Daily Trust Saturday

Nigeria’s hidden offenders

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Death has become unnervingl­y cheap in Nigeria. Incredibly, life manages to be even cheaper. In many parts of the country, lives are being snuffed out of people with alarming regularity.

Every day, people are being snatched and led to their deaths like sheep to a slaughter.

On 12th March, the red mist descended on popular Wuse Market in Abuja, when a hastily convened mobile court which tries environmen­tal offenders found a teenage hawker liable for a couple of environmen­tal offences.

He was duly convicted and while he was being taken away by men of the Nigeria Correction­al Service, the familiar Nigerian suspicion and fear of the agents of state set in to send him scampering down from the vehicle, upon which he quickly took to his heels.

The prison wardens briefly gave chase before fatally shooting him to make him one more entry on the list of those killed rather recklessly by agents of state.

The bullet fired by the correction­al services official more than snuffed the life out of the hapless teenage hawker for whom life was already tough peddling his wares. It also set off a firestorm in the market, during which no less than ten shops and eight cars were burnt down by angry youths. Over 1 billion Naira was lost as the market was temporaril­y shut down.

For using a sledgehamm­er to kill a fly, law enforcemen­t in Abuja did not just result in an unquantifi­able loss of life, at least a billion was also lost in money. With time, the damage done to the system will become apparent.

The killing machine also made a stop in Taraba State, whetting its appetite on the stone of festering ethnic crisis in a state where different ethnic groups are locked in a panicked competitio­n which precludes peaceful co-existence.

Also on 12th March, a bus carrying about fifteen passengers from Zaki Biam to Maihula in Donga Local Government Area of Taraba State was ambushed by criminals. While the driver managed to escape, the bodies of about nine of his passengers were later recovered. The abduction and consequent killing of the passengers have been chalked down to reprisals for previous clashes between Ichen and Tiv ethnic groups in the state.

Gradually, Nigeria is becoming an open market of bodies and body parts; a market marked by the conspiracy of many criminals in the country, the complicity of those who aid them and the complacenc­y of law enforcemen­t.

They abduct and kill as if Nigeria has stopped being a country where human life is the gift of gifts that should never be taken away save under the strictest stricture of the Constituti­on. When people are indiscrimi­nately or systematic­ally killed and nothing is done, it won’t take a soothsayer to know that there will be more death.

In Nigeria, those who kill and those who aid them make up Nigeria’s hidden offenders, together with those who condone them.

The teenage hawker in Wuse Market must have come to Abuja from his village in one of Nigeria’s thirty-six states, lured by the sirens of Abuja’s fabled but fatal green pastures. Having learnt the hard way that the roads in Abuja are not paved with gold, he must have taken to hawking to avoid returning to his village, which may be under the iron fist of terrorists. This was until the mobile court came and pronounced judgment on him, a judgment that was swiftly executed in a country where the wheels of justice grind scandalous­ly slowly.

The law kills In Nigeria, sometimes literally. But until it does, all other acts of killing are unconstitu­tional, illegal, and unforgivab­le.

The killers lurking in some local government areas of Taraba State don’t seem to know this. To their minds, the law cannot enjoy a monopoly of killings. Rev. Joseph Abah, a pastor of the African Church and his wife and his thirteen-month-old son are still missing. Given the cruelty of the attackers, it is improbable that the child survived, which may have been a more merciful fate given the circumstan­ces. In many Nigerian states, a multiplici­ty of ethnic groups have given rise to multitudin­ous conflicts fueled by ancient animositie­s over scant resources and relevance.

Death does not discrimina­te. The experience of the state has shown that many of those who remorseles­sly and indiscrimi­nately dispense death are themselves afraid of death. Their cowardice expresses itself in the ease with which they unburden the weight of their cowardice on others, somehow drawing pleasure from that which they fear the most.

To protect its monopoly of death, Nigeria must prey on the fears of those who dish death but not under the hand of the state. Bringing them nose to nose with that which they fear most; touching it but not exactly succumbing to it in a way that only the law can, may make them rethink their crimes.

A country that not only condones callous criminals but deigns to share its monopoly of death with them is surely complicit in their crimes.

Ike Willie-Nwobu wrote via Ikewilly9@ gmail.com Need to address plight of people with disabiliti­es

People with disabiliti­es who are mostly seen as idle are currently undergoing unutterabl­e sufferings and slumping in deep dejection as a result of the country’s recent removal of fuel subsidy that keeps giving rise to an unpreceden­ted soaring inflation and sinking the masses deeper into multidimen­sional abject poverty and starvation.

An inclusive and vibrant democracy is always so desirous of lending a helping hand to these vulnerable groups. This unblemishe­d democracy can only be actualised when all citizens are not stranded or marginalis­ed while disbursing democratic dividends regardless of their disability, ethnicity, national, status, race, gender, religion and region.

Today, millions of idle people with disabiliti­es, who are contingent on street begging for survival, are the worst hit by the adverse effects of the fuel subsidy removal. They are now being suffocated by pauperism, severe hunger and starvation since they couldn’t afford to get three square meals per day.

It should be remembered that the World Bank has recently estimated that about 15 per cent of Nigeria’s population has some forms of disability. The World Health Organisati­on also revealed that Nigeria is among the countries that has the highest rates of disability in the world. Do these miserable human beings not deserve to be given special attention?

It is lamentable that due to their physical challenges, people with disabiliti­es face daily struggles to access their basic needs, human rights, services, job opportunit­ies and participat­ion in government in Nigeria.

In this blessed month of Ramadan, in which each good deed of Muslims has a tenfold reward, I strongly call on Nigeria’s authoritie­s, ranging from governors, members of the federal legislatur­e and State Houses of Assembly and philanthro­pic individual­s to ameliorate hunger, penury and unutterabl­e sufferings confrontin­g people with disabiliti­es. Doing so will definitely gratify their creator and elevate their status in paradise.

Mustapha Baba Azare wrote from Bauchi State

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