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Security officers block Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan from entering di National Assembly

Security officers block Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan from entering di National Assembly

BBC News6 days ago
Nigerian female senator wey bin raise allegations of sexual harassment against di senate president, don dey denied entry into di National Assembly building for Abuja dis Monday.
Di senate bin suspend Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan for six months for March dis year afta dem find her guilty of flouting dia standing rules, but on 5 July, 2025, di federal high court for Abuja rule say di senate "can and should recall her".
Di senate spokesperson, Yemi Adaramodu, bin don tok say di ruling no be binding order but na mere advisory to di senate leadership wey dem fit obey or not.
But Akpoti-Uduaghan bin tell her supporters say she go resume for di senate chambers on Tuesday in accordance wit di court ruling.
Security presence for di entrance of di National Assembly complex bin dey tighter on Tuesday in anticipation say di senator fit show up, and she true-true try to gain access into di complex but dem deny her entry.
Dem first stop her vehicle for di outermost gate, but di senator come down and waka pass di first barricade wia another batch of security personnel stop her again.
We dey update dis tori.
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‘A huge human cost': Labor criticised over delays to aged care reforms as waitlist grows
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  • The Guardian

‘A huge human cost': Labor criticised over delays to aged care reforms as waitlist grows

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‘The matter is in his hands alone': president of Sierra Leone urged to ban FGM as court rules it tantamount to torture
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She also met someone who offered to help after hearing her story, and paid for her to go abroad for surgery on her injuries. After her trauma had subsided and she found out there had been a change of government, Allieu's thoughts turned to her family, especially her son who was 10 when she left. She decided to return to Sierra Leone. 'People saw me, said I was dead and came to feel me to check I was alive,' she says. 'When I saw my son and my family, it was good, I was happy.' Sign up to Global Dispatch Get a different world view with a roundup of the best news, features and pictures, curated by our global development team after newsletter promotion When word spread she was back, an activist got in touch and introduced her to Yasmin Jusu-sheriff, a human rights lawyer and former vice-chair of the Human Rights Commission of Sierra Leone, who was instrumental, among others, in bringing the case to Ecowas. The ruling on 8 July comes at a critical time in the fight against FGM in Sierra Leone. A few weeks before, on 21 June, the president of Sierra Leone, Julius Maada Bio, became chair of Ecowas, marking a historic moment as the first Sierra Leonean head of state to hold the position. He has yet to acknowledge the ruling publicly. Meanwhile, celebrations at the passing of the Child Rights Act 2025 in Sierra Leone in early July were tempered when parliament issued a press release on 7 July stating that the act, which prohibits all forms of violence against children, including physical and mental abuse, 'does not contain any provision imposing a fine, penalty, or punishment specifically addressing FGM'. The act is awaiting presidential assent. But as there is no mention of banning FGM, Josephine Kamara, advocacy and communications manager at Purposeful, says: 'If we can't name a violent action for what it is, and boldly call it out, we cannot begin to end it.' 'Politically and internationally, the situation just does not look good,' says Jusu-sheriff. 'Since the president is chairman of Ecowas, and in light of the Ecowas decision, let him send the act back to parliament and let them rethink it.' She adds: 'The matter is in his hands, and his hands alone. He holds the sword of Damocles over himself. This is the thing that will determine whether he will go down as the greatest, most human rights-loving president of all time, or not.' Allieu, who is bringing a separate case in Sierra Leone against the woman who mutilated her, is due to be awarded $30,000 (£22,000) in compensation as part of the Ecowas ruling. She says she can't find work because of the public stigma surrounding her case, but wants to use the money to further her education and become an activist. 'I really want the government to look into this, especially the sitting president with his power as head of state,' she says. 'I want him to honour the ruling of the Ecowas court and [make it so] the Child Rights Act can help eradicate FGM.'

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