By Emmanuel Ojeifo
I knew it
would come to this. I knew that the murderers of Mrs. Bridget Agbahime, the
74-year-old Igbo Christian trader killed by irate Muslim youths at Kofar Wambai
market in Kano
would not be brought to book. I knew that the typical political Nigerian-speak,
“We will ensure that the culprits of this
dastardly act are brought to book,” is only a euphemism for intrigues,
betrayals and cover-ups. I knew that the political, religious and traditional
powers that be would ensure that the case is silenced and that nothing comes
out of it.
*Late Mrs. Bridget Agbahime |
I knew all of these
when I wrote my article, “The Media and
Extrajudicial Killings” published in Thisday of September 12, 2016. In that piece I
argued that the Nigerian news media ought to stay on course and, with patience
and persistence, pursue issues regarding human rights violations to their
logical conclusion in order to hold political leaders accountable. I spoke in
favour of what I termed ‘protest writing’ and ‘protest broadcast’ in media
practice in order to bring to the consciousness of media practitioners the huge
moral obligation that they have to “to
take sides with the powerless against the depredations of power.”
Thus, when the news
filtered into the public domain some days ago that the five Muslim culprits who
were arrested and arraigned for the gruesome murder of Mrs. Agbahime, have been
set free – “discharged and acquitted” – on frivolous grounds by a Kano
Magistrates Court, I wasn’t any bit surprised. That has been the pattern of
gross human rights violation in Nigeria .
The sad part of it is that in the eyes of many Nigerians, tragedies claiming
multiple human lives have become “one of those things.”
Like a national ritual,
whenever tragic incidents happen we talk about them soberly. Our security
agencies run around and get busy for a few days. Political leaders come out to
assure us that the culprits would be brought to book. They then pledge that
every possible effort will be made to forestall a repeat of such tragedy. End
of discussion! We return to business as usual, and wait until something tragic
happens again.
Has anyone heard
anything about the killers of Mrs. Eunice Elisha, the Redeemed Christian Church
of God (RCCG) pastor who was murdered in Kubwa, Abuja , during the early hours of June 9, 2016
when she went out to preach? Has anyone heard anything about the eight students
of Abud Gusau Polytechnic in Talata Marafa, Zamfara State ,
who were set ablaze on August 22, 2016 by some fanatical Muslim youths on
allegations of blasphemy against the Prophet Mohammed? Fifteen years have
passed since a famous Nigerian Minister of Justice was murdered in cold blood
in his Ibadan
residence.
Has the slain Minister of Justice found justice? We can count many other
illustrious and unknown Nigerians who have suffered a similar fate. For many
people, Nigeria
is simply a jungle, a modern version of the Hobbesian state where human life is
brutish, nasty and short, but also valueless. If not, how could criminals get
away with blood-stained hands, in such manner that makes laughable the
acclaimed professionalism and investigative rigour of our security agencies?
Frankly, I am close to
tears as I write this. There is something downright sickening about a nation
that has no regard for human life. As a people and as a nation, we have become
so accustomed to scenes of bloodshed to such an alarming degree that the wanton
destruction of human lives no longer generates any sense of moral revulsion in
us. Ever day in this country, the consciousness of human life being sacred and
inviolable is gradually being depleted as we witness gruesome violence and
deaths in monumental proportions. Our country is fast becoming an endless
theatre of sanguinity, daily watered by the blood of innocent citizens.
But for as long as our
leaders continue to politicise human lives and human deaths and vacillate where
they should take a tough stand against criminal acts, they are setting the
stage for an eventual showdown, a violent clash of “titanic forces” that is
destined to consume us all. In his classic novel, A Tale of Two Cities, the
great English novelist Charles Dickens narrates how brewing public resentment
and outrage against the excesses of French kings, nobles, aristocrats and high
clergy fast tracked the dawn of social revolution – the deluge of blood – which
consumed many lives.
In Dickens’ novel, we
see how a society of spectacle and glamour, without regard for the miseries and
injustices suffered by the poor masses can rapidly degenerate into an
insatiable hunger for glamorous show of horror and violent caprice. As always,
no government that asserts its power in the form of public exhibition can
guarantee control of its audience’s reaction.
I am sick and tired of the conspiracy of the Nigerian political elite against
the poor fellows who have nobody in the pyramid of power to fight their cause.
I am absolutely sure that if the son or daughter of a Governor or a Minister or
a Senator was killed in the manner in which poor Nigerians are being executed
daily, something drastic would have happened by now. We cannot continue on this
path as a nation, where the lives of poor people do not matter but the lives of
the rich matter.
We refuse to live in a
nation where there are two standards of citizenship valuation: the Nigeria of the rich and powerful who get
justice, and the Nigeria
of the poor and powerless who suffer untold injustices. We must, therefore, put
an end to this Orwellian “animal farm”
called Nigeria
where some lives are more important than others. Unless we do this, we are on a
long walk towards anarchy.
The brazen manner in
which the court hurriedly discharged the suspected murderers of Mrs. Agbahime
is sending the wrong signal to the Christian community in Nigeria . The
turn of events did deliberately provocative and it subverts the many years of
efforts to restrain adherents of the Christian faith from retaliating such serial
fatal attacks. All concerned citizens should speak up now and press on
President Muhammadu Buhari to order a re-opening of the murder case and bring
the murderers of Mrs. Agbahime to account. The ‘Prayer for Nigeria in Distress’
composed by the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of Nigeria in 1995 concluded by
imploring the “God of justice, love and peace” to “spare this nation Nigeria
from chaos, anarchy and doom.” That is my prayer for Nigeria .
*Ojeifo is a Catholic priest of the Archdiocese ofAbuja .
*Ojeifo is a Catholic priest of the Archdiocese of
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