I owe SOJ a big thank you for her posting of her daily brief of foreign news. This piece sadly caught my eye today. If anyone has time, please copy it and send it to your congressman, local paper or anyone who you think might listen. How can we call ourselves civilized when we allow people to live like this. I have copied the piece in its entirety below. The link is
http://allafrica.com/stories/200505050325.html.
"Niger: Leading Anti-Slavery Activist Imprisoned
UN Integrated Regional Information Networks
Niamey
Niger's leading anti-slavery campaigner, Ilguilas Weila, and five colleagues have been put in a civilian prison, a member of his family announced on Thursday.
Judicial sources said the six had been accused of "propagating false information on slavery and attempting to raise funds illegally" by seeking money from London-based aid group Anti-Slavery International for the rehabilitation of thousands of slaves due to be released in March.
Weila, the head of prominent anti-slavery organisation Timidria, was arrested with his colleagues last week. They were held at a police station in the Niger capital Niamey until Wednesday when they were transferred to prison.
"We condemn the Niger Government's treatment of Ilguilas Weila and demand his immediate and unconditional release," Mary Cunneen, the director of Anti-Slavery International, in a statement.
"Slavery is a significant problem in Niger and we call on the government to work in cooperation with Timidria to achieve an end to this abuse," she said.
Rights groups estimate that there are at least 43,000 people enslaved in Niger, a landlocked West African country with a population of 12 million and rated as the second poorest country in the world by the UN.
Slaves, who are generally inherited but can also be given as gifts, are made to undertake all kinds of menial work for their masters without pay. A child born of a slave mother automatically enters the slave cast, even if he or she is fathered by the slave owner.
Anti-Slavery International have been working with Timidria to fight the practice, and in 2004 after years of lobbying, the government made slavery a crime punishable by a 30-year jail term.
In March this year, rights groups organised a release ceremony for some 7,000 slaves in the village of Inates, almost 300 km northwest of the capital, but the slaves failed to show up. Anti-Slavery International said a government delegation had visited the slave chief and intimidated him into backing out of the release.
One of the five people arrested with Weila last week was the assistant secretary general of the regional Timidria office that organised the blocked ceremony.
Instead of the ceremony, the government's National Commission for Fundamental Human Rights has organised an information and awareness campaign, but there has been no mass release of slaves.
Judicials sources said that the six arrested were suspected of forging the signature of a local chief in a letter saying that slavery existed in the Inates region.
Local newspaper, The Republican, quoted legal experts saying that Weila was planning on running off with the money Anti-Slavery International raised as an 'integration gift' for the liberated slaves.
But the London-based group said Timidria "categorically denies the fallacious charges" brought against Weila.
It called on Mamadou Tandja, Niger's President and the current head of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), "to guarantee the respect of fundamental human rights and end the intimidation and arbitrary arrest of its citizens"."