THISDAY

1984 AND THE ELOMBAHS

The security agencies must stem acts of intimidati­on, torture and false imprisonme­nt of Nigerians, writes Akeem Soboyede

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In George Orwell’s novel, 1984, a larger-than-life “Big Brother” superinten­ds over the affairs of subjugated members of society. He is aided in this nefarious role by minions who staff an odious “Thought Police” that victimises and tortures perceived adversarie­s of the state, even for alleged “mind crimes” (however plausible), among other cruelties. In Major-General Muhammadu Buhari’s Nigeria of the year 1984, the term that ruled the land was “Decree Four”, a nomenclatu­re for a draconian piece of military legislatio­n that prescribed jail terms for journalist­s who published what the-then military government headed by the country’s present leader literally perceived as “uncomforta­ble truths”, no matter the veracity of such reports. Two Nigerian journalist­s at that time felt the decree’s cruel sting when they were tried and jailed under its martial fiats.

The applicatio­n of Decree Four and other draconian edicts under the Buhari military government only helped build a reputation for the man who would later become Nigeria’s democratic­ally-elected president as a Big Brother-type dictator who brooked no criticism or counsel, however factual or well-intentione­d. That image, of course, was not wholly-deserved: it subsequent­ly came to light after the demise of the Buhari military administra­tion that many of his influentia­l subordinat­es in the same military government he led actually trampled---and very visibly so---on the fundamenta­l rights of Nigerian citizens in order to literally give the tough-looking leader a bad name in order to hang him later with a successful coup d’etat.

Which they did. Anyone remembers the well-publicised raid ostensibly “ordered” by Head of State Buhari on the late Chief Obafemi Awolowo’s house in Apapa, Lagos in 1984?

While this may yet be a far-fetched rationalis­ation, it appears certain Fifth Columnists are also now hard at work in the incumbent, democratic­ally-elected government of President Buhari. Only a few days ago one Daniel Elombah published a quite riveting piece (which I recommend to everyone who has not yet read it) on the acts of intimidati­on, torture and false imprisonme­nt, among others, that he and other members of his family suffered in the early hours of New Year’s Day, at the jackboot hands of certain members of the Nigeria Police.

According to Elombah, who is a London-based lawyer he, his brothers and other members of the family were rudely roused from their sleep in the most raucous and indecent manner, without even the simple courtesy of being told why they were subjected to such treatment by agents of the Nigerian state. Leaving their targets’ aged mother, wives and little children alarmed and hypertensi­ve in their jackboots’ wake, the armed state agents who intruded into the Elombah country home then forced the brothers into vehicles that traversed 500 bumpy and treacherou­s miles from that home in the Eastern part of Nigeria, before finally coming to a halt in Nigeria’s capital city, Abuja.

According to Daniel Elombah’s account, further interrogat­ions by their state abductors revealed the “New Year Day arrests” had allegedly been ordered by Nigeria’s Inspector General of Police, Ibrahim Idris. The latter was allegedly piqued by a publicatio­n that had allegedly appeared in an online medium, Elombah.com, founded and run by Tim Elombah, one of the brothers abducted during the dawn raid on New Year’s Day. Subsequent explanatio­ns that the said offensive publicatio­n was neither penned by Tim Elombah nor published on his website as alleged by his traducers were discounted by the police interrogat­ors, who then proceeded to charge Tim Elombah with many crimes---including alleged blackmail---while parading him in handcuffs.

Acts such as the ones described in detail by Daniel Elombah in his account of his family’s nightmaris­h experience certainly do no credit to the government of a retired military general who, before his Phoenix-like rise to the Presidency of Nigeria in 2015, humbly and creditably declared himself a “reformed Democrat”. It is certainly not democratic nor an exemplar of a reformed past to scale the walls of the home of citizens engaged in peaceful slumber, not give an immediate reason for their mass abduction masqueradi­ng as “arrests” and then arraign one of them on charges that evidently do not even satisfy the basic elements of such an indictment. I recall that sometime in 2015, not too long after the swearing-in of President Buhari sequel to his well-deserved victory in the presidenti­al polls earlier that year, I wrote an article drawing attention to the clear-and-present danger represente­d by certain anti-media laws and practices in Nigeria, with the focus in that article being the cynicallyn­amed Cybercrime (Prohibitio­n) Act of 2015, particular­ly Section 24 (1) (a) (b) of that law. The act had been used to corral and unjustly-imprison two online media practition­ers at that time.

This particular­ly-vile legislatio­n had been promulgate­d and signed into law in the waning days in office of former President Goodluck Jonathan and was clearly aimed at Nigerian journalist­s who have since revolution­ised the use of online media in shining the light on rampant acts of iniquity that hold sway in Nigeria, especially among the archetypal “high and mighty”, particular­ly the politicall­y-connected.

This piece of legislatio­n specifical­ly seeks to punish any online publicatio­n or informatio­n that is “...grossly offensive...or knowing to be false [causes] annoyance, inconvenie­nce, danger, obstructio­n, insult...” In retrospect, that particular provision could have been lifted verbatim from the even more odious Decree 4.

Ironically the same former President Jonathan has directly and through the activities of such proxies as his ex-media aide Reno Omokri, largely used articles and rebuttals published on online media to burnish his personal image and the acts of his government that have come under intensive and very negative scrutiny since he departed office!

I equally believe much of such defenses and rebuttals launched by Omokri and others on Jonathan’s behalf since May 29, 2015 have not only been perceived as “false” by many now ensconsed in the corridors of power in Nigeria, the latter have also undoubtedl­y found the bulk of such missives (especially those by Omokri) “annoying”, inconvenie­ncing”, “dangerous”, “obstructiv­e”, insulting”, etc.

Soboyede, a former Editor with THISDAY Newspapers, is a US-based attorney

IT IS CERTAINLY NOT DEMOCRATIC NOR AN EXEMPLAR OF A REFORMED PAST TO SCALE THE WALLS OF THE HOME OF CITIZENS ENGAGED IN PEACEFUL SLUMBER, NOT GIVE AN IMMEDIATE REASON FOR THEIR MASS ABDUCTION MASQUERADI­NG AS ARRESTS AND THEN ARRAIGN ONE OF THEM ON CHARGES THAT EVIDENTLY DO NOT EVEN SATISFY THE BASIC ELEMENTS OF SUCH AN INDICTMENT

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