Moreover, the Commission will have to examine the human rights situation of Niger, Senegal and the Democratic Republic of Congo. Given the continuing human rights violations in these States, this examination is of particular importance. The FIDH and its member organizations in these countries will be presenting to the Commission alternative reports to the periodic reports of States.
This session will take place against a sombre background described by the FIDH president, Sidiki Kaba, as the "autumn of human rights" . The Commission should not turn a deaf ear to this reality. Indeed, since the last session of the African Commission, the FIDH has denounced many human rights violations, such as: rejection of political alternation and pluralism, rigged elections in Togo, the coup d’Etat in Guinée Bissau, and in Sao Tome and Principe, arbitrary arrests and persons held in detention in Mauritania, torture in Cameroon, death sentences in Nigeria, mass expulsion of immigrants in Djibouti, restriction of basic freedoms in Senegal and in Chad, harassment of human rights activists in Zimbabwe, Algeria and Tunisia, economic and social rights trampled, armed conflict and/or violation of international humanitarian law in Liberia, the Democratic Republic of Congo (RDC), Burundi, etc.
Many challenges will be put to the African Commission which will have to show a real will and ability to take these up, in particular by adopting a firm stance on these situations. The FIDH specifically hopes that it will take account of the elements presented in the two reports published on this occasion by the FIDH, on human rights violations committed in Cameroon and in the Democratic Republic of Congo .