Our Voices

RFK Human Rights Condemns Recent Violence Against Journalist Omoyele Sowore

Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights is deeply disturbed by the ongoing targeting of our client, journalist Omoyele Sowore, by Nigerian authorities.

On Monday, May 31, 2021, an officer of the Nigerian Police Force shot and injured Mr. Sowore during a peaceful protest for better governance and improved security in Nigeria. Mr. Sowore was hospitalized. This latest attack occurs just a few months after an arrest in December 2020. At that time, he was arrested, beaten, and detained following a peaceful protest which he was covering in his capacity as a journalist.

In response to this violence, Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights filed an update before the United Nations Working Group on Arbitrary Detention on the recent shooting and previous arrest and detention of Mr. Sowore. In October 2020, the Working Group published a decision declaring Sowore’s previous detention in 2019 was in violation of international law. Nigerian authorities had arrested Sowore on August 3, 2019, two days before a planned #RevolutionNow pro-democracy protest. He was held in arbitrary detention for 144 days, where he was subject to several due process violations.

We urge the Government of Nigeria to investigate and hold accountable all persons responsible for the unlawful arrest, detention, inhumane treatment, and shooting of Mr. Sowore.

Read our June 2021 update to the UN Working Group.

New year, new us. Same mission.

Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights is rebranding to honor the legacy of our founder and hero, Mrs. Ethel Skakel Kennedy. From now on, we will proudly be known as the Robert & Ethel Kennedy Human Rights Center

While our name is changing, our mission and work remain the same. We will continue to fight injustice, advance human rights, and hold governments accountable around the world in 2026 and beyond.