Tag: Banex Plaza

  • Banex Plaza and burst of brazen illegalities

    Banex Plaza and burst of brazen illegalities

    Sir: Two soldiers beat up not exactly to a pulp but in the full glare of onlookers and bystanders, some terrified and others not quite, and then in the global glare of the social media.

    Too much humiliation in a day, and within months, and signs of considerable danger for a regimented institution known for its discipline and indelible institutional memory especially with the attack in Okuama, Delta State where about sixteen military personnel lost their lives in the most brutal manner.

    True to form, the Nigeria Army had shut down Banex plaza, a behemoth commercial hub that sits like a boulder in the heart of the Federal Capital Territory, where the assault occurred, reopening it after more than a week. If the army’s loss of face in the unfortunate situation is well imponderable, the losses of those who do business there have simply been incalculable.

    A pressing question Is why? Why should a relatively trivial commercial transaction descend into a fracas that has now generated more losses than imagined? Are Nigerians now shred of all dignity so as to  easily eschew the simplest dictates of civility?

    It should worry the few sensible Nigerians left that may of their fellow citizens have lost all regards for constituted authority.

    Read Also: UN, Nigeria unveil Northeast action plan against internal displacements

    It Is a good thing that the Nigerian Army has  recalled its men from the Plaza. They are not security men there and Nigeria is too  pressed for security personnel presently to have extra uniformed hands to push to gateposts as gatekeepers of a commercial plaza. Now that the resumption of commercial activities at the plaza has been allowed, it will surely not militate against the identification of the culprits who must be made to account for their crimes in laying leprous fingers on men whom the law considers defenders of Nigeria’s territorial sovereignty.

    What transpired at Banex was yet another episode in the open-air assault on the law which some Nigerians favour more than the strained dignity of judicial proceedings. This kind of assault often comes unannounced and is capable of springing up anywhere. It is a habit born presumably of the heady days of military regimes,  when the army gave an  especially short shrift to the law in Nigeria. It was ironic then to see men in uniform at the receiving end of this brand of cruel and crude justice.

    However, throwing in hands and stones or contributing fuel and match sticks to such gruesome expeditions is terrible advertisement for a country that aspires to become a model democracy.

    Nigerians must discipline themselves to refrain from taking the law into their hands. No one deserves to be punished except in accordance with law. Not the vagrant accused of stealing at the market or even  suspected one-chance robbers commonplace in Abuja nowadays.

    In a democracy such as Nigeria’s, acting in accordance with the law is a strength not a weakness. If Nigeria ever hopes to heal from the deep wounds of its military past, Nigerians must see obedience to laws and respect for constituted authorities as key.

    There is no love lost between Nigerians and the army as an institution. A historic animosity long preceded by the military coups which truncated Nigeria’s democracy in the 60s through the 80s. This animosity is rooted in the colonial era, when force was used to by the colonialists to achieve their aims. Though the Nigerian Army was not what it is now, residual hostility for those who bear arms in the name of the law became a part of many Nigerian lives.

    Many Nigerians blame the army for frustrating democracy in the country for so long and allowing corruption to fester. This memory carried over from the days when the institution was used to defeat the aims of democracy has done enough to shroud the heroic job Nigerian soldiers have done to keep the country from falling into the hands of terrorists.

    To strengthen the country’s security and fortify its democracy, Nigerians, and the personnel of the Nigeria Army must close ranks and work together instead of working at cross-purposes. This is necessary in the grander scheme of things, for any divisions would surely be pounced upon by Nigeria’s many enemies.

    •Ike Willie-Nwobu, Ikewilly9@gmail.com

  • Why we reopened Banex Plaza, says army

    Why we reopened Banex Plaza, says army

    The Nigerian Army said it agreed to reopen Banex Plaza in Abuja after reaching some key resolutions with stakeholders.

    Army spokesperson, Maj.-Gen Onyema Nwachukwu, said this in a statement yesterday.

    The plaza was shut on May 18, after a fight between some traders and soldiers over phone sales.

    Read Also: Why we reopened Banex plaza, by Army

    But Gen. Nwachukwu said in response to incident, a high-level meeting was convened in the Office of the National Security Adviser, including the Principal General Staff Officer to the NSA, Commissioner of Police, FCT, the FCT Director of the Department of State Services, the leadership and Management of Banex Plaza, a representative from the Directorate of Abuja Environmental Protection Board, and the National Chairman of the Mobile Phone Traders Association, with the primary objective “to identify and apprehend the perpetrators and ensure the continued security of the Federal Capital Territory.”

  • JUST IN: Army reopens Banex Plaza Abuja

    JUST IN: Army reopens Banex Plaza Abuja

    The popular Banex Plaza in Abuja’s Wuse 2 neighbourhood which was closed for more than a week by the Nigerian Army has been reopened.

    Eyewitness reports revealed that the plaza was reopened on Monday afternoon.

    It was reported that the market was taken over by military authorities on Saturday, May 18, after a violent clash between civilians and uniformed men.

    The Nation reported that there was a disturbance at Banex Plaza, a telecommunications gadgets market in Abuja, following a confrontation between suspected thugs and some soldiers.

    Read Also: Army probes attacks on soldiers at Abuja Banex plaza

    A viral video seen on X by The Nation on Saturday showed some civilians beating soldiers during a fight at Banex.

    The incident began when three soldiers approached a trader regarding a phone issue.

    A disagreement over the phone matter quickly escalated into a full-blown conflict.

    According to a trader at the Old Banex complex, phone dealers ganged up and overpowered the soldiers and a civilian.