THE National Human Rights Commission (NHRC), earlier today, said it recorded 3,724,822 million human right violations complaints across the 36 states and the FCT in 2025.
The Executive Secretary of the commission, Dr Tony Ojukwu, SAN, disclosed this at the presentation of the December Dashboard and Observatory Reports on Human Rights violations.
Ojukwu noted that human rights violations were linked to systemic issues among others, adding that collaboration remained a powerful tool in promoting and protecting human rights.
” From the January to December, 2025 dashboards, we have learnt that human rights violations are deeply linked to systemic issues including inequality, unemployment, weak institutions, and limited access to justice.
”We have also learnt that early warning signs are visible in the data as the dashboard is not merely a reporting tool; it is a prevention mechanism.
”One thing that has also been highlighted is that collaboration remains essential.
”No single institution can address Nigeria’s human rights challenges alone. Progress in 2025 was most visible where government agencies, civil society, traditional institutions, and communities worked together,” he said. Looking forward to 2026, he noted that the human rights outlook for Nigeria was one of cautious optimism, matched with realism.
He promised that in this context, the NHRC would prioritise strengthening early warning and prevention mechanisms, using dashboard data to support proactive interventions.
He added that the Commission would also deepen engagement with security agencies, to ensure human rights compliance in law enforcement and conflict response.
Ojukwu said expanding access to justice, particularly for women, children and marginalised communities was also a priority.
According to him, data alone does not change lives, action does. The Human Rights Dashboard is a mirror held up to our society. What we see in it should guide policy, reform, and accountability.
He therefore called on all stakeholders to use this data to inform people-centred policies.
Speaking, Adwoa Kufuor, Senior Human Rights Adviser to the UN resident and Humanitarian Coordinator in Nigeria, noted that looking ahead to the rest of 2026 and beyond, there are still many challenges.
She noted that these were security concerns, economic pressures, shrinking civic space, and barriers to getting justice.
The dashboard and observatory reports were presented by Mr Hiliary Ogbonna, senior human rights adviser to the commission.
He said that the North Central recorded the highest number of complaints with 1,317,213 cases out of the total number recorded in 2025.
Ogbonna added that Benue led in the number of violations of children ‘s rights.
He said in 2025, the Commission completed investigation of 52,489 complaints and lamented inadequate funding. NAN

