Daily Trust

Hooligans as ‘final arbiters’

- By AbdulYasas AbdulHamid

The recently vaunted peace in the northern Nigerian states of Kano, Kaduna and Plateau is being marred by the activities of hooligans. They attack, mug, rob and sometimes kill their victims at will. This has been going on for some time now.

These days, their operations, I do not know whether it was due to Sallah celebratio­ns and that they must have known that people carry either valuables with them, have multiplied. They dictate where one goes and where not to go, when to possess a phone and when not to do so; when to withdraw money from ATMs and when not to do so, when to smile and when to cry and, how mindboggli­ng it may sound, to live and when to die.

They are on streets, in markets and in the night they occupy public schools; they seem to be everywhere. They block every alleyway and backstreet. They waylay passers-by, take what they want and send them away.

These final arbiters have their own laws and courts. It is not an understate­ment if one says, “They are law unto themselves” that is why they break laws that are not meant for them.

In their courts, unlike constituti­on-governed ones, rewards and punishment­s come in the form of letting go of your possession or face glory death and die like an intrepid legend who dies with honour; and if one is lucky enough, he leaves with both mental and physical scars. In their court you have no right to defense counsel but your possession­s will be your passport to life.

“They sent a boy who grabbed my cap. When I turned to talk to him, he ran. I pursued him to take back my cap. Near a huge tree, the boy suddenly stopped. Before I knew it, I saw two young men heading toward where I was each menacingly holding a dagger. What could I do if not to run for dear life? Look here; can you see the stitches? I survived with two deep cuts. I reached the main street bare-footed. My expensive shoes and cap are gone and the reward for seeking them back are two deep cuts”, said a young man who was attacked by lawless ‘yan sara-suka (gangs).

You see them armed to the teeth with daggers, clubs, flatheaded machetes, sharpened horns and pairs of scissors. Their bloodshot eyes and scarified faces are enough warnings for any recalcitra­nt to their laws. Giveand-go-untouched is their final word and a pointer that speaks, “Keep off our area of operation”.

Many have been stabbed, some are with no finger or two as a token for their refusal to give out something worthwhile and some are living witness to such despicable operations of the “almighty” gangs for the scars they bear as signs of their encounters with them.

On Sunday 26th August, 2018, a friend wrote on his Facebook timeline on how his father broke the news of the demise of his brother. The decease, who was a father, was “brutally stabbed to death” just because he tried to intervene in a dispute between two gangs that flared up in his neighbourh­ood during the just concluded Sallah celebratio­ns in Jos, the Plateau State capital.

The hooligans, according to him, within some communitie­s in Jos North, Plateau State, never discrimina­te between the young and the old or men and women. They rampage and kill mercilessl­y at sight; and destroy property. This has been going on continuous­ly. Are the authoritie­s concerned not aware of this?

About a month ago, Techno K-7 of a co-worker of mine who is undergoing his master’s degree was snatched by a mugger at a knife-point. He was on his way to Bayero University, Kano, and the phone was in his breast pocket, when the criminal pick pocketed it and then brandished a sharp dagger menacingly at him. What else could he do? He chose his safety, as every sensible person would, over the phone.

This was after they had stolen his new motorcycle, Companion, at the premises of one of the courts here in Kano State. All efforts to retrieve were proved abortive. Imagine what a setback this would bring to his studies.

Reports have it that at Hawan Nassarawa (equestrian, elegant procession­s organized to mark Sallah celebratio­ns in northern Nigeria) many people were attacked, robbed of their possession­s and some even wounded when security agents were not insight.

About three months ago, Sauna area in Nassarawa Local Government Area of Kano State, was in total anarchy. About four boys were stabbed to death. It was a dispute between two rival gangs over a girl.

Two months later, two boys were stabbed right in their chests. Both of them died right on the spot: the first one was due to disagreeme­nt over age between two boys at Tudun Murtala. Because he said he was older than the culprit, he stabbed him to ventilate his anger. There he was laying dead. The other had just come back from a rehabilita­tion centre. He was stabbed for demanding a fair share of his pay from his co-worker near Tudun Wada Mini Stadium of Nassarawa Local Government Area.

Ultimately, to avoid this moral degenerati­on especially amongst youth, parents should take up their parental responsibi­lities such as giving proper education, feeding, sheltering and clothing their wards.

Until the authoritie­s concerned and all stakeholde­rs are ready to find lasting solutions to this nagging threat, ‘Yan sara-suka, Kallare, area boys or ‘Yan daba will continue to operate freely thereby threatenin­g the lives and properties of innocent Nigerians; may God forbid. AbdulHamid from Kano wrote this piece

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria