Bar leader Osigwe denies bias, partisan conduct allegationsNBA President Afam Osigwe (SAN)

The Nigerian Bar Association has condemned the sexual assault and public harassment of women during a recent festival in Ozoro, Delta State, describing the incident as a national disgrace and renewing form of gender-based violence.

Viral videos circulating on social media platforms show women being accosted in broad daylight, forcefully stripped of their clothing, sexually assaulted, and subjected to degrading treatment by groups of young men while others watched, recorded, and, in some instances, cheered.

The association, in a statement jointly signed by the President of the association, Mazi Afam Osigwe, SAN, and Chairperson, NBA Women’s Forum, Huwaila Muhammad, on Saturday, said that the act where women were chased, stripped, groped, violated, and publicly humiliated by mobs under the guise of celebration, is not culture but “a collapse of conscience and a stain on our shared humanity.”

The association, however, noted that no woman should ever have to endure such terror, such exposure, such violation of her dignity.

“This was not a festival. This was lawlessness. This was gender-based violence in its most primitive and shameful form,” the NBA stated.

The association noted that the acts amount to a grave violation of the fundamental rights to dignity of the human person, personal liberty, and security as guaranteed under the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999 (as amended), as well as other international human rights instruments.

The NBA urged the Delta State Government and all relevant law enforcement agencies to act swiftly and decisively, in bringing the perpetrators to book. It further urged the authorities to hold accountable not only the perpetrators but also those who aided, enabled, or failed to intervene.

“Justice must not be delayed, and it must not be selective. Silence, indifference, or excuses in the face of such brutality only embolden further abuse,” it stated

It also urged the community leaders, traditional institutions, and festival organisers to take urgent responsibility by reviewing their actions during festival periods, warning that cultural celebrations must never become theatres of violence but reflect dignity, order, and respect for human life.

“The protection of women is not optional. It is a legal duty. It is a moral obligation. It is a test of who we are as a people. Nigeria must not become a place where women live in fear of being stripped of both their clothing and their dignity in public spaces. This must never happen again!”

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