Saturday, October 17, 2020






Of Gaudy Earrings, Bare Arms And Revealed Cleavage: 
The Feminine Face Of The Ills Of The Bar?
By Francisca Serwaa Boateng, Esq.


Introduction

Literature-in-English was my favourite subject in both my O’ and A’ Level classes at St. Monica’s Secondary School in Asante-Mampong. Apart from the richness it added to one’s language, Literature-in-English also gave a vivid historical account of how people lived during various epochs of human civilization. I loved the African Writers Series but Shakespeare was also a favourite and I followed his writings with keen interest. Now, one of our select books for drama at A’ Level was HAMLET and I thoroughly enjoyed it.

Very early in the book, young Hamlet gave his mother, Gertrude, a dressing down in his first soliloquy. Apparently, Gertrude’s offence was that she had married Claudius, her late husband’s brother. “Frailty, thy name is woman”, Hamlet famously declared. When Hamlet later met with his mother in her closet, his words were even more scathing.

Even at that early stage of life, my 17-year old brain got shifted into fifth gear as I started asking myself a lot of questions. They were questions about Hamlet’s rude attitude towards his mother: why wasn’t Hamlet angry at Claudius who married his mother Gertrude but rather vented his spleen on Gertrude who, most likely, did not have any choice in the matter?; Why did Hamlet bundle all women together and describe them as weak on account of his perceived weakness of one woman, his mother?, and so on.

To my eternal surprise, though Hamlet could blast his mother with words that felt like daggers in her ears, he failed to find similar strength to accomplish the task his late father’s ghost had set down for him. Hamlet could not avenge his father’s death but he had enough time and words to berate his mother whose only crime was her marriage to her late husband’s brother. Thus, was the beginning of my appreciation of gendered perspectives and stereotypical attribution of ‘problems’ to women when we have no practical solutions to the real problems that confront us.

Female lawyers and judges under the radar.

On Tuesday, 15th September 2020, the Ghana Bar Association held its virtual annual conference from the auditorium of the Court Complex in Accra. The conference was originally scheduled to be held in Bolgatanga but for the COVID-19 pandemic.

As is the tradition at the Bar’s annual conference, the virtual conference was reportedly addressed by the President of the Republic, the Chief Justice, the Attorney-General & Minister of Justice and the President of the Ghana Bar Association.

The theme for the conference was “Enhancing National Cohesion: the essence of free, fair and responsible electoral process”.

Of all the speakers who addressed the conference, none appeared to have received much coverage in the press than the President of the Ghana Bar Association. The Ghana News Agency reported in a publication titled “Refrain from showing too much skin – GBA President warns” on Ghanaweb that the Bar President has said that whether in court or at the office, lawyers and judges should refrain from showing too much skin.

He is quoted to have said that “bare arms are generally frowned upon in the office and never appropriate in court. Skirts or blouses should always be bottomed (sic) so that cleavage is never revealed...bare legs are never acceptable in court and neither are open toes (sic) shoes.

Anything flashy such as large gaudy earrings or sandals are also inappropriate.” He also reportedly added that the legal profession remained one of the most conservative concerning work attires and that hair and makeup should also be conservative. The Bar President is said to have added that female lawyers should always wear dark suits with trousers or knee-length matching skirts. The next day after the Ghana News Agency’s publication, other media houses published the story with such repugnant headlines that I shudder to repeat here.

The speech as published and attributed to the Bar President left a lot be desired. It was most condescending, sexist and betrayed the persistent patriarchal narratives that still feature in our discourse even in the 21st Century. Whenever it suits our whims, we take umbrage under the so-called “conservative” nature of our profession and rebuke others for no apparent reason other than sexism and discrimination. Whose sense of conservatism are we protecting? Is it that of the British or the Ghanaian?

The British whose legal system was imposed on us in 1876 have since moved away even from the prescribed apparel of old. They do not wear tail coats to court by prescription anymore and they have almost completely done away with the fake horsehair wigs and mournful black gowns.

Being ultra-conservative, we in Ghana have now embraced the hallowed wig and gown such that from the lowly magistrates at the District Court to the Lords temporal on the Supreme Court bench, pupils who are one week old at the Bar to veteran lawyers who are in their fiftieth year of practice, all must be festooned in these colonial relics to preserve the conservative nature of our profession. How noble! It is for the very reason of the enforced wearing of wigs and gowns that the admonition to female lawyers and judges to cover up appears contrived.

Throughout Ghana, every lawyer who goes to court must necessarily cover their heads

and body with wig and gown. How then do female lawyers and judges appear in court with disheveled hair, bare arms and legs and revealed cleavage while covered in wig and gown? As for the female lawyers and judges who wear large gaudy (whatever that means) earrings, flashy make-up and sandals (if not for medical reasons) to court, we need to await specimen from the speechmaker. Apart from wearing the usual dress, skirt or a pair of trousers, one cannot see how else female lawyers and judges can completely avoid exposure of parts of their body.

The admonition as issued transcends female lawyers and judges’ dressing in court; it applies with full force to their dressing in their offices as well. The last time I checked, lawyers in their offices, both male and female, wore normal office attire. Some even have ‘Friday African Wear’ policy in place.

There is nothing wrong with that. Choosing to prescribe what female lawyers and judges should wear even in their offices is distasteful, chauvinistic, and discriminatory. It is interesting to observe that, in the past 12 years when we had female Chief Justices, there was no complaint about how female

lawyers and judges dressed. In just about six months since the last female Chief Justice retired, the front-burner issue for the Bar Association is how to get an imaginary scantily dressed female lawyer or judge to cover herself up. At any rate, a President of the Association of Magistrates and Judges of Ghana (AMJG) cannot chastise members of the Ghana Bar Association any more than a President of the Ghana Bar Association can drag the name of a section of the Association of Magistrates and Judges of Ghana through mud.

As a profession, we have hidden behind an affinity with conservatism to stifle our own growth and development while society has passed us by. Admittedly, our profession is a noble one and we need to carry ourselves in a manner that befits our calling. However, it will be most unreasonable for one to expect a lawyer practicing in Ghana today to dress like a John Mensah Sarbah or an Annie Jiagge.

These two pioneering stalwarts of our profession belonged to their time and so do the present generation. In the days of Mr. Sarbah, it probably would have been heresy for a male lawyer to be seen wearing ‘happy socks’ and figure-hugging suits. These days, we have them in fashion and we love them.

In the days of Mrs. Jiagge, Brazilian hair was most likely to be found on Brazilian heads. Nowadays, we rock them over our kinky hair and we love them. Much as members of the Bar and Bench are keen to abide by the reasonable dictates of the ethics and code of conduct of the legal profession, it does not lie in anyone’s mouth to isolate the female section of the profession and hold it to public scorn and derision.

Some challenges that need to be addressed.

After all is said and done, there are real challenges confronting the legal profession today and as a profession, we cannot just sit in a corner and suck our thumbs while waiting for the next ritualistic annual conference to come round. We need to find space and time to address those pertinent issues.

a) Law school admissions

The foremost challenge confronting the legal profession in recent years is the law school admission process. Matters came to a head when a citizen put the issue before the Supreme Court. Though the Supreme Court and Parliament subsequently addressed aspects of the law school admissions process, the efforts appeared to have yielded little result.

The situation was not made any easier by a Chief Justice who maintained that for as long as she had anything to do with legal education, there will be ‘no mass production’ of lawyers in Ghana. No definition of ‘mass-production’ accompanied the edict so issued but the meaning became clear when, in the 2019-2020 academic year, only 128 out of 1,820 students who sat for the Law School Entrance examinations passed and were admitted to the Ghana School of Law. That means a paltry 7% of all potential students with LL.B Degrees was admitted.

Some law students even reportedly declared a ‘red week’ of demonstrations to register their protest against what they saw as a deliberate attempt to restrict entry into the legal profession. In the midst of the hullabaloo, the Bar Association’s silence was most deafening.

We chose to be silent lest we ruffle some pristine peacock feathers.

As the venerable Archbishop Desmond Tutu once wrote, “If you are neutral in situations of injustice, you have chosen the side of the oppressor. If an elephant has its foot on the tail of a mouse, and you say that you are neutral, the mouse will not appreciate your neutrality.” The late Margaret Thatcher it was who once advised that “standing in the middle of the road is very dangerous; you get knocked down by the traffic from both sides.” In the past, our association was the conscience of the nation.

The sad thing is that, even as the Bar Association has adopted a mum stance, the law school entrance saga remains a dominant national issue. Indeed, so central is the issue that a political party has included it in the party’s manifesto for the upcoming elections. Recently when the results for the 2020-2021 academic year law school entrance examination results were released, it was at once shocking and relieving.

It was shocking because 1,045 out of 2,720 students who wrote the examinations passed and gained admission to the Ghana School of Law; it was relieving because for the first time in several years, many LL.B graduates have the chance to undertake the professional law course. Interestingly, nothing much has changed in the physical infrastructural fortunes of the law school in the past year but there has been such a quantum leap in admissions.

Perhaps, if we had added our voices to the call for expanding access to legal education when it mattered most, maybe, just maybe, relief may have come a tad earlier. It is still not late for us to show interest and commitment in the affairs of the school that provide the membership of our association.

b) Enforcing the provisions of our association’s Constitution and Regulations

In 2018, our Constitution and Regulations received a makeover through an amendment which had been in the works since the last amendment of 1994. However, huge portions of the Constitution and almost the entire provisions in the Regulations lie dormant. For example, under the GBA Constitution, one of the objects of the Bar Association is the organization and promotion of legal education and continuing professional development programmes.

Over the years, we have been excited to conduct the less crucial continuing professional development programmes, but we shy away from even discussions bordering on the crucial subject of the organization and promotion of legal education. The Regulations of the GBA mandates the General Council of the Bar to do the following:

- To arrange the professional training course for lawyers in Ghana; - To register foreign-qualified lawyers to practice in Ghana;

- To organize the call of lawyers to the Bar;

- To fix annual subscriptions for Bar Association membership; - To register all professional chambers;

- To enforce disciplinary measures for professional misconduct under the Code of Ethics; and so on.

We need to ask whether, as an association, we have been fulfilling our mandate under the GBA’s Constitution and Regulations.

c) The e-justice system

Last year, the e-justice system was formally launched by the President of the Republic, signaling the end of the old manual justice delivery system and its attendant problems. The euphoria that greeted the launch has, however, given way to disappointment because nothing much has changed. We still carry processes physically to court and file, among other frustrations which we thought the e-justice system would have wiped out.

d) The effects of the COVID-19 Pandemic on the legal profession

This year, the COVID-19 pandemic has changed the nature of our profession and law practice for good. Globally, most lawyers’ livelihoods and businesses, just as all facets of life, have taken a hit and we need to device practical ways to weather the storm till calm is restored. The Bar Association’s role in this endeavour will be very crucial.

These are some of the pertinent issues that ought to engage our attention. As an association, our time will be better served in addressing some of these issues rather than engaging in our favourite pastime of tickling the ears of some retiring judge with ill-deserved panegyrics.

So yes, the Bar Association has challenges and when we look diligently, we will find that the challenges go beyond the length of a female lawyer’s skirt and the blush on her cheeks.


Francisca Serwaa Boateng, Esq., © 2020

The author has 5 publications published on Modern Ghana.








Canadian Kidnappers: State Calls First Witness



The State has called its first Prosecution Witness in the case in which four persons are standing trial for unlawful imprisonment of two Canadian nationals last year.

The four Sampson Agharlor, aka Romeo, Elvis Ojiyorwe, Jeff Omarsar and Yusif Yakubu have all pleaded not guilty to the charges of conspiracy to kidnap, two kidnappings and an unlawful improvement.

They have been accused of playing various roles in the kidnapping of Miss Lauren Patricia Catherine Tiley and Miss Bailey Jordan Chilley, who were in Kumasi to participate in a youth programme on June 4, 2019.


When the case was called on Friday, October 16, Hilda Craig, Senior State Attorney told the court that prosecution was ready for the trial to start.

She, however, prayed the court that the matter be heard in-camera since the witness is national security personnel.

The court presided over by Justice Lydia Osei Marfo granted her the request and cleared the court.

Agharlor was represented by Longinus Chinedu. Ojiyorwe and Omarsars were not represented by counsel. Yakubu said he will represent himself.

The brief facts accompanying the charges were read to the court by Senior State Attorney Hilda Craig after their plea were earlier retaken.

---Starrfm
Five things to know about Guinea
By AFP

More than half of the population of some 13 million people live below the poverty line. 

By JOHN WESSELS (AFP/File)

Guinea is among the world's poorest countries, despite significant mineral resources, and has a turbulent political history.

Here is some background ahead of the presidential election on Sunday, in which President Alpha Conde is seeking a controversial third term.

Authoritarian regimes


Guinea won independence from France in 1958, becoming Africa's first Marxist state under President Ahmed Sekou Toure, who ruled for a quarter of a century.

Rights groups say his regime is responsible for the death or disappearance of 50,000 people, and the exile of hundreds of thousands of others.

Days after his death in 1984, Lansana Conte, a soldier, seized control and remained in charge until his own death 24 years later.

Multi-party rule was introduced in 1990 but elections were widely believed to be rigged.

After Conte died in 2008 after an illness, another military coup brought Captain Moussa Dadis Camara to power and plunged the country into chaos.

In 2009, security forces opened fire and mowed down demonstrators gathered at the capital's main stadium to protest against Camara's regime.

The United Nations said 157 people were killed and 109 women were raped in the deadly crackdown, while hundreds were wounded.

Camara survived a shot to the head a few months later and was removed from office, paving the way for a democratic transition.

First free election

Guinea held its first democratic elections in November 2010 and long-time political opponent Alpha Conde was voted president. He was voted in again in 2015, the constitution providing for two terms.

After periods of turbulence marked by violence at opposition demonstrations, protests broke out again in October 2019 against a Conde third term, leaving dozens of people dead in a security force crackdown.

Conde confirmed his plan to run for a third term in September.

He argues that the new constitution adopted in March resets the presidential term counter to zero, but the opposition has denounced a "constitutional coup".

Mineral wealth

More than 80 percent of the Muslim country is made up of ethnic groups, mainly the Fulani and Malinke.

The country is one of the world's biggest producers of bauxite, the ore used to produce aluminium. It is also rich in iron, gold, diamonds and oil.

Conde has enacted reforms to diversify the economy, including the mining sector which attracts foreign investment but is hobbled by poor infrastructure.

Agriculture remains the main source of jobs.


According to the African Development Bank (AfDB), gross domestic product grew by 6 percent in 2018 and 6.2 percent in 2019, thanks to increased foreign direct investment in the mining sector and some improvement in power generation.

But because of the coronavirus epidemic, the AfDB in April said it expected a slowdown in 2020 growth to 1.4 percent in the best-case scenario, and in the worst case, a contraction.

Guinea is also plagued by corruption, listed as 130th of 180 countries on Transparency International's rankings.

More than 55 percent of the population of some 13 million people live below the poverty line, and many have no access to electricity or running water, according to the World Bank.

Ebola

The deadliest epidemic of the tropical virus Ebola started in Guinea in December 2013, killing around 2,500 people there and affecting agriculture, mining, trade, transport and tourism.

The World Health Organization (WHO) declared the end of the epidemic in March 2016, after it had killed 11,300 people in the region.

Female genital mutilation is a widespread practice in Guinea, affecting 97 percent of women and girls in 2014, according to UNICEF.

Mandingo music


Along with Mali, Guinea is the cradle of Mandingo music, played with instruments such as the kora or the balafon.

Among its most famous celebrities is singer Mory Kante, best known for the 1997 dance song "Yeke Yeke," a huge hit in Africa and a No. 1 in several European countries. Kante died in May.
#EndSARS: Nigeria's young protesters demand real change

Rich, poor, feminist and gay, celebrities and street kids, everyone chants the same slogan: "end SARS now", in reference to the Special Anti-Robbery Squad, a police unit widely accused of human rights violations.

CARNIVAL 
DANCING IN THE STREETS AS PROTEST
A FESTIVAL OF CONTESTATION

By Sophie BOUILLON 

16.10.2020 NIGERIA

Protestors can be seen carrying Nigeria's green and white flag 
in what has become an ongoing festival of contestation
By Pierre FAVENNEC (AFP)

Dancing, chanting and determined: thousands of young Nigerians are jamming the streets of megacity Lagos to protest against police violence and vent at a society they feel sidelines them.

West Africa's economic hub and beating heart, normally bustling with traffic, is at a standstill as demonstrators have occupied major roads day after day since last week.


The gigantic Lekki Toll Gate, a key junction in and out of the city of 20 million people, is the main stage for the ongoing festival of contestation.

DJs take turns on a makeshift stage in front of a jubilant crowd, while others set up pool tables and hustlers sell soft drinks nearby.


Convertible Mercedes and beaten-up cars park side by side in the middle of the crowd, windows down and pumping music, as onlookers drink beers and raise clenched-fisted salutes.


Better-off protesters distribute water bottles and soft drinks. Popular food chains hand out provisions. Nigeria's green and white flag goes from hand to hand for selfies.


Protesters have gathered at the Lekki Toll Gate, a key junction in and out of the city of 20 million people. By Pierre FAVENNEC (AFP)

Rich, poor, feminist and gay, celebrities and street kids, everyone chants the same slogan: "end SARS now", in reference to the Special Anti-Robbery Squad, a police unit widely accused of human rights violations.

The slogan, initially launched to denounce the unit after a video of a man being allegedly killed by police went viral last month, has become a rallying cry against injustice and for more freedom.

'Not going anywhere'

"If we have money on our bank account, they say we are Yahoo boys (cybercriminals). If we wear earrings, they say we are gay (illegal in Nigeria). If we have dreadlocks, they say we smoke weed," Femi Daniel, a 33-year-old demonstrator tells AFP.

"We are tired, we are not free in this country."

Bowing under pressure and faced with a massive online campaign supported by celebrities like Cardi B, Kanye West or Twitter's CEO Jack Dorsey, the government dissolved SARS and announced a raft of police reforms.


It is Nigeria's entertainers and pop stars, icons whose influence stretches across social classes, rather than politicians who are supporting the movement. By Pierre FAVENNEC (AFP)


But it has not been enough to appease the anger and determination of the street.

The creation of a new SWAT team to replace SARS is among the newly announced measures that protesters oppose.

Quickly, the hashtag #EndSWAT was added to #EndSARS and hundreds more people continued to join the movement in a string of cities including in the capital Abuja.

"#EndSARS united us. Now our eyes are open and we are fighting. Our independence is starting now," Daniel says.

Cynthia Shalom, a famous actress in Nigeria's Nollywood film industry, is determined to keep the movement going.

She insists the government address five main demands: the release of all arrested protesters, compensation for families of victims of police abuse, the setting up of an independent investigative body, psychological evaluation of all disbanded SARS officers and an increase of police salaries.

"They think we are joking. They look at us, sitting in their offices, and they think we are kids partying and that we will go home. I can tell you, we are not going anywhere, I am so proud of our generation," she says.

'Protests have snowballed'

"The protests have snowballed into an outlet for latent anger and frustration," Leena Koni Hoffmann, associate fellow at Chatham House wrote.

"Nigeria has the largest number of young people in poverty in the world, as well as the most food insecure households in West Africa."


The creation of a new SWAT team to replace the Special Anti-Robbery Squad is among the newly announced measures that protesters oppose. By Pierre FAVENNEC (AFP)

This social uprising is first and foremost the result of a generational divide, where the youth does not identify with its ageing rulers.

President Muhammadu Buhari, 77 and a conservative Muslim, is at the helm of a country where half of its 200 million people are under the age of 30 and where the median age is 18.

It is Nigeria's pop stars, icons whose influence stretches across social classes, rather than politicians who are supporting the movement.

"We don't have a leader. But the youth, the masses wanted us, the celebrities, to speak out. Now I am out, and I'm staying here," Peter Okoye, a singer known as Mr P with 9 million Instagram followers, says.

Standing on his luxury 4x4, the performer's voice crackles as he shouts to the crowd.

"I shouldn't be here you know. I am 40, I have a good life, I made it. But one day, my son, my daughter, they will ask me what I was doing in October 2020, and I will tell them 'I was fighting for you'."

What to know about Nigeria's #EndSARS protests

"end SARS now", in reference to the Special Anti-Robbery Squad, a police unit widely accused of human rights violations.

By AFP 16.10.2020 NIGERIA


Demonstrators have made five demands that include structural police reforms and better pay for officers. By PIUS UTOMI EKPEI (AFP)

Protests against police violence in Nigeria show no sign of stopping as thousands continue to take to the streets despite announcements of reforms by the government.

The demonstrations erupted this month and were initially focused on abolishing the federal Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS), accused of unlawful detention, extortion and extra-judicial killings.

But after the government announced the unit would be dissolved, thousands of mainly young protesters have remained out on the streets pushing for genuine change in the country.

Why did the protests start?

In early October a video spread on social media showing what looked like a SARS officer attacking a man in Delta state.

The video was shared massively in the country of 200 million people and thousands started sharing their own stories of police abuse online.

"Nigerian youth have campaigned against SARS for years," Bulama Bukarti wrote for the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

But the recent video "resonated with thousands across the country and led to youth pouring out en masse onto the streets."

Why did the protests spread?

In the course of days, the hashtag #EndSARS topped the global trends on Twitter, supported by world famous Afrobeat popstars like Davido and Wizkid. Their engagement gave visibility to the movement.


  
In the streets and online, the youth has been asking for more and better jobs, an end to power cuts, more freedom of expression and better representation in politics. 
By PIUS UTOMI EKPEI (AFP)

There was a violent crackdown by police on some of the first protests. At least 10 people were killed and hundreds were injured according to Amnesty International.

The brutal response drew more people onto the streets and emboldened protesters began to push further.

Who supports the movement ?

As numbers have swelled at home, eye-catching demonstrations have also been held abroad, most notably involving the large Nigerian community in London.

"The diaspora's participation was immensely impactful because Nigerian politicians are easily unsettled by negative news outside the country, especially in the West," said Bukarti.

Following in the steps of Nigerian celebrities, international stars like Cardi B, Kanye West and Twitter's CEO Jack Dorsey joined in and expressed support for #EndSARS.

How is the government responding?

Bowing to the pressure, president Muhammadu Buhari announced on October 11 that SARS would be dissolved, with immediate effect.

He said the move was "only the first step" in more extensive reforms to Nigeria's police.


A youth holds up a sign reading "Am I Next?". By Benson Ibeabuchi (AFP)


A new SWAT unit was announced to replace SARS, with promises that it will be "ethical".

SARS officers will not be eligible for the new unit and will have to undergo psychological evaluation before being redeployed, police said.

The government said police abuses will be investigated and prosecuted.

But these announcements have not appeased the street and demonstrations have continued.

How long will protests last?

"Nigerians are sceptical of the authorities' pledge to end police atrocities because the past claims of reforming SARS have turned out to be empty words," said Osai Ojigho, director of Amnesty International Nigeria.

Demonstrators have made five demands that include structural police reforms and better pay for officers.

"Senior ranking officers are known to maintain a perverse bribery pyramid which requires that poorly paid rank-and-file officers transfer bribes extorted from citizens up the chain of command," wrote Leena Koni Hoffmann, associate fellow at Chatham House.

Many of the demonstrators have begun calling for more wide-sweeping change as they look to seize the moment to bring real change to their country.

While Nigeria is Africa's largest economy, more than half of the populaton lives in poverty and youth unemployment rates are significant.

In the streets and online, the youth has been asking for more and better jobs, an end to power cuts, more freedom of expression and better representation in politics.

For some, like Bukarti, "this may just be the beginning, rather than the end, of massive protests in Nigeria."   




Justice For Alleged Child Witches In Ogun State
By Leo Igwe
15.10.2020  FEATURE ARTICLE

Listen to article https://www.modernghana.com/news/1035883/justice-for-alleged-child-witches-in-ogun-state.html

It is not often that victims of witch persecution get justice. Abuses linked to witchcraft beliefs are usually perpetrated by the powerful against those in weaker sociocultural positions-the poor, women, elderly persons, or people living with disabilities.

Even in situations where the avenues to seek redress are there, victims seldom utilize them. Some of these avenues expose alleged witches to further victimization and exploitation. In response, survivors of witch persecution resign to their fate, or as they say in Nigeria, they hand the matter over to God.

The Advocacy for Alleged Witches (AFAW) campaigns to end this culture of silence and resignation. AFAW adopts a proactive approach. It supports alleged witches and empowers them to defend themselves and tackle their accusers and abusers.

In the spectrum of victims and victimhood, children are most affected. Children are the most vulnerable, the most victimized because they cannot defend themselves or seek redress anywhere. Unlike adult victims, alleged child witches have little or no knowledge of witchcraft or occult harm. Adult torture and coerce them to confess to witchcraft. Family members often abuse children.

Those who are supposed to show children love and care, those who should protect them- parents, brothers, sisters, and other relatives are their persecutors. Witch believing family members torture and abuse children suspected of witchcraft as a form of duty; as a way of disciplining or correcting them.

More importantly, relatives maltreat alleged child witches as a way of protecting themselves and thwarting some impending occult schemes. So situations, where child witch victims get justice, are rare. That is why AFAW commends the police in Ogun state- especially the Divisional Police Officer in Awa Ijebu for the diligent work; for ensuring the successful prosecution of child witch abusers.

In July, AFAW reported how the combined efforts of the police, the social welfare department, and the ministry of justice brought an end to the abuse of suspected child witches in Ogun state. The police arrested the couple and charged them in court.

In August, the Divisional Police Officer of the station at Awa Ijebu called to informed me that the magistrate had ruled on the case; that the court had convicted them. He tried giving me the details on phone, but I told him that I would visit and possibly have a copy of the judgment. The plan was to visit the station and interact with the police officers and then go to the orphanage to see the victims.

The DPO told me that I could visit at my convenience. On October 9, I confirmed via a text message that I would be at the station. The DPO explained the outcome of the trial. The court convicted the man on all the four-count charges, including conspiracy, failure to provide necessary, assault occasioning harm, and causing grievous harm.

The court fined the wife and subsequently discharged her. According to the DPO, no option of the fine was given to the man for causing grievous harm. So he was sentenced to two years in prison. The conviction of this couple for violations linked to witchcraft beliefs is a welcome development. It confirms that there are existing mechanisms to seek redress under the law in the country.

AFAW commends the Ogun state police command for the diligent prosecution of the case. If the police in other parts of the country respond to complaints of witch persecution in this manner, there would have been significant progress in tackling and containing the menace.

However, I noticed that something was missing in the charges as recounted by the DPO. There was no mention of witchcraft accusations among the offenses that the couple committed. Look, section 210(b) of the Nigerian Criminal Code Act states that any person who " accuses or threatens to accuse any person with being a witch or with having the power of witchcraft" is guilty of a misdemeanor and is liable for two years imprisonment. Now I wondered: if witchcraft accusation is an offense under the Nigerian law, why was it omitted in the count charges against the couple? And this omission is common in the prosecution of witchcraft-related offenses.

In my conversation with some police officers at Awa Ijebu, they made it clear that witchcraft allegation informed and motivated the harm and abuse of the children. So I expected witchcraft allegation to feature on the list. But witchcraft accusation was not mentioned on the charge sheet.

It was not included. Why? To root out witch persecution, perpetrators must be prosecuted for the crime of witchcraft accusation as provided by the law. The offense of witchcraft accusation must feature in the hearing. By omitting witchcraft accusations in the prosecution of witch hunters, the police and the court are not helping efforts to stamp out and eradicate this social disease.

After a brief meeting with the DPO, I went to see the children at the orphanage. The children have enrolled in a school, and the injuries have healed. The Advocacy for Alleged Witches donated some money towards the education and general upkeep of the children.

While AFAW welcomes the outcome of the child witch persecution case in Ogun state, it urges the government to do more to enforce the law and help deter witch hunters and witch persecutors of children and adults in other parts of the country.



Leo Igwe, © 2020

The author has 332 publications published on Modern Ghana.Column: LeoIgwe
Disclaimer: "The views/contents expressed in this article are the sole responsibility of the author(s) and do not neccessarily reflect those of Modern Ghana. Modern Ghana will not be responsible or liable for any inaccurate or incorrect statements contained in this article."



The Witch by Ronald Hutton review – why fear of witchcraft ...
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Jul 28, 2017 — The Witch by Ronald Hutton review – why fear of witchcraft hasn't gone away.
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New Brunswick
Fredericton shooter's computer shows focus shifting from video games to anti-Muslim sentiment

Matthew Raymond had material about 'atrocities' committed by ISIS, anti-Trudeau messaging

Hadeel Ibrahim · CBC News · Posted: Oct 14, 2020 
Victims of the shooting from left to right: Const. Lawrence Robert (Robb) Costello, 45, and Const. Sara Mae Helen Burns, 43, Donald Adam Robichaud, 42, and Bobbie Lee Wright, 32.

Matthew Raymond's defence team is painting an image of a man losing interest in biking and video games, and instead seeking information on ISIS, anti-Muslim sentiment, demons and the occult.

Raymond. 50, is facing four counts of first degree murder after he shot and killed Donnie Robichaud and Bobbie Lee Wright, then Fredericton constables Sara Burns and Robb Costello when they responded to a report of shots fired at 237 Brookside Dr. on Aug. 10, 2018.

Raymond has admitted to the shooting but pleaded not guilty. His lawyers are arguing he was not criminally responsible because of a mental illness.

  
Mathew Raymond being brought into the Fredericton Convention Centre for the continuation of his trial. (Hadeel Ibrahim/CBC)

The Crown and defence have agreed Raymond was mentally ill at the time of the killing, leaving the defence with the burden to prove his mental illness prevented him from knowing what he was doing, or knowing what he did was wrong.
A digital timeline

Alex Pate, a member of the defence team, testified he reviewed tens of thousands of photos and videos on Raymond's hard drives, spanning from 2015 to 2018.

In 2015 the vast majority of the files were related to video games and mountain biking, he said. There were also some videos of Raymond with his family or with a group of people.

The year 2016 was largely the same.

Police ask 'why' in Raymond interrogation, but get little in response

Crown concedes man had mental disorder when he shot 4 people in Fredericton

In March of 2017 the data shifted focus to the terrorist organization ISIS and some of the "atrocities" they were committing in the Middle East, Pate said. This focus persisted until August of 2017, when Pate said the content became more focused on occult numbers, demons and serpents.

Pate said he found quite a few "extremely graphic" and "brutal" images and videos related to ISIS on Raymond's hard drives. In March of 2017 alone, there were about 10 "extremely violent" videos, Pate said, and somewhere between 10 and 20 images.

In 2017, materials also included references to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. He found comments written on images of Trudeau that say he was responsible for "mass immigration," and the loss of Canadian values, Pate said.

In early 2017 the data also began leaning toward anti-Islam and anti-Muslim-immigration, Pate said.

Alex Pate, a member of Matthew Raymond's defence team, continued his testimony Wednesday. (Hadeel Ibrahim/CBC)

The jury was shown a video by Fredericton blogger Charles LeBlanc from June of 2017. In it, Raymond was protesting the recently passed motion known as M-103, which calls for a national action plan against racism, including Islamophobia. He wore a sandwich board that read "No Sharia-law."

LeBlanc confronted Raymond and asked him if he's mentally ill. Raymond said no. Raymond said he gets his news from "the internet."

"They talk about the borders and stuff. And they talk about it on Rebel Media."


Blogger videotaped alleged Fredericton shooter
2 years ago  Last year, Fredericton blogger Charles LeBlanc videotaped the man accused in August of killing four people in Fredericton. 1:49

Pate testified the first video from a YouTube conspiracy theorist who identifies himself as Rob Lee was saved in May 2017, before this encounter. The video included material about Muslim immigration and ISIS, he said.

In the Charles LeBlanc video Raymond spoke about how Muslims are going to change Canadian society for the worse, and that there are "boatloads of them."

Pate testifies this is a similar message to the Rob Lee video from May.
From skating videos to ISIS conspiracies

The jury was shown multiple videos taken by Raymond. From 2015, some were of a family holiday dinner, another was of a skating outing.

Jumping to 2017, the jury was shown videos from a YouTube channel. The name of it is under a publication ban imposed by Justice Larry Landry. Pate testified some of the videos uploaded to the channel could be made by Raymond himself.

The first video on the channel, posted in March of 2017, has references to Trudeau speaking at a Muslim event and participating in a prayer. The five-minute-long video ends with ISIS-related photos, some graphic, and a clip of Trudeau saying he will not support a war in Iraq.

The final frame is a closeup of Trudeau's face with text that reads "Justin Trudeau is dangerous."

Pate said he also found this video on Raymond's computer, and not just posted on the channel.

Justice Landry told the jury Tuesday this trial is expected to continue until the end of the month. The defence intends to call six witnesses.

Hundreds of satanic, conspiracy photos followed Islamophobic material on killer's computer

Matthew Raymond is facing four counts of first-degree murder



Hadeel Ibrahim · CBC News · Posted: Oct 15, 2020 

In the summer months before Matthew Raymond shot and killed four people in Fredericton, he recorded multiple videos of the sky.

For one video, Raymond focused the camera on a line of vapour among the clouds.

"That's weird," he said from behind the camera.

In painstaking detail this week, Matthew Raymond's defence lawyer has gone through hundreds of photos and videos with satanic, transphobic and conspiracy references found on Raymond's computer, including a "chemtrail" conspiracy theory which posits an unknown, organized entity is poisoning the air.

Raymond shot and killed Donnie Robichaud and Bobbie Lee Wright, then Fredericton constables Sara Burns and Robb Costello when they responded to a call of shots fired at 237 Brookside Dr. on Aug. 10, 2018.

The 50-year-old has admitted to the killing, but pleaded not guilty. His defence lawyers are arguing he was not criminally responsible on account of mental illness.
From anti-Muslim to satanic materials

Alex Pate, who reviewed evidence for the defence team, began testifying last week about what he found on Raymond's hard drives.

On Thursday, Pate said that in the summer months closer to the day Raymond shot and killed four people, he stopped downloading conspiracy theory videos.

Instead, Pate found GoPro and cellphone videos of the sky, and screen recordings of someone using an electronic tool such as Microsoft Paint to make markings on YouTube pages, and doing numerical calculations with occult numbers such as 66 and 33.

Pate's testimony paints a picture of a man whose interest in biking and video games waned as he started viewing and downloading more and more anti-Muslim, anti-Justin Trudeau, demonic and occult data.

Alex Pate, a member of Matthew Raymond's defence team, testified he reviewed tens of thousands of photos and videos on Raymond's devices between 2015 and 2018. (Ed Hunter/CBC)

In 2017 Raymond started becoming interested in ISIS and anti-Muslim material, data shows. That interest translated to the real world in June of 2017, when he protested an anti-Islamophobia bill outside the New Brunswick legislature, wearing a sandwich board that read "No Sharia-law."

But the court was shown Thursday as the year went on, Raymond's interests moved further into the conspiracy world, touching on flat earth, Illuminati and satanic references somehow related to Disney and other pop culture giants.

This was presented in the form of "countless" images of celebrities or politicians saved on his computer, with titles such as "evil" and "devil," Pate said, and deriving satanic meaning from the shapes of their hands or the look of their eyes.

Police ask 'why' in Raymond interrogation, but get little in response

He also identified multiple famous people as transgender, and related transgender people to the devil.

One video downloaded on Raymond's computer says Hollywood is run by "anti-Christ" demons and "occultists."

The data on his computer started shifting, and increasing in numbers, by the spring of 2017, Pate testified. The "demon" references continued until the summer of 2018, just before the shooting.

Pate also testified a YouTube channel, the name of which is under a publication ban, had videos that appeared to be made by Raymond.

Last week the Crown and defence agreed Raymond had a mental illness at the time of the shooting. This means to get a not-guilty verdict, the defence must prove to the jury, on a balance of probabilities, that Raymond's mental illness either stopped him from knowing the nature and consequences of his actions, or knowing what he was doing was wrong.

Fredericton shooter communicated with YouTube 'conspiracy theorist' and tried to expose 'demons' online

Cpl. Aaron Gallagher testified he recovered thousands of images and videos from Matthew Raymond's devices

Hadeel Ibrahim · CBC News · Posted: Oct 06, 2020 9

Matthew Raymond's murder trial heard Tuesday that he started communicating with a YouTube conspiracy theorist by email and was exposing followers of the channel as "demons."

Crown witness Cpl. Aaron Gallagher continued testimony under cross-examination in the quadruple murder trial in Fredericton.

Gallagher testified Monday that he recovered thousands of images and videos from Raymond's devices after he shot and killed Donnie Robichaud, Bobbie Lee Wright and Fredericton constables Robb Costello and Sara Burns on Aug. 10, 2018.

Raymond, 50, has admitted to being the shooter but pleaded not guilty. His defence lawyers are arguing he was not criminally responsible for the crime on account of a mental illness.

Nurse testifies Raymond thought someone was in his room, was 'agitated' day after shooting

Gallagher told the court earlier that he found videos of Raymond firing a shotgun at a target in the woods and complaining of noise in his apartment, as well as "conspiracy theory" videos and images.

Gallagher testified he couldn't agree that Raymond went out in public and exposed or pointed out demons, but he would agree that Raymond did that on the internet.

Court was shown images of people Raymond found online. The images had titles that included the word "evil eyes" and "snake tongue" and showed dots under their eyes or around their mouth.

The court was also shown a one-hour-long video made by a YouTube conspiracy theorist who identifies himself as Rob Lee. The video begins with the narrator denying space exists.

"If Real, why use CGI?" one caption says about images of a constellation.

Near the end of the video the narrator says fallen angels and demons are on earth, and they "aren't like us."

"It may be a politician … It may even be the woman down the street."

The video narrator identified pop-culture icons and politicians as demons, including former U.S. President Barack Obama and actor David Duchovny, by pointing at their eyes or tongues.

"These serpents and monsters are everywhere and they are out to deceive you," the narrator says in the video. "Trying to destroy you and your family."

The narrator also says the "flood of people" and immigrants are brought on by the devil.
Exchanges with a 'conspiracy theorist'

A 33-page document of email exchanges showed conversations between Raymond and Rob Lee, Gallagher testified. In November 2017 Rob Lee asked Raymond to question someone about the occult symbols in a picture of theirs.

Rob Lee also said, "I'm aware that serpents, shills and fake Christians are on my channel ... I look forward to this list, I can not wait."

The document shows Raymond sending Rob Lee a list of usernames and names. Justice Larry Landry has imposed a publication ban on any names or usernames used on social media and YouTube, aside from Rob Lee's.

Nurses testify Matthew Raymond was 'calm,' 'polite' days after shooting

Defence lawyer Nathan Gorham presented to Gallagher a narrative of the relationship between Rob Lee and Raymond deteriorating.

A screenshot from Feb 8, 2018, had writing added in blue: "Rob Lee has back tracked against what it's all about. Showing people to be aware of demons protects them."

Another screenshot shows Raymond had written in blue under a YouTube comment by Rob Lee: "Oh really ... Can you tell a demon from a pic ANYMORE?"

The jury in the Matthew Raymond trial was shown multiple screenshots with mathematical calculations written on them using a computer program. (Submitted by Court of Queen's Bench)

After prompting from Gorham, Gallagher testified that "it appears that [Raymond] was trying to determine who would be a demon or not on the internet," but he "can't tell if he's doing it for Rob Lee or contesting Rob Lee."

Screenshots also show Raymond accusing another YouTube user of being a demon. Following that, Rob Lee sent an email to Raymond, saying "You are seeing demons every place man."

"You dove on that girls after I had said she's welcome in the channel."

In response, Raymond says, "I know they are all over as I have seen them," and calls him a "liar" and "hypocrite."

The court also saw two videos of Raymond at 237 Brookside Dr. He spoke to two people who were standing in a moving truck, and he put his arm around a boy who appears to be in his teens and smiled.

The trial will continue Thursday after a one-day break on Wednesday because one of the lawyers has a prior engagement.

Tech expert found conspiracy-theory, noise complaint videos in Fredericton shooter's hard drives

Matthew Raymond had custom-built computer with four hard drives containing thousands of images and videos

A technology crimes expert who looked at Matthew Raymond's personal devices found conspiracy theory videos and images, and videos of Raymond firing a shotgun and complaining about noise at his Fredericton apartment complex.

RCMP Cpl. Aaron Gallagher testified for the Crown on Monday that he examined thousands of photos and videos found on Raymond's computer, GoPro camera and an external hard drive.

Raymond, 50, has admitted to shooting Bobbie Lee Wright and Donnie Robichaud, then Fredericton police constables Sara Burns and Robb Costello at 237 Brookside Dr. in Fredericton on Aug. 10, 2018.

He has pleaded not guilty to four counts of first-degree murder, and his defence lawyers are arguing he was not criminally responsible for the crime on account of a mental illness.

Gallagher testified he also found pornography, and videos of Raymond biking around downtown Fredericton.

On one hard drive, Gallagher testified he found 500 images and 400 videos. About 430 images were in relation to a conspiracy website, where Raymond was taking screen captures and "doing numerology" using numbers such as 33 and 666. 

The jury watched a 30-minute conspiracy-theory video introduced by the defence.

The video on YouTube says demons communicate using numbers such as 33, 666 and 36. The narrator in the video explains how demons are "casting a spell" on people by using symbolism in Disney movies, social media, celebrity music videos and video games. The video also makes reference to "Masonic" symbolism and the Las Vegas shooting.

The court heard Raymond has done mathematical calculations using these "demonic" numbers in hundreds of screenshots as well physical notes found in his apartment. 

Gallagher testified this video was downloaded onto Raymond's computer in October 2017. He agreed with the defence that Raymond's calculations began after the video was downloaded, and that it continued into 2018.

Gallagher testified Raymond stopped using the computer on Aug. 4, 2018, six days before the shooting.

Gallagher also testified the creator of the video had emailed back-and-forth with Raymond, where Raymond complained to him about seeing "D"s and also boasted about his accurate shooting abilities.

'The kick is unreal'

Gallagher also testified he found multiple videos of Raymond firing a shotgun in the woods. Gallagher said Raymond tied the gun to his bicycle with a garbage bag.

One video shows Raymond wearing a hat, dark sunglasses, a black, long-sleeve T-shirt under a grey short-sleeve, talking to the camera. He props up a target paper onto a bush and takes three shots, then reacts to the kick-back of the ammunition.

"Wow, wow, wow," he says, looking at the camera. "This ammo is insane. What the heck? The kick is unreal. It wasn't supposed to have that much kick."

A shotgun and a semi-automatic rifle were entered into evidence Tuesday. The Crown and defence agree Raymond used the rifle to kill four people on Aug. 10, 2018. (Hadeel Ibrahim/CBC)

Gallagher said Raymond's computer was custom built and could not have been bought "off the shelf." He said within that computer he found and examined four hard drives.

He found a total of about 200,000 images and videos but said most of those were images downloaded by software so they would function properly. It's not clear exactly how many images or videos were downloaded by the user and how many came with the software.

One hard drive had adult pornography, Gallagher said.

Another hard drive had more than 3,000 videos. He said some of these were videos taken by Raymond in June and July of 2018, including some of him "using a shotgun" in the woods. Two were of Raymond in his apartment complaining about noise in the building.

The last hard drive had a total of 130,000 pictures and 2,600 videos. A lot of the user-generated content were GoPro videos of biking and nature.

The Crown is expected to wrap up its case this week, after calling 38 witnesses.

The court has heard from 14 police officers, eight residents of the apartment complex, a firearms expert, and seven nurses who treated Raymond at the Dr. Everett Chalmers Hospital. A resident of a neighbouring building, the owner of a coffee shop where Raymond was a regular and a paramedic have also testified.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR


Hadeel Ibrahim is a CBC reporter based in Saint John.


RCMP pension plan discriminates against women, says Supreme Court

Three of the top court's nine justices dissented

Catharine Tunney · CBC News · Posted: Oct 16, 2020 


Retired RCMP Sgt. Joaner, right, is one of three women who took the national police force to court, arguing its pension plan discriminates against women who work part-time to care for young children. (Joanne Fraser)


The Royal Canadian Mounted Police pension plan discriminates against women and violates the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, the Supreme Court ruled in a divided decision released today.

The case was brought forward by three retired female Mounties who argued that elements of the RCMP's pension plan are outdated and sexist.

Joanne Fraser, Allison Pilgrim and Colleen Fox all had children in the 1990s, when the RCMP wasn't allowing members to work part-time.

Fraser said she was "overwhelmed" by the effort to balance work and family, Pilgrim described it as a "treadmill" and Fox called the experience "hell on earth," said Friday's decision.

The RCMP introduced a program in 1997 that allowed job-sharing as an alternative to unpaid leave, permitting two or three people to split the duties of one full-time position. All three women signed up for that program, as did 137 other members between 1997 and 2011.

The court's decision noted that most people who joined the program at the time were women and most of them cited child care as their reason for joining.

Pension plan discriminatory, female Mounties tell court

Federal Court dismisses claims that RCMP pension plan discriminatory

When Fraser, Pilgrim and Fox returned to their full-time jobs, they learned their part-time work was not considered pensionable service and they would not be permitted to make doubled-up contributions to buy back the time.

But other members with gaps in full-time service, such as leave without pay, were allowed to buy back the service they missed by making the contributions.

The plaintiffs argued that the force's pension plan treated job-sharers worse than it did other members and breached the section of the Charter of Rights that says the "law should treat everyone equally, without discrimination on certain characteristics."
SCC decision notes 'historical disadvantage'

A Federal Court judge disagreed, but the Supreme Court of Canada agreed to hear their arguments.

Today, most of the Supreme Court justices ruled the pension plan discriminated against the job-sharers because they were women.

Justice Rosalie Abella, writing for the majority, called it a clear violation of the charter.

"Full-time RCMP members who job-share must sacrifice pension benefits because of a temporary reduction in working hours. This arrangement has a disproportionate impact on women and perpetuates their historical disadvantage," says the decision.

"I agree with Ms. Fraser that the negative pension consequences of job-sharing perpetuate a long-standing source of disadvantage to women: gender biases within pension plans, which have historically been designed 'for middle and upper-income full-time employees with long service, typically male.'"

Paul Champ, who defended the three women, called today's decision a win for equality.

"The federal government has tinkered with the RCMP pension plan over the years to make it fairer for women who have interruptions in their service for childbirth and care for small children. But it continued to penalize women who wanted to balance their job duties and childcare responsibilities for young children," he said.

"My clients fought for over 20 years to bring this fundamental equality issue to the attention of the RCMP and, eventually, the courts. They understood it was wrong and unfair to women and they fought all these years to make it right."

Three justices dissented.

Justices Russell Brown and Malcolm Rowe wrote that the job-sharing program was an attempt by the RCMP to accommodate employees with child care responsibilities and argued that the initiative's failure to remove disadvantages didn't make it discriminatory.

Justice Suzanne Côté, meanwhile, argued that the pension plan didn't single women out for discrimination.

Abella said it will be up to government officials to come up with a plan to allow full-time members who reduced their hours under the job-sharing program to buy back their full pension credit.

A spokesperson for the RCMP said the force is still reviewing Friday's decision.

"We are currently in the process of reviewing the decision and its implications to determine what steps must be taken. This being said, we are committed to reviewing the job-sharing arrangement," said Cpl. Caroline Duval.

"The RCMP remains committed to building an inclusive and barrier-free workplace for all of its employees."

#LOBSTERWARS
Trudeau defends federal response as threats escalate over Mi'kmaw fishery in Nova Scotia

Chief of Sipekne'katik First Nation urged Trudeau to step in

Emma Smith, Taryn Grant · CBC News · Posted: Oct 16, 2020
Chief Mike Sack said Friday that commercial fishermen were cutting traps and urged members of Sipekne'katik to get off the water. (Eric Woolliscroft/CBC)

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau today defended the federal government's response to an escalating standoff over a Mi'kmaw fishery in Nova Scotia, saying Ottawa has been "extremely active" in trying to resolve the situation.

Speaking to reporters, he called for an end to the violence and harassment that has been on the rise over the past week in several fishing communities in the southwestern part of the province.

"We are expecting the RCMP and police services to do their jobs and keep people safe," Trudeau said.

"I think there's been some concern that that hasn't been done well enough and that's certainly something we will be looking at very closely."

On Thursday, the chief of the Sipekne'katik First Nation urged Trudeau to step in and make sure those involved in the violence are prosecuted.

IN DEPTHMore coverage of the Mi'kmaw moderate livelihood lobster fishery

On Tuesday night, two facilities storing lobster caught by Mi'kmaw fishermen were raided and vandalized by a mob of hundreds of non-Indigenous commercial fishermen. The raids in the fishing communities of New Edinburgh and Middle West Pubnico are part of a series of incidents connected to the fight over a "moderate livelihood" lobster fishery that was launched by the Sipekne'katik First Nation in September.

On Friday, Sack also warned Sipekne'katik fishers about commercial fishermen "taking matters into their own hands" and urged members of the community to get off the water.

He told reporters that several traps belonging to Mi'kmaw fishermen have been cut and roughly three boats belonging to band members were out on the water in St. Marys Bay.

"We're trying everything we can to make sure that they're safe, but I can't blame them for wanting to go out and protect what is theirs," Sack said.

Chief Mike Sack said Friday that commercial fishing boats were on their way to haul Mi'kmaw fishermen's gear on Friday morning. (CBC)

Stuart Knockwood, an official with Sipekne'katik First Nation, said some Mi'kmaw fishermen went out on the water Friday to retrieve their gear, fearing it would be tampered with.

Knockwood went on out on the water himself to look for evidence of interference with the Mi'kmaw fishing operation. He said he came back with a buoy that had been sliced open and some small pieces of fishing line that had been cut.

"The rest of the line is at the bottom of the water," he said.

Knockwood said he also took photos of two fishing vessels in the area, although he doesn't know for sure if they were the culprits. He said the band will pass along the information to the federal Department of Fisheries and Oceans and the RCMP in the hopes that they'll investigate and lay any appropriate charges.

Sack said while he had a promising conversation with federal Fisheries Minister Bernadette Jordan on Thursday, the lack of action by DFO to protect Mi'kmaw fishermen could undermine any progress made.

"Unfortunately, if DFO doesn't act and remove commercial fishermen from the water from interfering with our rights, the conversation will end," he said. "We're not going to continue to talk to move forward if they're not willing to protect us and to uphold our treaty right."
Lobster for sale

In Halifax, Sipekne'katik band member Cheryl Maloney sold about 50 kilograms of Mi'kmaw-harvested lobster on the sidewalk Friday outside Province House — a location she chose because she said it was time for the provincial government to step in to help resolve the dispute.

Since the launch of Sipekne'katik's moderate livelihood fishery, Premier Stephen McNeil has said the issue falls exclusively under federal jurisdiction. Maloney, however, argues the province needs to amend a provincial regulation that says it's only legal to buy fish caught by someone with a federal commercial licence.

Maloney sold out in about an hour, with one woman paying $60 for a single lobster as a show of support.

Sack, however, said he did not sanction the sale, fearing it might hamper or reverse the fishery's progress.

'This community is out of hand'

The vice-president of a fishermen's union in Nova Scotia stepped down Friday, citing fears for his family's safety as threats from some non-Indigenous fishermen opposed to a self-regulated Mi'kmaw lobster fishery continue to escalate.

Joel Comeau, a former member of the Local 9 of the Maritime Fishermen's Union, was supposed to meet with Sack on Friday morning but abruptly cancelled the meeting.

Joel Comeau said Friday that he's stepping down from his position with Local 9 of the Maritime Fishermen's Union after four years. (Olivier Lefebvre)

Comeau said he's received "a lot of flak from my people and a lot of intimidation" over his willingness to work with Sack to find a way forward.

"I've been followed right to my house with my family in the truck at seven o'clock in the morning and people with tinted windows sitting across my driveway, you know, intimidating me and some language that I probably can't use on the air," Comeau told CBC's Maritime Noon Friday.

Q&AN.S. fishermen's union head quits, says lobster dispute is 'too much of a toll' on his family

He said one of his friends and his friend's young daughter had to be escorted out of a restaurant by police on Thursday.

"This community is out of hand. This community feels unsafe," said Comeau.

This screenshot from a video posted to Facebook shows a man grabbing and shoving Chief Mike Sack during an altercation this week. (Facebook)

Commercial fishermen are angry the fishery is operating outside the federally mandated commercial season, while the Mi'kmaq say they're simply exercising their treaty rights and that their small-scale fishery would not have a negative effect on lobster stocks.

'Do your job': Sipekne'katik chief calls on PM to protect Mi'kmaw fishermen

Vehicle torched, lobster pounds storing Mi'kmaw catches trashed during night of unrest in N.S.

Even after the events of this week, Comeau and Sack shared a message of calm and committed to sitting down together to talk.

Their exchange about the need for commercial and Mi'kmaw fishermen to work together was caught on video Wednesday.

Sack said he has a lot of respect for Comeau and was disappointed to hear that he'd resigned.

"For them to turn on their own people like that, it should be a clear indication for Canada what we're going through, and we're outsiders so it's 10 times worse for us," Sack said.



Mainstreet NS
Sipekne'katik chief and commercial fisherman call for peaceful and constructive dialogueJoel Comeau, a third generation lobster fisherman from Meteghan, and Mike Sack, chief of Sipekne'katik First Nation, join host Jeff Douglas to talk about the way forward after this week's vandalism and violence in southwest Nova Scotia. 

Comeau said he presented a woven basket with tobacco to an elder at the Saulnierville Wharf on Treaty Day and was looking forward to continuing his conversation with Sack.

"It is a shame that it's not going to happen, and the fishermen felt that I was betraying them and that I was going behind their backs," he said.

He said he places the blame for what's happening in southwest Nova Scotia squarely on the shoulders of Bernadette Jordan and the inaction of DFO officials.

Mi'kmaw fishing vessel destroyed in suspicious fire at N.S. wharf

Jordan said Thursday she is in negotiations with the Sipekne'katik First Nation and talking to commercial fishermen.

Comeau said that while commercial fishermen will have to find someone else to fight on their behalf, he also understands their anger and knows where it's coming from.

"There's no divide. The fishermen are united. The coalition is united," he said. "The divide is with me and my family and my family is number one, so you're not able to twist this to be blaming anybody. Every organization is working 120 per cent on this file. Everybody wants answers."