(Link on Daily Trust site)
No sooner had the
#EndSARS protests erupted in many cities in Nigeria than a free-for-all
argument over it ensued. And from the sheer amount of emotion that
characterized the argument on social media where one followed it, one could
imagine its intensity in a typical joint in, say, Lagos or a typical
roadside majalisa in, say, Kano.
Arguments for and
against the protests were churned out right, left, and centre with many folks
rightly or wrongly taking it personally, which provoked bad feelings among many
and indeed caused strains in both virtual and real-life friendships. Many
theories were equally speculated supposedly to explain the protests.
Though everybody
claimed objectivity in his stand on the protests, opinions driven by underlying
prejudices dominated the atmosphere. What’s, however, clear is that regardless
of the logic or otherwise of any opinion expressed or theory speculated, the
incidents of the protests and its aftermath represented a clue of the
implications of lawlessness in the country.
In other words, the
escalation of the protests into indiscriminate vandalization of public
facilities and jail storming, which resulted in the escape of almost two
thousand prisoners, and looting spree of private properties and businesses
among other acts of violence against individuals and communities was a
mini-picture of what the situation in the country will turn into in the event
of the total breakdown of law and order.
Whether or not the
masterminds of the protests and the protesters had a hidden agenda as widely
alleged, or were simply being too reckless, their actions bore the hallmarks of
a subversive agenda against the already fragile corporate stability of the
country. The amount of recklessness shown by the protesters was rare if not
unprecedented.
In any case, they had
clearly manipulated popular discontentment over the persistently worsening
economic and security conditions in the country, to incite the gullible into
joining the protests, which also provided violent criminals lurking around with
a pretext to perpetrate their crimes after blending with the protesters.
The protesters equally
won the backing of many otherwise discerning observers with many of them
effectively turning into apologists for the protesters. Likewise, many others
with underlying political and/or personal interests gloated over the situation
under the illusion that it would only undermine the Buhari administration.
Having said that, one
has to admit that the protests had set in against the backdrop of accumulated
popular frustration frustrating enough to trigger not only protests but a
spontaneous revolt for that matter. And if not for the passionate dissuasion
against joining the protests by many northern Nigerian influential figures and
Muslim scholars who warned of a hidden agenda behind the protests, the protests
would have swept across the region and the situation would have become far
worse than what occurred in southern Nigeria.
Because SARS brutality
and whatever grievances that supposedly triggered the protests in southern
Nigeria cannot be compared to the situation in the particularly poverty-ravaged
northern Nigeria where people have literally resigned themselves to their fate
in the face of government’s failure to protect them from kidnappers, bandits
and terrorists unleashing death and misery across the region.
Anyway, with the
particularly blatant show of insensitivity to the worsening plight of the
people in the country by the very elite who have inflicted it on them over the
decades, popular frustration will definitely continue to pile up towards the
boiling point where no amount of dissuasion can prevent a complete and
irreversible breakdown of law and order, God forbid.
The recent incidents
of discovered warehouses housing tons of assorted foodstuff meant for free
distribution to the poor as Covid-19 pandemic palliatives, which, however,
somehow ended up hoarded to probably be misappropriated amid unprecedented
unaffordability of foodstuffs in the country suggest the worst form of
nonviolent callousness that leaders can exhibit.
Admittedly, while
following (on social media) the viral videos of people storming and looting the
warehouses, I was torn between two conflicting thoughts; the illegality of
their acts, on the one hand, and emotional feelings justifying the acts at least
for the desperate among them, on the other. After all, out of sheer
desperation, many otherwise decent people partook in the looting spree.
However, storming and looting personal properties, private warehouses and
businesses, which many people carried out during and in the aftermath of the
protests were absolutely unjustifiable. But then again, this is what inevitably
ensues whenever and wherever chaos reigns.
Nonetheless, though
popular frustration in the land has understandably reached unprecedented levels,
it must not be handled with emotions, for that will definitely lead to anarchy.
Because given Nigeria’s ever-tense atmosphere of political, ethnoreligious,
regional and resource control-linked tensions, a nationwide breakdown of law
and order means the breakout of irreversible anarchy in the country.
Even in the event of
the situation deteriorating to a point where the country’s corporate existence
is no longer viable, under no circumstances should anarchy be justifiably
resorted to in the name of restructuring, secession or separation.
By the way, the
assumption that Nigeria’s collapse would give rise to viable countries in some
geopolitical regions e.g. the southeast and the Niger-Delta where this
assumption is more popular, is too simplistic hence unrealistic.
Though unjustifiably
fragile, Nigeria’s stability remains the only guarantee for the already grossly
inadequate security of life, property and dignity that we take for granted, and
in no circumstances should it be jeopardized for a romanticized post-revolution
Nigeria that some reckless folks are promoting.
The recent incidents should serve as a wake-up call to the country’s leadership elite to get committed enough to arresting the worsening popular frustration in the land by addressing its root cause, which is bad governance driven by the culture of corruption and impunity. Because, after all, in the event of overwhelming chaos, they, their families and properties will be the first set of targets. And even those who would manage to flee the country will have to endure the humiliation of living as glorified refugees in foreign lands struggling with legal prosecutions for corruption and perhaps crimes against humanity to the end of their lives.
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