…also published in Daily Trust
Though
my piece titled “Mismanagement of Zakzaky’s detention” a fortnight
ago was originally a single-part piece, some subsequently conceived
afterthoughts warrant writing more on the issue and under the same title. I
have therefore added (1) to the title of the previous piece making this part
two accordingly.
I
must also admit that the drama of Zakzaky’s aborted medical trip to India
disproved my early assumption that by granting him the leave to leave the
country in the first place, the federal government was actually succumbing to
pressure to release him; and that it was actually allowing him to escape in a
carefully stage-managed face-saving arrangement.
Nevertheless,
even though the federal government has managed to avert a potentially
embarrassing situation by bringing him back home early enough, his detention
remains grossly mismanaged anyway; and unless both the federal and Kaduna state
governments handle the issue with necessary decisiveness, the resultant dilemma
will keep getting even more complicated exposing the country to further
Iranian-sponsored subversive plots and campaign of calumny, which the Nigerian
government obviously lacks the necessary intelligence capabilities and
counterpropaganda resources to tackle.
This
is particularly imperative now that Zakzaky has contradicted his own claim of
being critically ill with poisonous bullet residues in his eye and body, by his
dramatic transformation from a wheelchair-bound, visibly seriously ill and
decrepit person with medical mask and a cervical collar around the neck and a
seemingly permanently damaged eye, in Nigeria, into a very healthy and well-fed
66-year-old man, in less than twenty-fours after his arrival in India without
having to undergo any medical treatment.
Besides,
by his own admission in his conversation with the visiting Indian Minister of
Minority Affairs, Mukhtar Abbas Naqvi, Zakzaky highlighted the quality of his
detention conditions and the privileges he enjoys in Nigeria. By the way, it’s
still not clear whether minister Naqbi’s visit to Zakzaky was in his official
capacity as a minister or as a leading Shiite figure in India.
In
any case, figuring this out is important at this juncture especially
considering the fact that, though Zakzaky wasn’t/isn’t even on bail, yet soon
after his arrival in India he began to act with an unmistakable sense of
entitlement, releasing propaganda videos and demanding to be relocated to a
5-star hotel while moves were already underway to somehow secure a transitory
legal status for him in India that would have made it practically impossible
for Nigeria to bring him back, and would have also enabled him to escape to
Iran.
Anyway,
now that the aborted medical trip has vindicated both the federal and Kaduna
state governments with regards to Zakzaky’s state of health and his detention
conditions, both governments should review their handling of his case.
Though
his group (IMN) has finally been duly designated a terrorist group in Nigeria,
this should be followed up with the appropriate commitment to concluding his
trial as soon as possible even if entails holding dedicated court sessions for
his trial to ensure reasonable promptness without prejudice to any of his
rights as an accused person, as provided by relevant legal, judicial and
procedural provisions.
However,
even from his own description in his conversation with the visiting Indian
minister, it’s obvious that Zakzaky is not only being treated well in detention
but actually pampered with privileges quite unnecessary for an accused person
facing serious criminal charges, compared to the average standard of living in
Nigeria, where I believe many people, given the option, would willingly agree
to give up their freedom to enjoy similar conditions in detention.
The
Kaduna state government should, therefore, and in the spirit of fairness to
other accused persons in Nigeria, move Zakzaky to a prison facility where he should
be treated accordingly without prejudice to his rights as an undertrial pending
the conclusion of his trial that determines his fate.
Also,
the relevant authorities at both the federal and Kaduna state governments
should be prompt in debunking the avalanche of both sponsored and unsolicited
propaganda released by his Iranian sponsors, followers and his foreign and
local apologists.
Yet,
I must point out that these measures can only address the challenges
surrounding Zakzaky’s detention and trial at the moment. After all, as I have
always observed in this column and elsewhere, there has always been a
dismissive underestimation of Zakzaky phenomenon on the part of successive
Nigerian governments due to apparent unfamiliarity with the agenda behind the
phenomenon on the part of Nigerian intelligence agencies, strategic research
centres, media and decision-making institutions.
This
explains the ineptitude that has always characterized the handling of his
subversive activities by successive federal and state governments; and unless
those and other relevant government and private institutions develop an
interest in that agenda, which I have always exposed in this column and
elsewhere, governments’ handling of Shiite activities in Nigeria would remain grossly
simplistic hence ineffective.
3 comments:
Good piece.
Well spot-on. This thought-provoking!👍
I wonder how I never come across your insightful writeups all this while, with my keen interest in such issues.
May Allah bless you and increases you in knowledge.
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