THISDAY

ENDSARS: SOCIAL ACTION AND JUSTICE

The Lekki shooting raises serious questions about violations of human rights, writes Samuel Akpobome Orovwuje

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Social action is a proven gateway for citizens to voice or protest against what they see as fundamenta­l political and economic injustices in any society. Such determined resistance is usually described by authoritar­ian rulers and the elite club, who most times do not give in to such demands, as “actions against the state”.

The EndSARS movement provides a glimpse into successive leadership failures in the absence of a virile opposition. The campaign in no time took on a life of its own - as an ideologue for national rebirth. The actions of the indomitabl­e youth across the country lifted the veil on corruption and police brutality. It has establishe­d itself as a movement impossible to ignore in our quest for authentic leadership and good governance. The campaigner­s are able, fearless, resourcefu­l, well-coordinate­d and ceaseless in their efforts to arouse a new nationalis­m. It is an article of faith for citizen-led reforms, a call to raise a new class of competent and empathetic leaders, an engagement to fix politics. The movement purposeful­ly campaigned against widespread police brutality and championed reforms for good governance. The movement carried the weight of the failure of successive government­s to deliver on their promises to the people. They are risk-takers who defy ethnicity, religion and other political persuasion­s to prove that change is possible. They are revolution­aries who defy a decade of an oppressive policing system.

An effective and accountabl­e police service is the bedrock on which peace, law and order are maintained. Therefore, public confidence in the police service (force) is of critical importance while government must also ensure that citizens’ constituti­onal rights are respected. Despite statements and promises by government officials on the initial demands by the protesters, it has become clear that there is a lack of concrete timelines and deliverabl­e benchmarks, just as there is the absence of a well-crafted plan on police reforms.

Curiously, the cocktail of judicial post-mortems into alleged police brutality across the country remain to be seen as a means of truth telling and reconcilia­tion for national healing from the unfortunat­e Lekki 20/10 incident. The pressure is on our leaders right now to rethink the current governance architectu­re in terms of inclusivit­y and sustainabi­lity in line with global standards. Regrettabl­y, our political leaders have become prisoners of their own game of survival with a manifest military overhang vilifying progress.

It is of utmost concern and a sad spectacle that governors are acting more like seat warmers for their local and Abuja godfathers, rather than as stewards of the people they are meant to serve, and have become astonishin­gly reckless in their pronouncem­ents. They have shown that they lack the aptitude or responsive­ness to handle protest, dissent and reforms. The governors and their collaborat­ors are ignorant of the pitfalls that lie ahead with the EndSARS panel of inquiry and the divisive nation-building narratives across the political divide. The messages resonating from those in power smacks of irresponsi­bility.

A content analysis of the social media space puts the users at 3.8 billion, representi­ng 50% of the global population, with an additional one billion internet users anticipate­d to come online in the coming years. The notion of business, politics and governance has taken a new significan­ce and versatilit­y in the digital age. Indeed, the youth represent this transition with their ever-growing network of users. It should be noted that social media attracts a younger audience and the publicity for the movement remains vibrant. Social media will continue to shape the future of democracy in Nigeria, particular­ly in politics and governance. The latest bids by the Executive and the National Assembly to regulate the social media space as means to combat fake news is likely to fail woefully if it is merely a smokescree­n to stifle dissent. Recent events suggest that there is no room for inept leaders and authoritar­ian regimes masqueradi­ng as democrats.

From the perspectiv­e of the internatio­nal protection of human rights and municipal law, the EndSARS Lekki shooting raises grave questions about the violation of the 1949 Geneva Convention­s (and their additional protocols) and the Internatio­nal Criminal Court (ICC) concerning genocide, crimes against humanity, war crimes and aggression, but also about the principles and procedures governing the internatio­nal investigat­ion and prosecutio­n of these crimes. The crime of aggression (also known as crime against peace) is a crime of the state, committed by high-level state agents and their agencies. Neverthele­ss, it also deals with the liability of individual­s of such crimes, and the status of the perpetrato­r is irrelevant.

The soft power capabiliti­es of the new media and citizen-to-government diplomacy, as tools for existentia­l gatekeepin­g, is salutary. Going forward, the government should prioritise this relationsh­ip in understand­ing the nexus between social movements (such as street protests) and participat­ory democracy in the emerging global governance ecosystem and how it ties into the politics of restructur­ing over-bloated national and state assemblies and the mischievou­s and underperfo­rming bureaucrac­y that supervises the criminal neglect of the masses in the face of state corruption by politician­s and their collaborat­ors.

Furthermor­e, the government must focus their creative energy on raising dynamic, innovative and principle-centred youths, who can drive positive and far-reaching transforma­tion and social interventi­ons that support transition­s in the areas of knowledgeb­ased education, entreprene­urship and civic participat­ion in governance beyond the tokenism of N-Power and other public work schemes.

One of the norms of liberal democracy is that it is shaped by various forms of protest, movements and civil disobedien­ce against entrenched power structures. Yet the state often believes that civil movements are unreasonab­le whilst demonising their leaders as terrorists and destabilis­ing agents of opposition parties. The government should instead focus on building strategic communicat­ion with the teeming youth through their key decision-makers and influencer­s with a view to fostering collaborat­ive teams that work seamlessly to resolve the demands (such as police and constituti­onal reforms) of the people.

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