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President Tinubu, Ali Pate, must intervene now in the 17 house officers rejected by UCTH because they are IGBOS: HURIWA ,…..Rejection of Igbo born medical house officers is criminal

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Comrade Emmanuel Nnadozie Onwubiko

By George Mgbeleke

Prominent pro-democracy and civil rights advocacy group HUMAN RIGHTS WRITERS ASSOCIATION OF NIGERIA (HURIWA) has urged President Bola Ahmed Tinubu to direct his minister of Health and Social Welfare Dr. Ali Pate to immediately resolve the lingering controversy trailing the alleged rejection of seventeen newly posted medical House Officers to the University of Calabar Teaching Hospital (UCTH) just as HURIWA has called for the dissolution of the Governing Board of the teaching hospital and the dismissal of the Chief Medical Director for promoting tribalism and ethnic division.

HURIWA also condemned the Medical, Dental Council for keeping mum on the disturbing development connected to the
Seventeen newly posted medical house officers to the University of Calabar Teaching Hospital (UCTH) who have reportedly accused the hospital management of alleged discriminatory treatment and abrupt rejection.

HURIWA condemned the ethnic chauvinistic tendencies in the University of Calabar Teaching Hospital just as it stated that ethnic chauvinists have no place in the public service of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

“Nearly seventy years after the Nigeria-Biafra civil war, we in the organised civil society community in Nigeria are miffed that some persons are continuously engineering IGBOPHOBIC tendencies and are inflicting punishments to youngsters who were mostly born in the new millennium and are obviously not even aware that there was a civil war that took place nearly a century ago only for them to be rudely and crudely reminded that this war that was fought by their ancestors called Nigeria-Biafra civil war is yet to end.

“It is sad that President Bola Ahmed Tinubu who had to change the national anthem back to the old version that is very emphatic on national integration, cohesion and unity of all ethnicities, has yet to make a public statement on the controversy ignited by the IGBOPHOBIC CHIEF MEDICAL DIRECTOR OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALABAR TEACHING HOSPITAL.

“We are by this statement to the media appealing yo our globetrotting President who is reportedly travelling to Turkey, to immediately direct his minister of Health and Social Welfare Dr Ali Pate to ensure that the Medical and Dental Council of Nigeria which posted the medical house officers enforce their acceptance and commencement of housemanship at the University of Calabar Teaching Hospital immediately just as the President should remove the recalcitrant chief medical director for promoting tribalism in the Federal civil service of the Federation.”

Comrade Emmanuel Nnadozie Onwubiko the National Coordinator of the HUMAN RIGHTS WRITERS ASSOCIATION OF NIGERIA (HURIWA) who endorsed the media statement stressed that the action of the hierarchy of the University of Calabar Teaching Hospital in rejecting the candidates for medical housemanship just for being of Igbo ethnicity, is a direct violation of section 42(1 and (2) of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria as amended which absolutely prohibits discrimination and ethnic chauvinistic tendencies, thus: ” Chapter 4. Section 42. Right to freedom from discrimination
(1) A citizen of Nigeria of a particular community, ethnic group, place of origin, sex, religion or political opinion shall not, by reason only that he is such a person:-
(a) be subjected either expressly by, or in the practical application of, any law in force in Nigeria or any executive or administrative action of the government, to disabilities or restrictions to which citizens of Nigeria of other communities, ethnic groups, places of origin, sex, religions or political opinions are not made subject; or
(b) be accorded either expressly by, or in the practical application of, any law in force in Nigeria or any such executive or administrative action, any privilege or advantage that is not accorded to citizens of Nigeria of other communities, ethnic groups, places of origin, sex, religions or political opinions.

(2) No citizen of Nigeria shall be subjected to any disability or deprivation merely by reason of the circumstances of his birth.”

HURIWA noted that the affected doctors, posted to UCTH by the Medical and Dental Council of Nigeria (MDCN), said they arrived in Calabar from different parts of the country to commence their mandatory one-year housemanship, only to be informed that the hospital would not clear them to resume duty.

One of the house officers, who spoke to the media in Calabar, said they reported at the hospital on a Monday in line with their posting letters issued via the MDCN online portal. “We were issued posting letters instructing us to resume within two weeks. There was no indication that the hospital had rejected us or that clearance was conditional,” the doctor said.

According to the source, the problem began when they reported to the hospital’s administrative unit, where officials informed them that UCTH management had petitioned the MDCN over what it described as “discrepancies” in the posting list.

Hospital officials, the doctors alleged, raised concerns that 15 of the 17 house officers were from the same ethnic group, questioned the absence of any indigene of Cross River State on the list, and queried why only 17 names were posted despite claims that the hospital had capacity for 50 house officers.

“They openly complained about the number of Igbos on the list. At a point, we were told that people from a particular tribe were saturating the hospital,” the source alleged.

The house officers further claimed that the hospital accused some of them of paying to secure postings, an allegation they said was never substantiated.

“They said they had evidence that people paid to get slots, but no proof was shown. Instead of investigating those involved, they rejected all of us,” the doctor added.

The development, according to the affected officers, left many of them stranded after relocating to Calabar. Some said they were forced to sleep on bare floors in makeshift spaces within the hospital premises due to lack of accommodation and uncertainty surrounding their status.

HURIWA is calling for an end to this sort of illegality of denying citizens of their positions only because they are of a particular ethnic group just as HURIWA said this issue demands an immediate presidential intervention.

Opinion

HURIWA Commends Senate’s Oversight On SEDC  -Demands EFCC Probe,Arrests, Reconstitution of Commission’s Board 

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The Human Rights Writers Association of Nigeria (HURIWA) has commended the Senate Committee on the South East Development Commission (SEDC), led by Senator Orji Uzor Kalu, for what it described as a courageous, diligent and constitutionally mandated exercise of legislative oversight in probing the financial activities of the South East Development Commission.

HURIWA


HURIWA in a statement signed by its National  Coordinator,Comrade Emmanuel Nnadozie Onwubiko said the revelations emerging from the Senate investigative hearing on the management of over N16.6 billion released to the Commission from the 2025 budget allocation raise disturbing questions that demand immediate intervention by anti-corruption and law enforcement agencies.

The rights group particularly expressed outrage over allegations presented before the Senate Committee that the Commission allegedly expended N153 million on the rent of a one-room liaison office in Abuja and listed another N2.5 billion under what was reportedly categorized as “implied expenditure.”

According to HURIWA, such allegations, if established through investigation, represent a shocking abuse of public trust and a reckless deployment of scarce public resources at a time millions of citizens in the South-East region continue to grapple with poor infrastructure, youth unemployment, insecurity, inadequate healthcare facilities and widespread economic hardship.

“The Nigerian people are entitled to know how every kobo appropriated for regional development is spent. The allegations emerging from the Senate hearing are deeply troubling and demand immediate, transparent and independent investigation. No public official entrusted with development funds should be allowed to treat public resources as personal assets.”

HURIWA specifically called on the Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) to immediately invite the Managing Director and relevant management officials of the South East Development Commission for interrogation and forensic scrutiny of all expenditures made from the N16.6 billion allocation.

The association stated that the Senate Committee has already performed its constitutional responsibility by exposing apparent discrepancies and demanding accountability and that anti-corruption agencies must now complement that effort through criminal and forensic investigations where necessary.

“If investigations establish financial misconduct, diversion of public funds, inflation of contracts, procurement violations or any form of abuse of office, arrests and prosecutions must follow without delay. Public office holders must understand that accountability is not negotiable and that impunity can no longer be tolerated in institutions created to uplift disadvantaged regions.”

HURIWA noted that the South East Development Commission was established to address decades of infrastructural deficits and developmental neglect in the region and not to become another bureaucratic structure for wasteful spending.

The group expressed disappointment that within a relatively short period of its establishment, the Commission is already facing allegations capable of undermining public confidence in its mandate.

The association contrasted the emerging controversy with the performance of the North East Development Commission (NEDC), which it said has over the years executed numerous transformative projects across the six states of the North-East region.< According to HURIWA, despite challenges associated with post-insurgency reconstruction, the North East Development Commission has become visible through the construction and rehabilitation of roads, schools, hospitals, housing projects, water facilities and other critical infrastructure that have directly impacted millions of citizens. "The South East Development Commission was expected to emulate and even improve upon the developmental template established by the North East Development Commission. Unfortunately, what Nigerians are hearing at this stage are allegations of questionable expenditures rather than reports of transformational projects."

The rights group further argued that the controversies surrounding the management of the Commission have cast serious doubts on the capacity of its current leadership structure to effectively deliver on its statutory mandate.

Consequently, HURIWA called on President Bola Ahmed Tinubu and relevant authorities to urgently review the governance architecture of the South East Development Commission and consider the immediate reconstitution of its governing board in the interest of transparency, credibility and effective service delivery.

HURIWA said that it has not categorically accused the hierarchy of the South East Development Commission of any crimes but stressed that development commissions must be managed by individuals whose commitment to integrity, accountability and prudent management of public resources is beyond reproach.

HURIWA urged the Senate Committee not to relent in its investigation and called on Nigerians, civil society organisations, professional bodies and stakeholders across the South-East to closely monitor developments surrounding the matter. HURIWA hopes that the investigative activities around the management of resources of the SEDC by the anti-graft institutions would be in a position to ascertain if anyone is guilty of these allegations or not. This is a clarion advocacy call for a full investigation.

“The South-East people deserve a development commission that works for the people and not for a privileged few. Every naira appropriated for development must translate into visible projects and measurable improvements in the lives of citizens. Anything short of this constitutes a betrayal of public trust.”

The association reaffirmed its commitment to supporting all lawful efforts aimed at promoting transparency, combating corruption and ensuring that public institutions remain accountable to the Nigerian people.

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Opinion

HURIWA Commends Senate’s Oversight On SEDC  -Demands EFCC Probe,Arrests, Reconstitution of Commission’s Board 

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By George Mgbeleke
The Human Rights Writers Association of Nigeria (HURIWA) has commended the Senate Committee on the South East Development Commission (SEDC), led by Senator Orji Uzor Kalu, for what it described as a courageous, diligent and constitutionally mandated exercise of legislative oversight in probing the financial activities of the South East Development Commission.
HURIWA in a statement signed by its National  Coordinator,Comrade Emmanuel Nnadozie Onwubiko said the revelations emerging from the Senate investigative hearing on the management of over N16.6 billion released to the Commission from the 2025 budget allocation raise disturbing questions that demand immediate intervention by anti-corruption and law enforcement agencies.
The rights group particularly expressed outrage over allegations presented before the Senate Committee that the Commission allegedly expended N153 million on the rent of a one-room liaison office in Abuja and listed another N2.5 billion under what was reportedly categorized as “implied expenditure.”
According to HURIWA, such allegations, if established through investigation, represent a shocking abuse of public trust and a reckless deployment of scarce public resources at a time millions of citizens in the South-East region continue to grapple with poor infrastructure, youth unemployment, insecurity, inadequate healthcare facilities and widespread economic hardship.
“The Nigerian people are entitled to know how every kobo appropriated for regional development is spent. The allegations emerging from the Senate hearing are deeply troubling and demand immediate, transparent and independent investigation. No public official entrusted with development funds should be allowed to treat public resources as personal assets.”
HURIWA specifically called on the Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) to immediately invite the Managing Director and relevant management officials of the South East Development Commission for interrogation and forensic scrutiny of all expenditures made from the N16.6 billion allocation.
The association stated that the Senate Committee has already performed its constitutional responsibility by exposing apparent discrepancies and demanding accountability and that anti-corruption agencies must now complement that effort through criminal and forensic investigations where necessary.
“If investigations establish financial misconduct, diversion of public funds, inflation of contracts, procurement violations or any form of abuse of office, arrests and prosecutions must follow without delay. Public office holders must understand that accountability is not negotiable and that impunity can no longer be tolerated in institutions created to uplift disadvantaged regions.”
HURIWA noted that the South East Development Commission was established to address decades of infrastructural deficits and developmental neglect in the region and not to become another bureaucratic structure for wasteful spending.
The group expressed disappointment that within a relatively short period of its establishment, the Commission is already facing allegations capable of undermining public confidence in its mandate.
The association contrasted the emerging controversy with the performance of the North East Development Commission (NEDC), which it said has over the years executed numerous transformative projects across the six states of the North-East region.
According to HURIWA, despite challenges associated with post-insurgency reconstruction, the North East Development Commission has become visible through the construction and rehabilitation of roads, schools, hospitals, housing projects, water facilities and other critical infrastructure that have directly impacted millions of citizens.
“The South East Development Commission was expected to emulate and even improve upon the developmental template established by the North East Development Commission. Unfortunately, what Nigerians are hearing at this stage are allegations of questionable expenditures rather than reports of transformational projects.”
The rights group further argued that the controversies surrounding the management of the Commission have cast serious doubts on the capacity of its current leadership structure to effectively deliver on its statutory mandate.
Consequently, HURIWA called on President Bola Ahmed Tinubu and relevant authorities to urgently review the governance architecture of the South East Development Commission and consider the immediate reconstitution of its governing board in the interest of transparency, credibility and effective service delivery.
HURIWA said that it has not categorically accused the hierarchy of the South East Development Commission of any crimes but stressed that development commissions must be managed by individuals whose commitment to integrity, accountability and prudent management of public resources is beyond reproach.
HURIWA urged the Senate Committee not to relent in its investigation and called on Nigerians, civil society organisations, professional bodies and stakeholders across the South-East to closely monitor developments surrounding the matter. HURIWA hopes that the investigative activities around the management of resources of the SEDC by the anti-graft institutions would be in a position to ascertain if anyone is guilty of these allegations or not. This is a clarion advocacy call for a full investigation.
“The South-East people deserve a development commission that works for the people and not for a privileged few. Every naira appropriated for development must translate into visible projects and measurable improvements in the lives of citizens. Anything short of this constitutes a betrayal of public trust.”
The association reaffirmed its commitment to supporting all lawful efforts aimed at promoting transparency, combating corruption and ensuring that public institutions remain accountable to the Nigerian people
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Opinion

HURIWA questions FG’S evacuation plan for Nigerians fleeing xenophobia in South Africa; demands justice, compensation*

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By George Mgbeleke

The Human Rights Writers Association of Nigeria (HURIWA) has received with mixed feelings the announcement by the Federal Government of Nigeria regarding the planned evacuation of over 1,000 Nigerians from South Africa following the resurgence of xenophobic attacks against African migrants, including Nigerian citizens.

In a statement signed by National Coordinator,Comrade Emmanuel Nnadozie Onwubiko the group said, “While we commend the Federal Government for eventually assuming responsibility for the transportation costs of the affected Nigerians and facilitating their safe return home, HURIWA believes that the evacuation exercise, standing alone, is grossly inadequate and fails to address the far-reaching humanitarian, economic, diplomatic, legal and moral dimensions of this recurring tragedy.

“Indeed, the proposed evacuation raises more questions than answers.
The first and perhaps most fundamental question is: What becomes of the accumulated wealth, businesses, investments, landed properties, shops, vehicles, equipment, bank deposits and other assets painstakingly acquired by Nigerians who are now being compelled by fear, insecurity and targeted hostility to abandon their lives in South Africa?

“Many of these Nigerians did not arrive in South Africa yesterday. They have lived there for years and, in many cases, for decades. They have paid taxes, established businesses, employed workers, contributed to local economies and built lives through hard work and enterprise. If these citizens are now being forced out by organised xenophobic violence, does the Nigerian government have a framework for pursuing restitution, compensation and legal protection for their assets?

“Will their losses simply be written off as collateral damage while government celebrates the evacuation of victims from a hostile environment?”

HURIWA submits that evacuation without compensation amounts to managing the consequences of injustice while ignoring the injustice itself.

Secondly, what becomes of the thousands of Nigerians who have established families in South Africa?

Many Nigerians are legally married to South African citizens and have children who possess dual heritage and whose identities are intertwined with both countries. These are not merely immigration statistics; they are families, spouses, children and communities.

Has the Nigerian government negotiated safeguards for these mixed-nationality families?

What becomes of the Nigerian husband whose South African wife cannot immediately relocate?

What becomes of the South African spouse whose Nigerian partner is forced to leave?
What happens to children whose education, healthcare, social relationships and future are rooted in South Africa?

What legal and humanitarian mechanisms are being put in place to prevent the fragmentation of families and the emotional trauma that often accompanies forced displacement?

Thirdly, HURIWA is compelled to ask whether Nigeria has fully exhausted the diplomatic mechanisms available through the African Union, the Southern African Development Community (SADC), the United Nations system and other international human rights platforms before resorting to mass evacuation.

Nigeria is not an insignificant nation on the African continent.
Nigeria played pivotal roles in the liberation struggles of Southern Africa. Nigerian taxpayers contributed enormously to anti-apartheid campaigns. Nigeria sacrificed diplomatic, economic and political resources in support of the freedom and dignity of Black South Africans during the dark years of apartheid.

It is therefore deeply troubling that decades after apartheid, Nigerians and other Africans continue to face violent hostility in a country whose liberation Nigeria vigorously supported.

The question therefore is this: Has Nigeria sufficiently leveraged its historic moral authority and diplomatic influence to compel South Africa to discharge its constitutional and international obligations to protect every lawful resident within its territory regardless of nationality?

The recurring xenophobic attacks in South Africa are not merely criminal incidents. They represent repeated assaults on the ideals of African unity, Pan-African solidarity and human dignity.

Even more disturbing is the perception across Africa that perpetrators of xenophobic violence often act with a sense of impunity because accountability remains weak and consequences are minimal.

HURIWA therefore demands that the Nigerian government publicly disclose the diplomatic measures it has initiated to ensure accountability from South African authorities.

Has Nigeria demanded compensation for victims?
Has Nigeria sought guarantees against future attacks?
Has Nigeria requested the prosecution of perpetrators and organisers of xenophobic violence?
Has Nigeria demanded an independent investigation into allegations that some security institutions have either failed to act decisively or have looked the other way while foreign nationals were targeted?
These are legitimate questions that require immediate answers.

Furthermore, HURIWA believes Nigerians deserve to know whether the Federal Government has considered proportionate economic and diplomatic responses to the persistent victimisation of its citizens.
South African businesses continue to thrive in Nigeria under the protection of Nigerian laws and security institutions. Their investments are protected. Their personnel operate freely. Their commercial interests are safeguarded.

Yet, Nigerian citizens in South Africa continue to live under the recurring shadow of xenophobic violence.

While HURIWA is not advocating reckless retaliation, we insist that diplomacy must be accompanied by consequences where repeated violations occur without meaningful corrective action.

No nation that values its citizens should appear indifferent when those citizens are repeatedly subjected to violence, intimidation and displacement abroad.
Another critical concern is the fate of the more than 1,000 Nigerians expected to return home.

What specific reintegration framework has the Federal Government developed for them?
How many jobs have been created for them?
What financial support packages have been approved?
What business recovery schemes have been established?
What psychological counselling and trauma-support programmes have been designed for victims who may have witnessed violence, lost loved ones, lost businesses or suffered severe emotional distress?
The return of displaced citizens should not mark the end of government responsibility; rather, it should signal the beginning of a comprehensive rehabilitation process.
Anything short of that would amount to transporting victims from one crisis into another.

HURIWA therefore calls for the immediate establishment of a Presidential Task Force on the Rehabilitation and Reintegration of Returnee Nigerians from South Africa, comprising relevant ministries, financial institutions, private-sector stakeholders, civil society organisations and diaspora representatives.

Such a body should be mandated to develop emergency economic assistance programmes, access-to-credit facilities, vocational support initiatives, business recovery grants and long-term reintegration strategies.

Finally, HURIWA warns that the recurring pattern of xenophobic violence against Africans in South Africa represents a grave threat to continental integration and the vision of a united Africa.

Africa cannot preach unity while Africans are hunted, intimidated and displaced in fellow African countries because of their nationality.

The dignity, security and rights of every African must be protected wherever they reside on the continent.

The Federal Government of Nigeria must therefore move beyond evacuation and pursue a comprehensive strategy anchored on justice, accountability, compensation, diplomatic firmness, protection of family rights, economic rehabilitation and the defence of the fundamental rights of Nigerian citizens. Indeed, these values should incorporated or rather become the centrepiece of Nigeria’s foreign policy direction and engraved in the constitution that is being amended.

Nigeria owes its citizens nothing less.

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