km (30 miles) west of el-Fasher.

Somewhere along the road – amid thirst, fear and the rush of thousands moving at once – her brother disappeared. They searched, then had to keep going.

There was no choice, she said, and she remains unsure of his fate.

Three Sudanese refugees narrated to Al Jazeera about their escape from el-Fasher, making a journey from a city which was under bombardment and siege to the Tawila refugee camp, where the sudden arrival of thousands has pushed already scarce resources to the brink.

‘Ghost town’

What the fleeing people left behind has become a “ghost town”, according to medical charity Doctors Without Borders (also known by its French acronym MSF), whose teams visited the city in January.

MSF said it fears that “a majority of the civilians who were still alive when the RSF seized the city were killed or displaced”.

More than 120,000 people fled the RSF’s capture of el-Fasher – approximately 75 percent of whom were already internally displaced people (IDPs) seeking refuge there – the International Organization for Migration said in January, while the World Food Programme says between 70,000 and 100,000 remain trapped in the city.

Nathaniel Raymond, executive director of the Humanitarian Research Lab at Yale’s School of Public Health, which has been monitoring the war, recounted a rare call last year with someone trapped in el-Fasher, telling Al Jazeera: “They had run out of food and water. And they … saw bodies everywhere … they came out during the night.

“We only got them on the phone once. We haven’t talked to them again.”

RSF accused of more war crimes

The RSF mounted a large offensive to capture el-Fasher late last year, after besieging the city for nearly 18 months.

Its long-anticipated fall, despite the fighters marooned in the city putting up a determined resistance, precipitated mass atrocities in el-Fasher, including the systematic targeting of non-Arab populations, particularly from the Zaghawa and Fur tribes, according to the United Nations and rights groups.

On January 19, the International Criminal Court’s (ICC) deputy prosecutor told the UN Security Council that the RSF had committed war crimes and crimes against humanity during its capture of el-Fasher.

Nazhat Shameem Khan said the fall of the city was followed by a “calculated campaign of the most profound suffering”, particularly targeting members of the Zaghawa and Fur ethnic groups. “This criminality is being repeated in town after town in Darfur,” she said.

Marwan Mohammed, an activist at the Tawila refugee camp, where the majority of the refugees have fled, told Al Jazeera recent escapees described scenes in the city as “the worst they’ve seen”, with neighbourhood streets strewn with corpses.

Satellite imagery analysed by Yale’s Humanitarian Research Lab showed systematic RSF efforts to destroy evidence of mass killings as piles of objects consistent with human remains were formed, large enough to be seen from space.

By late November, 72 percent of the clusters had shrunk and 38 percent were no longer visible.

A Sudan Tribune investigation published in January identified suspected mass graves across el-Fasher, along with secret detention centres where the RSF reportedly murders, rapes, tortures, starves and financially extorts civilians.

RSF leader Mohamed Hamdan “Hemedti” Dagalo acknowledged that his fighters had committed abuses in October and said some perpetrators had been arrested, a move met with scepticism by activists and rights groups.

Mohamed Badawi, a Sudanese human rights activist with the Uganda-based African Centre for Justice and Peace Studies who monitors Darfur, told Al Jazeera that a war economy had emerged to sustain the city, with RSF fighters charging exorbitant prices for goods to enter. The first aid convoy to enter el-Fasher since mid-2024 only came in mid-January.

“The stuff which gets through includes animal feed, salt, really basics for people,” Badawi said.

“The people inside are depending on their friends around the world … who send them money. There are no services inside the city. No water, no internet, no food. It has become a city in the dark centuries,” Badawi added.

Badawi said escaping el-Fasher has now become a system of extortion, with RSF fighters frequently kidnapping fleeing people for ransom.

“People are paying from $500 at the lower end and as much as $1,600,” he told Al Jazeera. “Many people in el-Fasher simply cannot afford this.”

‘My children and I are suffering’

Many of the displaced people leaving el-Fasher make a days-long journey to the Tawila refugee camp, some 50km (31 miles) west, through multiple checkpoints manned by RSF fighters who often charge fees for passage.

There, they join an estimated 1.4 million displaced people in what is now a sprawling network of camps in Tawila.

Long a refuge for those fleeing violence in North Darfur, the town offers distance from the front lines but little else for those on its margins.

“The weather is very cold. We do not have mattresses to sleep on or blankets to cover ourselves. We lack food, and getting water is extremely difficult,” Mustafa, the 18-year-old who lost her brother as she fled, said.

Zahra Mohamed Ali Abakar, 29, who fled el-Fasher months earlier, in June, said: “We sleep on the ground and under the sky.

“There are no tents; people are using sacks to cover themselves from the sun and in cold weather.”

The Sudan Doctors Network warned in October that Tawila’s health facilities are suffering from a severe shortage of medicines and medical supplies, a lack of suitable food for children, and even safe drinking water.

Very little has changed since then, said Mohammed, the activist in the Tawila camp.

Abdalla Ahmed Fadul Abu-Zaid escaped el-Fasher four-and-a-half months ago, after RSF shelling shattered his left leg, forcing doctors to amputate in the city, where medical supplies had all but run out months earlier, he said.

Since arriving in Tawila with his family of eight, they have received aid only twice, small rations of corn that ran out quickly.

His wound still requires regular dressing, but the journey to the hospital is costly, money he does not have.