By Paul Onomuakpokpo
It is immaterial whether this column’s warning just last Thursday
that the Department of State Services (DSS) is on the prowl and it needs to be
reined in was an act of serendipity. What matters is that the warning is
increasingly becoming a frightening reality. We need not look far for the
ominous signs of the cluelessness of the government mutating into dictatorship.
If the trouble were only that the government has become clueless about managing
the economy and snatching the citizens from the cauldron of poverty, we would
not bother. But the government has repeatedly demonstrated its apparent
antipathy towards the people by assaulting them.
We need not explore
the unceasing cases of police brutality. These are familiar. They are
apparently provoked by the citizens’ refusal to oblige police officers with the
bribes they demand. We need not also be reminded of the military’s maiming and
killing of Shittes and IPOB members. There was the official justification of
such mowing down of citizens under the rubric of squelching threats to the
peace and order in the polity. But we are deservedly outraged at the impunity
of security operatives when their attacks on the citizens are not provoked by
the latter’s actions which conflict with the presumed interest of the state and
the collective good. And this happens in an atmosphere of democracy where the
dignity of the citizens ought to be privileged.
In October last year, an
easy-going Joseph Izu, a footballer with Shooting Stars of Ibadan was killed by
soldiers in Rivers
State . Last month, Alex
Ochienu, a pastor with the Redeemed Christian Church of God was assaulted by
two soldiers in Abuja
for refusing to heed their cruel command to frog-jump.
There was also the
case last month of a Nollywood actress and movie producer Jewel Infinity who
was travelling from Port Harcourt to Onitsha . When she got to
a checkpoint, a soldier said that she was gossiping about him. He did not
accept the lady’s protestation of innocence that she was only engaged in a
friendly debate with a fellow passenger in the vehicle in which they were
travelling. The soldier demanded that the actress should knee down and
apologise. Her refusal to do this was met with beating with wood and rod.
The unprovoked brutality being meted out to the
citizens by security operatives is in tandem with their reading of the body
language of President Muhammadu Buhari. It is clear that Buhari either tacitly
or directly endorses this brutality. This was why he approved the DSS raid of
the homes of the justices of the Supreme Court over the allegations of
corruption.