mardi 28 octobre 2008

TimesPeople
What’s this?Latest Activity Share and Discover the Best of NYTimes.com 8:47 pm

Skip to article Try Electronic Edition Log In Register Now
TimesPeople
Home Page My Times Today's Paper Video Most Popular Times Topics
Search All NYTimes.com

World
World U.S. N.Y. / Region Business Technology Science Health Sports Opinion Arts Style Travel Jobs Real Estate Autos Africa Americas Asia Pacific Europe Middle East Advertise on NYTimes.com
West African Court Convicts Niger in Slavery Case
Sign In to E-Mail or Save This
Print


By REUTERS
Published: October 27, 2008
Filed at 3:16 p.m. ET

Skip to next paragraph NIAMEY (Reuters) - West Africa's regional Court of Justice convicted the state of Niger on Monday of failing to protect a 12-year-old girl from being sold into slavery, in what campaigners hailed as a victory for human rights.

The ECOWAS Court of Justice said Niger had failed in its obligations to Hadijatou Mani, sold into slavery as a child in 1996 for around $500 and regularly beaten and sexually abused.

"I am very happy with this decision," Mani, now 24, told reporters at the court. She spoke via an interpreter in the Hausa language spoken widely in Niger, in the Sahel region on the southern fringe of the Sahara.

Rights groups welcomed the ruling: "This historic verdict sets a legal precedent that we can take to neighboring states where slavery remains an issue," said Romana Cacchioli, Africa Program Co-ordinator for Anti-Slavery International.

The case against the state was brought with the help of British-based anti-slavery organizations to press African governments to stamp out slavery, which campaigners say is rife in some African countries despite legal prohibitions.

The court sentenced Niger to pay 10 million CFA francs ($19,030) in damages. There is no right of appeal.

Mani said she would use the damages to build a house and send her children to school "so they can have the education I was never allowed as a slave."

Mani was once jailed for bigamy by a Niger court when her former master opposed her marriage to another man, insisting she had automatically become his own wife when he freed her in 2005.

"These events were in the past. This was about righting a wrong, and the Court of Justice saw fit to say this is what should be done. Niger will accept that," Niger's African Integration Minister Saidou Hachimou told reporters.

"It is now 2008 and I think Niger has made significant progress regarding slavery with the law voted in 2003 abolishing slavery," he added.

"WE ARE ALL EQUAL"

London-based Anti-Slavery International says 43,000 people are enslaved in Niger despite the 2003 law. Activists say slavery is common in some other countries, including Mauritania and Sudan.

"It was very difficult to challenge my former master and to speak out when people see you as nothing more than a slave. But I knew that this was the only way to protect my child from suffering the same fate as myself," she said in comments published by Anti-Slavery International.

"Nobody deserves to be enslaved. We are all equal and deserve to be treated the same ... no woman should suffer the way I did," she said.

Anti-Slavery International said Mani had been born the daughter of a slave and was bought by El Hadj Souleymane Naroua, a friend of her mother's master, at the age of 12.

She worked for Naroua for nearly 10 years doing unpaid household chores and agricultural labor and was used as a sex-slave, known locally as a "wahiya," bearing three of his children, the organization said.

Local anti-slavery group TIMIDRIA said the decision would force Niger to face up to the practice of slavery.

"This decision belies the position that the authorities in Niger always take, which is to deny the existence of slavery," the group's president Ilguelas Weila said. "Hadijatou Mani is a concrete case which blows all that away," he said.

(Reporting by Abdoulaye Massalatchi; writing by Alistair Thomson; editing by Daniel Magnowski and Michael Roddy)

Aucun commentaire: