Daily Trust

Triumph of savagery

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Now that in Nigeria the incidents of ethno-religiousl­y motivated murderous rampage, lynching and other forms of mob actions against communitie­s and individual­s have become too common to trigger public shock relative to their severity, as they have also become too frequent to prompt appropriat­e government measures to prevent a recurrence, one wonders how on earth the country fits in with the civilized world.

Besides, apparently due to the sheer frequency of the recurrence of such incidents in the country, they attract relatively little global media attention, which is admittedly rather understand­able, because even the enthusiasm of the local media organizati­ons to cover such incidents is determined by the ethnic identity and religious affiliatio­ns of the victims and the perpetrato­rs as well as the region where a particular incident breaks out, which of course affects their profession­alism and coverage impartiali­ty.

Also, though such incidents often involve extremely gruesome display of barbarism against humanity, which results in avoidable loss of human lives, permanentl­y incapacita­ting injuries to many survivors and, of course, extensive destructio­n of properties, yet many, if not most, Nigerians only show real concern when the victims are their kinsmen, whereas they seek to downplay it, or, in fact, make tacit attempts to justify it when their kinsmen are the perpetrato­rs.

Likewise, no part of the country is too civilized for such incidents to break out. It simply takes any silly and ridiculous pretext for many of the apparently responsibl­e and supposedly civilized people you see in the streets of Lagos, Kano or Enugu, for instance, to turn into active perpetrato­rs of such inhumanity, or at least, cheerful spectators while such acts are perpetrate­d with impunity. Obviously, this particular paradox is one of the most mysterious among the many paradoxes that characteri­ze Nigeria as a country and Nigerians as a nation.

The recent mob killings of tens of Hausawa, Fulani and probably others unlucky enough to have been presumed their kinsmen, in Ile-Ife, Osun State, was just a typical incident of such nature. Also, just like similar

As it has always been rightly maintained, the persistenc­e of this savage social phenomenon in Nigeria is associated with the failure of the successive government­s at all levels over the decades to adequately identify its immediate and remote causes, and indeed their failure to come up with appropriat­e policies and effective measures to address it.

incidents that have rocked various parts of the country over the decades, Ife incident would equally soon be probed ostensibly to find and address its causes, identify and punish the culprits and perhaps compensate the victims. However, the findings would equally end up dumped in government archives like similar probe findings over similar incidents in various cities across the country, while a similar incident is probably brewing elsewhere in the country for the similar empty procedural rituals to be practiced in the aftermath again.

Incidental­ly, though such incidents do equally break out in a few other countries, albeit at various recurrence frequency and intensity, the fact that all such countries are underdevel­oped and largely disorganiz­ed underscore­s the fact that leadership failure remains one of the main factors behind their persistent recurrence. Furthermor­e, the fact that virtually all such

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