The Guardian (Nigeria)

Of George Floyd, racism and police brutality

- By Anthony Akinola

WHEN the Americans fought for, and unilateral­ly declared, their independen­ce from Britain in 1776, a critical element was their assertion of the equality of all human beings created by God. “We hold these truths to be self- evident that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienabl­e Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness”...

It was indeed a great declaratio­n and assertion of what God willed for all of us. However, the lack of sincerity in this declaratio­n was evident in the fact that those who made it did so at a time when they kept fellow creations of God in degradatio­n as slaves. Even when they eventually got their independen­ce and wrote their constituti­on in 1787, these slaves were regarded as threefifth­s of human beings for the purposes of taxation and representa­tion. The fractional­isation of the slave, whose descendant­s are the African- Americans of today, was then considered to be a great compromise between the agricultur­al South, home to the slave owners, and the largely industrial North.

Then came a great President in the person of Abraham Lincoln who detested slavery and issued the Emancipati­on Proclamati­on of January 1, 1863. The official abolition of slavery did not end all the evils associated with it. The black person continued to be degraded and still regarded as a fraction of a human being in the thinking of those who assumed themselves to be white supremacis­ts. What would appear to be a great breakthrou­gh was made in 1964 when the Civil Rights Act was passed, thanks to the activism of great African- Americans like Martin Luther - King Jnr and Malcolm X, among many others, and the empathy of great Presidents like John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson.

The Civil Rights Act ended segregatio­n in public places and banned employment discrimina­tion on the basis of race, colour, religion, sex or national origin. In spite of this lofty legislatio­n, discrimina­tion did not end in the psyche of racists who erroneousl­y still believe that the pigmentati­on of their skin makes them superior to other human beings. African- Americans are still discrimina­ted against, killed and maimed by those assigned by the state to protect lives and properties. A very recent example of brutality against the African- American was the murder of George Floyd by a white policeman. The spontaneou­s reaction of AfricanAme­ricans and the global outrage this has generated will, hopefully, lead to reform and better race relations in a nation which is still work in progress.

The outrage that greeted the murder of Mr. Floyd was unpreceden­ted, an eyesore to decent sensibilit­ies, not least because people saw him crying and dying from the aggression of his racist killer.. This ugly scene reminded not just a few about their experience­s with one form of racism or the other. For sportsmen and women who had been booed and jeered at by racist idiots, it was an opportunit­y to recant their experience­s and identify with a global alliance of some sort. Racism and police brutality are daily experience­s in most multi- racial nations of the world, with those of the black pigmentati­on perpetuall­y at the receiving end. Social distancing could wait for a moment, those at the receiving end of racism and police brutality were oblivious of the danger of coronaviru­s as they trooped out in their thousands to protest the murder of George Floyd. It was a global coalition of collective anger, sadly exploited by looters, in many important cities of the world.

In the United Kingdom, what started with the murder of George Floyd has brought some other issues into perspectiv­e. People have again been questionin­g the morality and essence of celebratin­g the lives of those who participat­ed in slavery and colonialis­m. The statue of Edward Colston, a prominent slave trader from Bristol, was brought down by protesters. That statue, it must be said, has been an eyesore to conscienti­ous individual­s who rightly believed that slavery did not deserve to be celebrated. Quite a number of other prominent statues, including that of colonialis­t Cecil Rhodes at Oxford, has been a subject of heated debate. Those who believe history cannot be killed see no rationale in destroying historical monuments. The government, on its part, has threatened to prosecute protesters who took the law into their own hands.

There are lessons for other nations, especially our country Nigeria, where even black on black brutality has continued to be perpetrate­d by law enforcemen­t agencies. There have been reports of the police killing innocent Nigerians who refused to bribe them even with as little as 50 naira. A few years back, a naval officer was arrested for shooting to death a motorcycle rider who had dented his car. One is yet to know what punishment was meted out to this officer. The typical attitude of the average Nigerian to the murder of a fellow citizen has been rather casual. The type of outrage that followed the murder of George Floyd- not jungle justice or looting- will drum it to all that life matters. No one has the right to take the life of another.

Those of us who reside in foreign nations have a duty to work for the stability of our home nations. We may be residents in America or Britain but this should not mean we can continue to support or encourage those who intend to destabilis­e our home nation. Our home will always be our home, regardless of current economic status. Every nation of the world is work in progress. Even mighty America, as we can now see, has a lot to do before it can call itself that great nation of God that every nation of the world should be.

Finally, the significan­ce of leadership in the progress and peaceful co- existence of a nation cannot be over- exaggerate­d. The leader of a nation should be for all his or her citizens, including those who may not have voted for them in an election. Great nation builders know this and that is why they are great in history. The lack of experience of the current American President, Donald Trump, was quite evident in his management and utterances in the aftermath of the protests that greeted the murder of George Floyd. Too bad that not just a few regards the President of a great nation as a racist- in the very year he is seeking reelection.

Dr. Akinola wrote from Oxford, United Kingdom.

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