Tag: mob

  • Three trucks razed by mob in Edo 

    Three trucks razed by mob in Edo 

    Three trucks were on Thursday razed by a mob at Agbede along the Benin-Auchi-Abuja high way after one of the trucks rammed into some persons.

    It was gathered that the truck had a brake failure and rammed into several persons standing standing and selling by the road side.

    The mob blocked the highway during a protest and caused heavy vehicular traffic.

    Eye witnesses said four persons died while eight others were seriously injured.

    The witnesses said the action of the mob prevented officials of the Federal Road Safety Corps and other security personnel from carrying out rescue operations.

    Read Also: Accident claims 20 lives along Kaduna-Abuja expressway

    But Edo State Sector Commander of the FRSC Samuel Odukoya confirmed the incident but said only person died.

    Odukoy stated that six others suffered severe injuries and attributed the cause of the accident to brake failure and dangerous overtaking.

    He said officials of FRSC has begun clearing major obstruction from the highway.

  • Mob beats up  pastor, demolishes  church where  baby’s heart was  allegedly found

    Mob beats up pastor, demolishes church where baby’s heart was allegedly found

    RESIDENTS of Abua Street in Calabar, Cross River State, yesterday demolished a new generation church located on the street.

    The Nation learnt that they also beat up the pastor in charge of the church thoroughly before he was whisked away to safety,.
    A source in the area who preferred anonymity said: “Their reason for beating up the pastor was because the church was a branch of another one located along Atamunu Street, which was allegedly discovered to be involved in kidnapping children for rituals purposes.”

    The General Overseer of the church, who presided over the Atamunu branch had been arrested along with some other people, over the alleged murder of a one year old baby, who was believed to have been used for rituals. The Atamunu church was ransacked on Thursday after which a baby’s heart among other fetish items were recovered.
    When The Nation visited the Abua Street branch yesterday, residents were seen demolishing the building and recovering items including used sanitary pads, bras, panties and other female accessories, as well as many pictures of young men.
    The angry mob later burnt every item recovered from the church.

    One of them, who gave his name as David, expressed concern over the proliferation of such churches.
    “These are just herbalist homes disguised as churches. If they put signpost as herbalists, no one will go, but they make it look like a church. I believe that this one was particularly patronised by women, who are given assignments, to look for husbands. You can tell from the many pictures of young men discovered here.

    “Most of those young men have no idea that their pictures have been taken somewhere and tied down here. Who knows if they have told any of them to use the soaked pads to cook for men they wanted to marry? A lot of bizarre things keep happening and I wish something would be done to check the activities of these churches.”

    Some residents were seen carrying woods, roofing sheets and other items recovered from the demolished building for their domestic use.

  • Mob justice

    •Suspected murderers in our society must be tried before punishment

    Just as the country was recovering from a killing spree inside a church in Ozubulu in Anambra State two weeks ago, the country’s commercial and cultural capital, Lagos, witnessed one week later mob killing of suspected ritualists after discovery of their den by community members in Ijaiye on the Lagos-Abeokuta highway.

    Police report confirmed that a female voice in distress emanating from a canal in Ijaiye compelled a Lagos State sanitary staff cleaning the street to draw attention of passersby to a den of ritualists around 8 a.m. on August 8. Angry passersby invaded the underground den where they sighted the remains of persons suspected to have been killed. The angry mob flushed out four occupants out of which two of them were burnt to death by the mob. The other two suspects confessed to being part of a group of over 20 ritual killers. Members of OPMESA of Lagos Police Command along with members of the military succeeded around 3:45 p.m. in saving the two suspects from being lynched. The two are currently in police custody. Without doubt, this gory event raises many concerns.

    Barely 24 hours after the Ijaiye episode, another suspected ritualists’ den was uncovered at the Ile Zik area of Lagos. Mercifully, policemen prevented the suspects found there from being lynched.

    One concern is the depth of erosion of values in the society, which must have led to the brazenness of citizens to convert a public-funded canal to a theatre for ritual killing of fellow citizens. That self-styled ritualists could erect, without qualms, what looks like a human abattoir so close to the highway linking two major cities suggests the level of horror that counterparts of urban ritualists must be creating in rural areas that are hardly under law enforcement radar. If criminals can act with such audacity in a city with noticeable police presence and along one of the busiest roads in a high-density area like Ijaiye, it is scary to imagine what danger may lurk in villages between cities, for innocent citizens at the instance of ritual killers.

    We commend the Lagos State Waste Management Authority (LAWMA) staff that heard the distress call and quickly alerted passersby. This act demonstrates importance of voluntary community watch and citizens’ vigilance. We also applaud people in the neigbourhood who took the risk to descend into the canal to save the woman calling for help for promoting the principle that public security is a collective responsibility. The military and police staff that finally arrested two of the criminals deserve recognition.

    However, we consider the time between the discovery of the den by people around the canal at about 8 a.m. and the search by law enforcement staff of the underground crime scene around 4 p.m. too long for effective crime prevention and detention. A speedier response from security forces could have prevented the embarrassing show of jungle justice by angry neighbours who set two of the suspects on fire.

    Relatedly, that the den of criminals had existed for about four years without being sighted by law enforcement agents raises concern about the need for modern surveillance equipment such as CCTV in public places in Lagos and other urban areas. We also believe that the rhetoric about community policing needs to be turned into concrete steps to nip crimes in the bud through deployment of more law enforcement agents to communities.

    We call on the government and security agencies to thoroughly investigate the matter, with a view to getting useful information on criminal activities of the hoodlums operating inside the canal in Ijaiye and other parts of the country. A speedy and proper investigation may well be an eye opener to many such places that are constructed for criminal acts. As this is not the first time to arrest suspects for ritual killing, it is important that speedy investigation and prosecution of suspects are given a chance in respect of this heinous crime.

    We also call on the media to stay on this story till the end so that citizens can be assured that the cause of justice is served. Disappearance of similar cases from media radar in the past must have made citizens to lose confidence in police investigation and prosecution, thus stimulating jungle justice against suspects who have not been properly tried.

  • Mob lynches suspected kidnapper in Oshodi

    Mob lynches suspected kidnapper in Oshodi

    •Civil Defence officer beaten up for ‘interfering’

    A mob yesterday lynched a suspected kidnapper in Oshodi, Lagos.

    An Intelligent Officer (IO) with the Nigerian Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC) Afe Demola, who rushed to his rescue, was beaten to a pulp. He was said to have been mistaken for a kidnapper.

    The suspect was stripped naked before he was lynched at Brown Street, Oshodi.

    His body was taken away by the police.

    The mob descended on Damola when he pleaded with them to hand over the suspect to the police.

    The mob descended on him with stones, punches and broken bottles on mentioning the police.

    The timely intervention of his colleagues, who rushed down to Brown Street, saved him.

    But three of them, two women and a man, were injured in the ensuing melee.

    They are Tosin Audu, whose phone was damaged, Fatimo Kolawole and Dimeji Olaleye.

    The mob chased them into the Oshodi-Isolo Local Government secretariat before they were repelled by other NSCDC officials.

    Demola was rushed to the nearby primary health centre, where his head, arm and stomach were stitched.

    A senior NSCDC official, who asked not to be named, described the attack as callous.

    According to him, Demola was writing a report of his field work earlier in the day before we all heard noise.

    “He left the report and rushed down to the place. He saw the crowd trying to lynch a suspected kidnapper. While trying to stop them and advising them to allow police handle the situation, the crowd got angry. One of them accused him of being the suspected kidnapper’s colleague and they descended on him.

    “It took the timely intervention of his colleagues before he was saved. Three of them were also injured by the mob. Sensing danger, they all ran back to the council while the mob chased them with broken bottles and stones,” he said.

    He accused the police of negligence.

    “We rushed to meet some police officers inside the council secretariat, but they rebuffed us. Instead of helping us to quell the mob, they were busy passing the buck. We are highly disappointed in the police officers’ show of shame,” he said.

    The Nation saw the crowd pelting the suspected kidnapper with stones, stick and other dangerous weapons.

    Speaking with The Nation, an eyewitness said the suspect trailed a seven-year-old boy coming from lesson and kidnapped him at Salami Street, Oshodi while urinating beside a car.

    “Two men, who were behind him suddenly discovered that the boy has disappeared. They suspected the man and hurriedly ran towards him to check what he was carrying in a big Ghana Must Go bag. He took a bike and ran away. The men chased him and started shouting kidnapper! Kidnapper!! Kidnapper!!! Somebody hit his bike around Owena and he fell down. They checked the bag and discovered that the boy has been strangulated.

    “While interrogating him, he claimed to be a Further Mathematics teacher in a secondary school around. They said he was lying and started beaten him.”

    Another eyewitness said the guy kidnapped three children coming from holiday coaching class.

    “The suspect was chased from Afariogun before he was caught around this place. One of the children is dead, two others were taken to hospital for treatment,” he said.

    Lagos State NSCDC Commandant Tajudeen Balogun described the mob’s action as barbaric.

    “How could they have descended on our officers for trying to prevent them from engaging in jungle justice?” he queried, adding: “Everybody has talked about jungle justice not being the solution to increase in crime because if you catch a suspect and hand him over to police for interrogation, he might give you some other information that would lead to the arrest of some other people. But if you kill a person like that whatever he wanted to tell you has gone down the drain and it is very unfortunate that sometime the public doesn’t trust the security agencies.  If not when you arrest you must know the syndicate he belongs to, how many of them are working together? Where are the others? By allowing that, you can have a lot of information to stop that thing from happening.”

    He urged the public to always confide in Civil Defence, promising that such vital information would be treated with confidentiality.

    “The issue of securing our environment is everybody’s responsibility. All of us must work together to make our environment safe and secured. No matter the circumstance, jungle justice is not the best,” Balogun said.

  • Tension in Kaduna as mob lynched suspected thief to death

    Tension in Kaduna as mob lynched suspected thief to death

    …18 arrested, as crisis escalates

     

    There was pandemonium in Kaduna metropolis on Monday morning, as angry mob were said to have lynched to death, a man suspected to have burgled a house the previous night in Kabala West area of the city.

    Security agencies have however arrested 18 persons suspected to have been involved in the unrest that followed the lynching in Kabala West and Ungwan Muazu.

    A Kaduna State Government statement said that security agencies arrested the hoodlums around the two communities following reports of threats to law and order.

    The Nation gathered that, the incident started around Kaje street of Kabala West on Sunday, but it led to serious fracas between youths of two neighboring communities of Kabala West and Ungwan Muazu on Monday.

    Accordingly to an eyewitness account, the incident which occurred on Sunday evening led to fracas on Monday morning between two groups suspected to be for and against the alleged thief that was lychned to death by angry mob.

    This development caused tension around the city, as many drivers, passing through Kaduna had to divert to another routes from Nnamdi Azikiwe bypass, western side of the city.

    The protesting groups were seen throwing sharp objects at each other as well as at other passersby.

    Another eyewitness account said, “Some of us cannot go back home since we managed to escape from the area in the morning because soldiers and police have blocked the roads leading to our houses.

    “Those residents that left for work in the morning have to call back home to their families to remain indoor while those that have left the house are asked to look for a safer place within the city centre and stay.

    “It is unfortunate that people are linking the fracas to religion, but I want to tell you that it has nothing to do with religion at all,  a thief was lychned to death and his so called friends decided to take law into their hands.

    “We are however happy that security people intervened immediately, and the situation is returning to normalcy as I speak to you”.

    Spokesperson to Governor Nasir El-Rufai, Samuel Aruwan while confirming the arrests of the suspects, said they will be charged to court as soon as the investigations are concluded.

    Aruwan dismissed stories making the round on social media that the crisis has escalated to other parts of Kaduna town leading to the killing of a few person and others injured and warned those peddling false stories to desist.

    According to him, “the state government has sent a high powered delegation to mediate between Kabala West and Ungwan Mu’azu communities. The delegation was led by Acting Secretary to the State Government, Alhaji Abdullahi Ibrahim Sani, the Special Adviser on Internal Security and Special Assistant Media and Publicity Samuel Aruwan.

    “The delegation met with the leaderships of Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN), Jama’atu Nasril Islam (JNI), youth leaders, security agencies and traditional rulers of the two communities.

    “At the end of the meeting, the two sides unanimously agreed that all those responsible for the unrest should be fished out and brought to justice. The delegation also commended all residents of the communities that collaborated with security agencies in containing the unrest that could have degenerated beyond the two communities.

    “The meeting resolved that all communities will be proactive in reporting any suspicious movements or activities to security agencies, and that it is illegal to resort to self-help or any act that amounts to taking the law into their hands”.

     

  • Mob kills man who cut woman to pieces

    Mob kills man who cut woman to pieces

    · Sets building ablaze

    A mob has burnt a 38-year-old man to death after he allegedly cut a 40-year-old woman into pieces at the weekend in Mgbakwu Community, Awka North local government area of Anambra State.

    It was gathered the incident took place last Friday around 7am when Mrs. Ifeyinwa Obalum went to sell pap at the market.

    She was said to have been waylaid by Nwabueze Oraekwulu, Aka- Ezeamosu (King of witches), who is deranged.

    Oraekwulu reportedly cut her to pieces with a cutlass with which he has been tormenting the community.

    At the same time, his house was put ablaze by the irate mob said to be from the woman’s village.

    The deceased, our correspondent learnt, was married to an 80-year-old blind man and operated as the bread winner.

    Oraekwulu, it was gathered, was deported from Morocco where he had gone for greener pastures some years back.

    After his return, he was said to have exhibited behavioural changes.

    Immediately he carried out the dastardly act, an angry mob was said to have tied his legs and hands, put tyre on his neck and burnt his body.

    The Anambra Police Command confirmed the incident.

    Its spokesperson, Princess Nkeiruka Nwode, said remains of the woman had been deposited in a mortuary in Isuaniocha for autopsy.

    Nwode told our correspondent investigations were ongoing by the command on the incident.

    She said it was a case of murder, adding the command received the information through a distress call from Amaezike village.

    The PPRO confirmed before the police could reach the scene of the incident, the assailant had been burnt to death by an angry mob.

    When correspondents visited the scene yesterday, the charred remains of the man was still in front of his house with people raining curses on him.

    An eye witness and indigene of Amaezike, Nduka Nzekwe, called on security operatives to investigate the incident with a view to finding lasting solution to such occurrence in the area.

    The youth leader in the community, Chukwuma Christian, said he was worried because it was not the first time such a thing had happened in Mgbakwu.

    A tenant in the community, Elizabeth Igboamalu (Aka- Adaobi Adada) confirmed that the man had been a mentally deranged person.

    She said the man always moved about on white pants and white stockings with a machete threatening every passer- by.

  • Ali, Baba and the NASS mob

    It must be a sobering time for Col. Hameed Ali (retd), the Comptroller-General of the Customs who has been riding gaily in his own self-made whirlwinds. Talk of enfant terrible, talk of in-your-face-defiance and talk of haughty go-to-hell ripostes and Ali is a master of that ancient art.

    Unable to bear the stench in the Nigeria Customs Service, President Muhammadu Buhari had drafted Ali to exorcise that honeypot of its infernal quick-fingered gnomes. The old soldier came riding in gallantly, wielding long swords – an old saying suggests that a son sent on a night mission by his father knocks down doors with impunity (well, not unlike our DSS). Ali, a sole administrator of sort, had let fly numerous heads in the service since he got on board and he is still harvesting scalps.

    But he may have backed up a wrong tree when he recently encountered the National Assembly (NASS) mob. Here is the story: Ali loves his agbada and danshiki and he also thinks it’s rather infra-dig for an army officer to climb down to donning any other yeye uniform. So he would not commit such class hara-kiri. But the Senate recently got on his case and insists he must love the service plus its uniform, or leave her.

    The hell with you, Ali had shot back, at least in body language. But then Baba returned in the middle of this eyeball-to-eyeball hold out. Now, Hardball can only wager that Baba must have told Ali: Oldboy what is this fuss about donning your khaki now? Even Fela said uniform na cloth, na tailor de sew am. Do you want to quarrel about uniform or do you want to do the job I sent you, Baba must have admonished.

    Ali sure got the message and immediately embarked on nocturnal peregrinations, to lobby the Senate and probably do a dress rehearsal. It is likely that Ali would don his khaki CGC regalia soon. That would be the photo of the age and it should go viral instantly.

    Ali has also returned to earth now promising to suspend and review the vexatious customs duty on vehicles saga. While at it, it may also serve him well to get his men off the streets and markets. There are probably more armed customs men in town today than soldiers and police combined. These men should be redeployed to the borders – every nook, every cranny, every footpath, every inch of our borders should be locked down – that is where the action is.

    Finally, and by way of lesson:  governance is always by consensus, always.

  • Mob storm Lion Building over two detainees’ death

    Hundreds of protesters yesterday stormed the Lion Building Police Station on Lagos Island over the death of the two detainees in custody.
    Ifedolapo Atansuyi, 19, died in Okokomaiko Awo police post, Adeniji Adele. The other, simply named Tope passed on in Lion Building station.
    Tope was among 190 people including women, arrested during a raid of Edumare Street. Atansuyi was beaten up by miscreants and handed over to the police for allegedly stealing a mobile phone worth N180, 000 kept with him.
    Atansuyi died on Saturday; Tope passed on yesterday at Lion Building.
    Although the police claimed Atansuyi hanged himself inside the cell with his shirt, it was learnt that suspects are detained with only their underwear on.
    The protesters, who claimed they did not know why their people were arrested, were dispersed by the police with tear gas canisters.
    A protester, Sijuade Omowarere said: “We were at the bar and everybody was drinking. Suddenly around 2am, policemen came in and said ‘everybody, on your knees!’ We were all confused and started running out. Some people got injured. About 197 persons were arrested and taken to Lion Building. There was no fight, no violence. Those people have been there since then.
    “On Saturday, Tope’s father went to Lion Building and explained his health condition to the police. He was taken to the Lagos Island General Hospital on Sunday; he didn’t respond to treatment. He was returned to the station and he died this morning (Monday). I always saw him around, but I don’t know exactly where he lived.”
    Atansuyi’s father, Pastor Gabriel said his son was a musician, adding that the phone kept with him got missing.
    The phone owner, he claimed, contracted some miscreants to beat the deceased before he was handed over to the police.
    He said: “My son said the phone got lost, but the owner insisted he sold it. When I met with him on Saturday morning in the cell, he showed me the injuries inflicted on his body by those boys before he was handed over to the Jankara Police Post. He said the phone actually got lost but the torture made him to confess. I have agreed to pay the money.
    “Around 3pm on Saturday while I was trying to get him food, I was called to come and see the Divisional Police Officer (DPO) for Adeniji Adele for settlement. On getting there, I was told to wait for the complainant. The DPO later took me to the Area Commander in Lion Building, who told me Ifedolapo was dead. He said he committed suicide. But, he was murdered. He had no reason to commit suicide.
    “He was a gospel musician and was easy going. He had put some lyrics together and he was supposed to produce them by Easter. Now, they have truncated his vision.”
    Another resident, Abayomi Johnson claimed they have not been attended to since Saturday, expressing displeasure at the teargas thrown at them.
    He said: “We have been coming here since Saturday morning but no single policeman came out to address us. We don’t know why they arrested all those people. Today we heard one boy died in their custody but instead of talking to us, they chased us away with tear gas.”
    Contacted, the command’s spokesman, Olarinde Famous-Cole, an Assistant Superintendent of Police (ASP), said Atansuyi committed suicide.
    He said: “I confirm that the incident on February 25, at about 10am is a case of suicide. The suspect was detained on allegation of stealing an iPhone valued at N180, 000. He committed suicide by hanging himself in the cell with his shirt. He was immediately rushed to General Hospital, Marina, where he was confirmed dead on arrival. Investigation is still in progress.”

  • Of descent into mob justice

    SIR: There is something sinister about the way we think and about our collective definition and understanding of the word ‘justice’ as a country. When a patriot with some modicum of common sense, takes a critical look into the scope by which different interpretations are being read into justice, you conclude that your country is sick, or perhaps mad, and nothing else.

    From the pedestrian purview, justice is synonymous with words like lynching, ‘jungle justice’, a mob attack, while from the elitist viewpoint it’s an avenue for subduing the commoners into a damnable quietude of class submission. Quite miserable enough, from the legal point of view, justice is a partially corrupt judge donning the wig of bias.

    Or what definition can you give to a country that grants widely-known Machiavellian political looters and betrayers of public trust a presidential or national pardon, but can dock and jail hunger-ridden and hapless commoners with hard labour for a pardonable deviance? What is the difference between a law that sends a poor man to a 10-year imprisonment upon a theft of N1000, triggered by frustrated living, and that of some ignorantly emotional entities among us who lynch someone to an early grave because of a tin of rice?

    We may say there is a difference. But to me, if I would make one, the only difference is that the former gives the offenders an opportunity to live an unfortunate life in prison which, in some cases, is more brutal than being given a mob lynch. The fact is clear that those who find themselves in prison today because of a hunger-prone theft are good human beings far better than those luxury-obsessed and selfish opportunists representing us the National Assembly. They’re people who, when given a proper societal concern, can also contribute their quota towards putting the country on the lane of the progressive shift. But your country is bad. They are condemned to jail, some even without trial. What a country!

    You may be wondering why this illustration. Well it’s because of the video of a 7-year old boy allegedly set ablaze in Badagry area of Lagos State, for attempting stealing garri. If this narrative is true as being told, then for the late innocent urchin death is rest, for he is no more a victim of a callous and clueless state. But for us, that horrible incident has portrayed our society as being nonchalant, malfunctioning, backwards and highly bereft of human sympathy. Irrespective of our epochal exposure, we are still the same hysteric country –a land of many misplaced priorities; a country that acts before reasoning.

    Because you will wonder what joy was being derived by those bystanders at the terrible scene of that gory incident? What was the joy of those taking pictures without human feeling? And what step has our government taken to bring the culprits of that deliberate attack into the black book?

    Is it not the same country that killed four University of Port Harcourt students – the Aluu four?

     

    • Rahaman Abiola Toheeb,

    Kano.

  • Mob parable

    Mobs destroy and scarcely create. Be it as wild savages or unthinking herds, it has always been the preoccupation of the mob to tear down. Take the Nigerian mob for instance; by its impulsiveness, lack of forethought and restraint, want of personal and societal ethics, it expedites the destruction of everything and anything – like an unpopular policy or worn-out civilization. Whether concrete or abstract, hard-wearing or fragile, whatever object or subject becomes the fascination of the Nigerian mob is sooner annihilated.

    This devastation persists as a ceaseless cycle and it is amply sustained and accelerated via brutish inclinations that characterize the Nigerian mob. Like primeval savages, the Nigerian mob lives, thinks and acts like creatures of the wild thus its unwritten code of existence: “Every man for himself in our communal jungle where only the strongest survive.”

    Who are the Nigerian mob? This question expectedly excites spurious theories, allegations and conclusions about the breed aptly classifiable and identifiable with mob mentality. While many would readily finger the nation’s ruling class and its horde of loyalists, many more would categorize the impoverished breadlines as the core of the Nigerian mob.

    In the flurry of generalizations, a certifiable crowd is omitted essentially because it constitutes the cult of self-appointed critics, intellectuals, moralists and the socially aware. This crowd comprises the pedestrian and infinitely tiresome breed of Nigerians who never see anything good about Nigeria; their pastime involves logging on to every social media portal with considerable traffic to continually vent and portray Nigeria as a failed enterprise.

    Facebook and Twitter offer wonderful platforms for these interesting breed to say all manner of unprintable things about Nigeria and their fellow Nigerians. Another category of this breed comprises journalists, ‘social commentators’ and newspaper columnists like me. The access we enjoy to means and channels of expression is oftentimes abused by us.

    It is alright to criticize but the bulk of what many of us do is classifiable as destructive sentimentality and hate-mongering. Oftentimes, we engage in sanctimonious whining, blame-casting and character assassination for reasons that border on the infantile and shame logic.

    The utter lack of gumption and foresight incessantly perpetuated by this breed continually offer court jesters and media attack-mongrels of the ruling class innumerable opportunities to lash out, deploying sophistry, ad hominem and juvenile heckling in responding to critics of the ruling class they serve.

    Such characters can treat the Nigerian critic and journalist with contempt given the irresponsibility and mercenariness that characterizes the latter’s criticisms of their principals. Having spent quality time as vocal parts of such crowd, media aides and attack-dogs of the ruling class respond to criticisms from a standpoint of knowledge and towering impatience.

    A Special Adviser to the President or a Governor on Media Affairs for instance, can continually afford to treat their principals’ critics with disdain goaded by the notion that the latter lacks the moral justification to perform such crucial roles in the interest of the collective.

    True, many a government critic on Facebook, Twitter or newspaper column is as despicable as the ruling class he condemns. Racism, gluttony, political harlotry, religious intolerance, sexism, all manners of bigotry and base sentimentality characterize Nigeria’s crowd of social critics. In several instances, members of this breed cheerily present themselves as muscles to the tyrannical ruling class they love to condemn, for a price.

    This breed of Nigerian mob, in its incessant criticisms of the ruling class, conveniently forgets that the incumbent leadership is a reflection of the society from which it emerges. If we are yet to produce honest and conscientious leadership, it’s because our society is constituted by the perverse and corrupt. If bank chiefs, stock exchange bosses and civil servants we parade are more nimble at stealing than performing constructive, developmental roles, it is because the society institutionalizes and celebrates vice. And if the worst of us continually emerge as the best leaders we could ever have, it is because we are innately wired to value and elevate vile above virtue.

    Sadly, rather than engage in active crusade against the perpetuation of such anomalies, the critical mob scurry on to soapboxes we mount in our living rooms, courtyards, pubs and social media to curse our luck and curse the times.

    We are that pathetic part of the Nigerian mob; negligible integers a cynical reader recently identified as “armchair Trotskys.” Unlike the more servile herd whose allegiance to the ruling class is at once wild and destructive, the breed we comprise is even more vicious and symptomatic of the failure of scholarship, literacy and other contemporary advancements in civilization we ought to epitomize.

    At least, the servile herd is actively involved – be it negatively or positively – according to the depth and strength of its awareness; this teeming mass of illiterate, semi-literate, unemployed and impoverished breadlines to mention a few, claim ignorance and poverty as reasons for its blind acquiescence to the tyranny of the ruling class, however, career critics and armchair Trotskys like you and I, given our touted learning and exposure, can hardly make such claims.

    Today, we are shackled by vulgar sentiments of religion, rebellion and ethnicity. More worrisome is our continued enslavement by the ruling class via obscene inducements and gifts of grandeur. Consequently, we capitulate to a system by which we are psychologically broken and confined to dubious segregation and manipulative politics. The sentimental fops amongst us are programmed by rumors, innuendo and outright falsehood to shun the path to progress and tow the fast lane to destruction.

    Exasperatedly, many identify the major problem afflicting us as the dearth of upright leadership mooted and drawn from the nation’s youth divide. This dearth persists due to our inability to selflessly and responsibly apply ourselves to the crusade against corrupt and selfish leadership. A more crucial dearth however, manifests by our inability to fulfill the demands of sterling citizenship.

    A sterling citizenry no doubt provides the humane elements necessary to foster a benevolent leadership but we are too busy casting blames and feathering our own nests that we conveniently forget to become the good citizens we ought to become. The prospective heroes we could rely on have learnt the wisdom of keeping silent. They tactfully scoff at our romanticized wish to abolish the status quo, knowing that, as usual, we would settle for an opportunistic contract between our exploiters (the government) and a part of the exploited (labour and youth leadership), at the expense of the rest of the exploited (you, me and everyone) – something Noel Ignatin aptly identifies as “the original sweetheart agreement.”

    Thus we resign to the tyranny of the ruling class, courting and maligning it often in the same breath, while we anticipate and wish doom upon Nigeria. If we look inwards, we would find that the intellectual aptitudes, will and individuality of many of us are strained by disillusionment, cowardice, laziness and abject failure in our roles as patriots and citizens of humanity. Several self-styled leaders of the critical mob are currently in the jailhouse of mammon and sociopolitical expediency. Consider the case of several critics turned presidential aides for instance; yesterday, they were mob heroes; today they carry on like minions enslaved to power and perpetually drunk on their own saliva.