Tag: violence

  • Police warn NURTW members against violence

    The Lagos State Police Command and the Directorate of State Service yesterday warned members of the National Union of Road Transport Workers (NURTW) against creating chaos in the state over leadership crisis.

    The warning came on the premise that leadership of the union had been sacked by the national body.

    At a meeting with NURTW Lagos Chairman Alhaji Tajudeen Agbede, the security chiefs urged those trying to cause trouble to have a rethink.

    Owoseni, who was represented by Mr Babatunde Kokumo, a Deputy Commissioner of Police, said: “The command is not interested in the affairs of the union. Our main preoccupation is to maintain law and order, so, we are ready to deal with anybody trying to cause confusion in the state. Your union is very important to us in that we need information from you to combat crimes. We are focusing on intelligence gathering; hence we need your support.”

    Agbede described as rumour the dissolution of state councils by the national body.

    “This is to inform you that all the zonal, state councils, branches and unit executives remain intact. l am using this opportunity to tell you to disregard the rumour,” he said.

    Meanwhile, the police said it arrested 14 suspected cult members for allegedly terrorising Mushin residence.

    The command’s spokesperson, Patricia Amadin, a Deputy Superintendent of Police (DSP), in a statement said the suspects were arrested on Monday at Mushin Area of Lagos.

    She said: “In a bid to make good its promise to chase out armed robbers and cultists from the state, the command has smashed a notorious robbery/cultist group. This group has continuously unleashed terror on the residents of Mushin and Idi-Oro Areas of Lagos.”

    According the statement, the command swooped in on the gang and 14 members were arrested following a tip off.

    It stated that the Commissioner of Police, Fatai Owoseni, urged the people of Lagos to be calm and continue to furnish the police with useful information.

    Owoseni also warned all cult members and robbers to desist, saying the police would employ all legal means to deal with them, their sponsors and benefactors.

    He added that unless the group desists from its nefarious activities, there shall be no hiding place for them.

     

  • Lagos approves 112 emergency lines for gender-based violence

    The Lagos State government has approved the use of 112 toll free emergency line to report cases of rape, defilement, domestic violence, child abuse, neglect maltreatment and other sexual assaults with an assurance that information provided will be passed across while the concerned agencies will be notified immediately.

    According to the government, the decision is in line with its quest to ensure that victims of Sexual and Gender Based Violence have a voice and concerned members of the public who wish to report acts of violence are able to do so with utmost confidentiality.

    Meanwhile, the State Domestic and Sexual Violence Response Team (DSVRT) has concluded training for 190 officials of the State Emergency Command And Control Centre on how to receive reports of Sexual and Gender Based Violence incidents.

    DSVRT Coordinator Mrs Titilola Vivour-Adeniyi told journalists yesterday that the officials were trained on how to receive reports of Sexual and Gender Based Violence.

    She said aside the dissemination of the information to the appropriate agencies for action, callers would be informed of relevant steps to be taken, depending on the nature of the call.

    “They would also be given details, addresses and telephone numbers of the relevant agencies that would handle their issues; for cases of rape or defilement, they can report such to the Mirabel Centre or the Office of the Public Defender (OPD),” Vivour-Adeniyi said.

    She said necessary steps have been put in place to help victims of domestic violence get help and counselling as well as free legal services from the OPD.

    “The essence of this initiative is to encourage victims and members of the public to make use of the 112 toll free emergency lines to ensure access to justice irrespective of class and means,” she said.

  • Ambode: speak out against violence

    Ambode: speak out against violence

    Lagos State Governor Akinwunmi Ambode has urged residents to speak out against sexual and domestic violence.

    The governor spoke when the Lagos State Domestic and Sexual Violence Response Team visited him at the Lagos House, Alausa, Ikeja.

    He assured the team that the  government was ready to protect the identities of those who volunteer to report these cases.

    “We just want to appeal to all Lagosians, they should not be afraid to speak out.

    “We have our dedicated lines and we also know that we are going to give resources out; at any point in time they should be ready to speak freely to us.

    “We would protect the identities of everyone and the fact is that we should be the first point of call.

    “In 2007, Lagos State passed a law on domestic violence. But beyond that, the law cannot work by itself, except we create the framework that enforces our laws.

    “ That is what we are standing for and in that respect, we talked about issues that relate to sexual and gender violence.

    “What I want to let you know is that together whatever it is that we need to now reach out in a larger way and give support to those who have been victims.

    “We have to let them know they have our support. That’s what we are going to do together. This government will strongly enforce our laws.”

  • Police arrest lawmaker’s aides over violence at tribunal

    The police in Ekiti State have arrested two loyalists of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in connection with the violence on the premises of the Election Petitions Tribunal sitting at the State High Court complex in Ado Ekiti, the state capital.

    They are being interrogated for their alleged complicity in the attack on some witnesses of the All Progressives Congress (APC), who testified in the petition by the party’s senatorial candidate in Ekiti Central, Gbenga Olofin.

    Olofin is challenging the declaration of the PDP candidate, Senator Fatimat Rasaki, by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) as the winner of the National Assembly election.

    Thugs attacked APC witnesses and members at the tribunal hearing on June 30 shortly after Olofin closed his case.

    Their action drew the ire of the tribunal Chairman, Justice A.N. Erabor, who summoned Mrs. Rasaki and reportedly warned her to caution her supporters against committing contempt of court.

    The Nation gathered yesterday that two prominent supporters of Mrs. Rasaki, believed to be arrowheads of the attacks, were arrested in Ado-Ekiti on Friday

    They are Ibukun Ayodele, who is Mrs Rasaki’s campaign coordinator in Igede-Ekiti and Mrs. Bosede Adeleke, popularly known as Awodama, who is her anchorwoman in Ado-Ekiti.

    Ayodele was arrested in his house on Nova Road in Ado-Ekiti on Friday at 6pm; Mrs. Adeleke was picked up at another location in Ado earlier in the day at 7am.

    They were taken to the Criminal Investigation Department (CID), where they were grilled for their alleged roles in the violence.

    A police source said they confessed to being Mrs. Rasaki’s loyalists and admitted that they were present in court on that day.

    Mrs. Rasaki, who has been invited by the police, is yet to honour the invitation.

    Police spokesman Alberto Adeyemi said he would speak fully on the matter today as he was away from office.

    But a police source said the two suspects were later released but they are expected to report today.

    The source said: “It is true that they were arrested in connection with what happened in court on June 30 but we asked them to go and come back.

    “We had to release them later that day because it is against the law to detain somebody beyond 24 hours without charging him to court and we are not oblivious of the public holidays.

    “I just want to plead with you to be patient with us because they must show up again today as we continue our investigation.”

    One of the victims, Lateef Subair, called on the police to ensure that justice was served.

    He said: “We reported this matter because we want justice. We are prepared to go to court because it has become the culture of PDP thugs to always take laws into their hands.”

    Olofin expressed his desire to prosecute the matter because “it was a replica of what happened on election day”.

  • Hitches in battle against violence

    Hitches in battle against violence

    A military team and civil organisations are still working to contain communal violence in Plateau State, but there are concerns that soldiers are being attacked too, reports YUSUFU AMINU IDEGU

    Communal clashes, especially between the Berom and Fulani, seem interminable. Scores are killed, houses burnt in frequent raids, just as Fulani herdsmen repeatedly complain of their cows being rustled. To stamp out the clashes, a Special Task Force (STF) was set up, with troops patrolling the affected areas.  Civil organisations too have stepped in, one such being the Search for Common Ground or SFCG.

    Still, there are worries not just that the combatants still find time and space to clash, but also that even the soldiers on peacekeeping mission are reportedly coming under attack, for instance, in Barkin Ladi Local Government Area of the state. This has angered the STF whose leaders have warned that they have had enough of such attacks.

    The Berom and Fulani seem to prefer to be left alone to fight it out.

    It is either the Berom will launch attack on Fulani cattle or the Fulani will use their cattle to destroy Berom farms or one party will waylay the other. This happens at regular intervals, making a mess of peace and reconciliatory efforts of the state government, SFCG and the STF.

    •STF Commander, Maj-Gen David Enetie
    •STF Commander, Maj-Gen David Enetie

    While the STF was established in 2010 by the federal government to prevent conflict and restore peace in the state, the SFCG was established by the European Union (EU) for the same purpose.

    Getting result is difficult. The NGO may have succeeded in restoring peace in Jos, the state capital, and elsewhere in the state, but peace building in Berom land is harder to achieve.

    But the dangerous dimension to the conflict in Berom land has to do with attacks on men of the STF. The task force has lost a good number of its men in the peacekeeping operation.

    Three soldiers of the STF escaped death in Foron village, Barkin LGA, allegedly attacked by the indigenes.

    Spokesman of the STF, Captain Ikedichi Iweha said, “We got a distress call from Fulani leaders that some gunmen suspected to be Berom youths attacked some Fulani boys grazing cows and succeeded in rustling their cows. The Fulani alleged that 400 cows were rustled in that attack. We responded to the distress calls and went in the direction of the criminals.

    “The style of the criminals who rustle cows is that when they rustle cows in large numbers, they will share them into groups and each group will go in different directions so that they can move them faster and to also confuse the security agencies that may be chasing after them. So knowing this tactics, we followed them up and recovered most of the cows. As soon as we rescued the cows, we handed them to the Fulani owners and left. But the Fulani later called us to complain that they couldn’t find the herders who took the cows for grazing. So we had to return the next day in search of the missing Fulani boys, six of them.

    “On the first day of the search we recovered one body of the six missing Fulani boys, killed and dumped somewhere. So we continued the search for the remaining five. But when the Berom boys knew we were making headway in the search they decided to frustrate the search by attacking our soldiers. They opened fire on some of them and three of them sustained fatal injuries. That tells us that these people are armed; we had to retreat for us to rescue those soldiers they shot. We rushed them to our clinic and called on our consultants for emergency cases, we battled that night to save their lives; medical doctors had to carry out emergency surgery on them to remove the bullets from their bodies.”

    “Why should we be the subject of attacks by youths of the state; we have been tolerating these kinds of attacks, we have lost several men through such attacks by the same people we help to build peace. We have recorded several cases where our soldiers are attacked in Barkin Ladi in particular; what have we done to offend the Berom people?

    “We have to warn now that people of the state should not see these soldiers as part of their problems, we are rather here to help solve their problem, there is a limit to which we can tolerate these attacks, let this be the last of such attacks”.

    The Berom see the STF as part of their problem, always accusing the soldiers of aiding the Fulani to attack them.

    One Berom youth leader, Samson Tsok said, “The soldiers who were deployed here to protect everybody are only defending the Fulani; we have records of several attacks where our people were not defended. We have lost hundreds of our people with STF in charge of security of the entire state. So how can they tell us they are here to defend us. Since the soldiers have failed to stop all the attacks by unknown gunmen or even arrest one of the gunmen, we hold them responsible for these attacks. And in most of these attacks on Berom communities, we know it is the Fulani that are the unseen gunmen, why is STF shying away from its responsibility?

    “In our land we see Fulani herdsmen going about with AK-47 while grazing, yet the soldiers look the other way and pretend they did not see them; Fulani will bring their cows to graze on somebody’s farm and destroy the farmers livelihood, the soldiers will tell us they are not here to defend our farms, but if anything happened to Fulani cows, men of the STF will be so concerned and they will come and arrest Berom youths. That is a way of telling us they are here to defend Fulani and cows.”

    The representative of the STF from Sector 7 Command (Barkin Ladi) and Sector 9 Command (Riyom) disagreed with the Berom, saying the Berom have always come up with half-truths and also make unsubstantiated claims. The STF said, “The Berom always raise the alarm that Fulani are heavily armed, but we that operate there knows that both Berom and Fulani carry arms and we have a lot of evidence to prove that Berom people to have arms.

    “We strongly believe that conflicts in Berom land will stop as soon as the elders are ready to expose the criminals among them; we will have peace in Berom land if the youths stop rustling cows. There is a tendency [to attack] after each rustling incident and it is not possible for soldiers to be everywhere in the state. The Berom too have refused to take their own personal security serious, we encourage them to form vigilante group to guide their own immediate environment, but they will prefer to go and sleep and expect STF to stand in front of their doors till day break. That is not possible even if we attach one soldier to every Berom man. As soldiers we have our limitations but the Berom are not ready to cooperate for us to achieve peace,” said the STF.

  • Violence averted as anti, pro-Aregbesola rallies hold

    Violence averted as anti, pro-Aregbesola rallies hold

     •APC hails people’s support

    Violence was averted yesterday in Osogbo, the Osun State capital,  as some civil society groups and human rights associations held separate protests over unpaid salaries.

    Some groups held a pro-Aregbesola rally. Others,  under the aegis of the Civil Societies Coalition for Emancipation of Osun State, staged a protest,  calling for the impeachment of Governor Rauf Aregbesola.

    A detachment of armed security agents, including the police and men of the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps, dispersed the protesters to forestall a breakdown of law and order.

    The anti-Aregbesola group tried to garner support for the investigation of the petition  by Justice Oloyede Folahanmi, calling for Aregbesola’s impeachment.

    From 9am the group marched from Ayetoro to Olaiya junction, where they met the pro-Aregbesola protesters.

    The security agents’ timely intervention saved an ugly occurrence of violence.

    CSCEO leader Adeniyi Alimi called for the people’s support in ensuring that Aregbesola was impeached.

    He said the House of Assembly had begun investigating Justice Oloyede’s petition.

    Wale Adebisi of Osun Progressive Left, Amitolu  Shittu of the De-Raufs and Waheed Lawal led the pro-Aregbesola protesters.

    They exonerated the governor of any misdeed over the  unpaid salaries, which they described as a national challenge.

    They condemned the opposition’s  desperate moves to capitalise on the nationwide problem to create mayhem in the state.

    On the pro-Aregbesola train were women, artisans, traders, and civil rights organisations, such as the Ola Oni Centre for Good Governance, State Civil Society Coalition, Committee for Democracy and Human Rights, Centre for Voters Awareness, Coalition Groups for Good Governance, Sharing Heart International, Climate and Environmental Awareness Initiative.

    The protesters insisted that those championing the campaign of calumny are on a failed mission.

    Some of the protsters carried  placards with various inscriptions, such as “Don’t stigmatise Aregbesola over unpaid salaries”; “Osun is not the only state owing workers”; “Omisore, PDP funding violence against Aregbesola’s  government”; “Salary issue is a national challenge” and many others.

    Shittu told the people to be wary of “selfish politicians using the salary issue to create tension and make Aregbesola the enemy of the people”.

    He added: “To the best of our knowledge, the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) has identified 23 states where salaries have not been paid.

    “In fact, if you look at the local government workers, Osun is one of the states owing the least number of months with the payment up till February and we are aware that even that of March is ready.

    “There are states with up to eight months of unpaid salaries in councils. The same thing goes for civil servants.

    “Why then is this crazy stigmatisation of Osun and its governor? We are here to say enough is enough.”

    But the All Progressives Congress (APC) has praised the people, especially residents for “routing PDP’s attempt at creating mayhem in the state capital”.

    In a statement by its spokesperson, Kunle Oyatomi, the party said the PDP mobilised a “dubious coalition of so-called civil society activists”.

    The party said the PDP was ignorant of the Federal Government’s intervention to help states that have been unable to pay salaries “as a result of the massive looting of the treasury by the ousted PDP government”.

    The APC added: “Before the PDP-sponsored hoodlums, in the name of civil society ‘activitists’ knew what was happening, an intimidating crowd of jubilant APC supporters emerged from Alekuwodo  and advanced towards the protesters waiting at Olaiya.

    “On sighting the crowd, the PDP-sponsored ‘activists’ fled in panic.

    “Shortly afterwards, the governor drove up to the jubilant crowd on his way to work at Abere. The scene was like a mini-rally.”

    The APC hailed the people for “this emphatic demonstration of solidarity with the governor and his party, despite the vicious hate campaign and demonisation of the Aregbesola government.

     

  • Is Davido preaching violence with Fans Mi?

    Is Davido preaching violence with Fans Mi?

    It has been said that Hip-hop music videos, especially those from these climes, lack substance but Nigerian superstar, Davido, takes it a notch higher in the video of his new track, Fans Mi, featuring Meek Mills.

    The video opens with Davido sealing a drug deal (or at least what appears to be a drug transaction) and accompanied to his mansion by his crew with loads of cash. There, nothing happens but a show of near naked girls, dancing to the song, playing with guns and preparing a lot of the white substance. Meanwhile, Davido goes on and on about enemies, jealousy and not having money in the past. The video also has flagrant display of pistols and semi-automatic guns.

    With its demographic made up of mostly the very young, music followers say it comes with a bad taste for an artiste of Davido’s standing to sing about his struggles and rejection and in the same medium, send the message home with a display of drugs and guns.

    Hip-hop music, by its very nature comes with a lot of social significance and bases its relevance to happenings in the society. The genre has been known to be a very strong voice in a lot of societal discourse, especially injustice but with this video, it is not clear what message Davido is trying to send. Even if he passes off the white substance as the local dish, Semovita, which he ends up swallowing, what would he say about the guns? This, to many, is like saying a parody porn movie is not pornography.

  • Separation of powers, politics and the violence

    Three  incidents  from the US, Nigeria’s National  Assembly  and  that of the Benue State, as well  as the death  sentence  of the Islamic  court  based in Kano State  provide  the background for the topic of the day. In  the US  a 21 year old white man shot  dead nine people at a bible study in church   famously  used by black  people  in  Charleston  in the state  of South  Carolina. In  Nigeria’s House  of Representatives legislators  fought over the election  of key  legislative  officers leading to the postponement of  the  session  to  July 21  to allow  tempers  to cool   down  by then.  Before  that we watched in horror  as legislators in Benue  state  House  of  Assembly wrestled in the  House  before  a prime time TV  audience over  the same issue of election  of their legislative leaders.

    These  three events throw up  constitutional and historical  perspectives from their environment and culture  all   at  once. Separately  each  on its own  brings   in some concepts  and  ideas on governance, social  cohesion  and  democracy  in practice as well  as a cost benefit  analysis of that  prevailing world  ideology as at  this moment  in time. The  violence  in  Nigeria’s  legislature invite another look at the concept  of separation of power  derived  from the  presidential  system  of  checks  and  balances  which  we  borrowed  from  the Americans.  The  slaughter  of blacks  in South  Carolina   once  a slave colony  inspired by the   Confederate  flag at the Capitol in Columbia in that state   and  reluctance  of the state  governor   to  bring  it down  even as a mark of respect while  burying the victims, raised  serious  issues on the rule of law and  the morbid  impact  of racism in interpreting the law in such  an environment. Similarly  the  sentencing in Kano cannot  but bring to  mind   vivid fears on the rise  of a situation similar  to   that of ISIS in  Iraq  and Syria which  can  also  be seen  as a ploy  to placate Boko  Haram when indeed  all  hands  including that of  the Sharia  judicial  system in Nigeria and Kano  especially, should  be on deck  to put an end to  Boko  Haram as  announced  by  the president   determinedly  when  he assumed  office recently.

    Starting  with  violence  in our legislature I want to take that on from the perspective expressed by the presidency  that the president will not intervene  just as it was made clear  by the same source that he did  not interfere  in the intra party politics leading  to  the emergence  of the Speaker and the President  of the  Senate. That  to  me is an expensive  mistake  on both issues. This  is because the presidential system thrives  on a principle of  checks  and  balances  and is predicated   on  majority  rule.Since  the president  is  from the ruling  APC he is  the leader  of the party  and not the Chairman or the NWC  of the party and  he  should  be interested in those members  of his  party  aspiring for      legislative honors and  leadership. This  is because  his party  has  the majority  in our legislature. To  do otherwise   as  the  presidency  is doing now is to  be seen like the  proverbial  ostrich  with its head buried in the sand. In  the presidential  system of checks  and  balances the three arms  of government, namely, the executive, the legislature and the judiciary are independent  but  they intertwixt  and intertwine in checking the excesses  of each other in governance. In  fact  the independence  comes into play once the  three arms are in place after elections by the electorate and  appointment  of judges. The  executive should  not interfere once the leaders of the legislature are in place after their election. It  should not then  have folded  its hands while the election of legislative leaders of its party was being done only to frown later at the way and manner it was done  and the emergence of  the leadership the legislative  elections threw up. Again  the  presidency  looked  like the cat  that would eat  fish from a pond without getting its paws wet.  Such  indifference can  be counterproductive in politics as the president is seeing right now as he prepares to   announce  his  much  awaited  list  of  ministers  which  he  has kept very  much  close  to  his chest. Without  mincing words I say  that it  is the duty of a majority party in the legislature to ensure  that it is not taken by surprise in legislative elections and that is the duty of the leader which  in the case of the APC in  Nigeria  is the president   on  whose  the table the buck stops in a presidential system  of checks and balances  such as we run in Nigeria today.

    Similarly in South  Carolina many people believed that the Governor should have brought down the Confederate Flag  which  represents  racism, slavery and  secession  in  American  history and  which the 21 year old white  racist murderer said inspired  his hatred and murder of the nine black  worshippers which included a state senator and preacher,  whose  funeral  the US president was preparing to attend. The  governor   of  the state claimed her hands were tied as she had  no power to bring down a flag which had inspired a mass murder   called  the  Charleston  Massacre which  the governor too had condemned very  eloquently. Legal  experts  have however disagreed  with the governor   citing a precedent  in another  state with such a problem  which  invoked  a legal  provision  that the  flag  could be brought down  for washing for some days and that  could be invoked at least  to  allow the funeral  of the hapless victims  of  the Charleston  Massacre and put the racist  murderer  to shame.  Obviously  the S Carolina  governor  was  making out as if  the law was an ass  on the flag  issue  when indeed it was her racist sympathy that was at play and not the law  being any ass, willingly or not.

    Undoubtedly the killing in S Carolina  came  about  because a black president is in power in the US  and  even President  Barak Obama has admitted that  racism is still a problem in his  nation fondly called  God’s  Own country. Which   really  is unfortunate  and  very  sad.  However  the charismatic  US president was  to give the eulogy  at  the funeral  of the slain preacher and senator  Clementa  Pickney in   Charleston   in S Carolina and  I bet that would  be another classic on the wickedness   and futility  of bringing back racism or  any form of discrimination by the backdoor  of violence  in  today’s  modern society especially in  the US, the  global  promoter and champion  of democracy  and  human  rights.

    It  is in such  light  that one should see the death sentence   for  blasphemy   by the Islamic Court  in  Kano  on the nine people in the state.  My  own  plea  here  is for mercy  and clemency.  In  South  Carolina  the families  of the victims  said  they forgave the killer of their  loved  ones. That  is to show the superiority  of love, mercy and tolerance over hatred and violence. These  are virtues that all  religions preach and not only Islam  and  Christianity.  Pardoning  these people  in  Kano  would send a strong message  to ISIS  and  Boko  Haram – which both Saudi Arabia, the champion  of Sunni Islam and Iran, the Shiite  champion are  fighting both in their regions and internationally –  that  blind and reckless  violence  has  no place in this modern world  we live in   today. That  simply  is my plea on this matter- even in this era of post election violence which we have  just  averted and the new phenomenon of legislative   trickery   and violence which we thought we had put behind us. Again, long live the Federal  Republic  of  Nigeria.

     

    Editors Note;   We  apologise for the error of calling late Senator Abubakar Sola Saraki a Senate President in his time.  He was indeed a  Senate Majority Leader. The mix  up on George  Bush instead of Jeb Bush later in  the  column is  also  regretted.

  • Violence and Rivers State

    I resolved many weeks ago to refrain from commenting on election matters for personal reasons. But for those miserable weeks, I also struggled continually with my conscience.

    However, I wish to state that this article was not inspired only by my conscience; I am troubled also by the verdict of posterity.

    What kind of country are we building? Are we proud of our institutions? And above all, our youths, are we satisfied with their conduct particularly during elections?

    Politics is superior to economics essentially because elections outcome determine to a very large extent, our level of development. This is so because the quality of governance depends largely on leaders who emerge after elections.

    In Rivers State, some of us are worried by the processes that eventually led to elections outcome that we now live with. We are therefore concerned, not just about our grimy political past, but also about our future. To keep quiet, obviously will amount to endorsing a process that many both within and outside the state have acknowledged as flawed.

    The violence and carnage that characterised election in Rivers State were predicted many months before the polls by international and local observers, civil societies, some political parties, government agencies, religious groups and even the media.  The violence and killing were in many ways, a disaster foretold. There was already a correlation between political violence during the campaigns and also during the actual elections. To my surprise, the pointers to massive violence that eventually characterised the elections in Rivers were there, yet they were ignored.

    Sadly, the brutality and bloodshed was not only widespread but also executed with unmatched impunity and viciousness by well known politicians and security agents across the services.

    From Abua-Odual, Ogba-Egbema-Ndoni, Eleme, Ahoada East and West to Akuku-Toru, Asari-Toru, Andoni, Bonny, Emohua, Etche, Ikwere, Khana, Gokana, Obio-Akpor, Tai, Okrika and other local governments, the stories were similar: barefaced intimidation, molestation, endless threats, arson and deaths.

    I am in agreement with many observers who are of the view that the unprecedented violence of April 11 governorship election would have been nipped in the bud if there had been sanctions for the brazen impunity and violence witnessed during the presidential and National Assembly elections which held earlier. Where there are no consequences for infractions, impunity, violence and crime, lawlessness thrive and that was what we witnessed.

    But the battle for the soul of Rivers was fiercest in Okrika, home town of Mrs Patience Jonathan, Nigeria’s former First Lady. Many had argued that all the atrocities and impunity that took place in Okrika and Ogu-Bolu in particular and the entire Rivers State in general, from campaign to election proper, had official endorsement and perhaps took firm roots in the two LGA’s. Those who doubted or thought differently, with the fullness of time, have now come to fully appreciate the unseen evil hands at work.

    The tragedy of Okrika began with the high drama that played out before the entire country during APC’s rally in there which culminated in the attack on journalists and APC supporters, and death of a police man.  In fact, Okrika was a basket case, coupled with the influx of arms, thugs and mercenaries who personally chased away voters and took electoral materials in all the wards. The fatalities of Okrika received national condemnation but not national response to punish those who were actors in the incident.

    By far the most worrisome was the complicity of the then ruling Peoples Democratic Party, PDP in the violence before, during and after the elections. In fact, the PDP maintained a larger than life presence as the party was fingered in all the ignoble activities in virtually all the troubled spots in the state. There were open intimidation, threats and name-dropping of very high politicians and government officials by the hoodlums

    For example, in Andoni Local Government Area, there were countless instances of violent activities believed to have been propelled by agents of government. Eye witnesses said that on the eve of the April election, shooting lasted for several hours in Ekede, Isiodum, Dema, Ajakajak and Ikuru town. It was however later gathered that the gun shots were fired by political thugs and security men attached to VIPs. This dimension of electoral violence in Rivers State is significant because it revealed how highly placed government officials perpetrated and coordinated violence.

    As it turned out, this scary pattern of persistent shooting was not limited to Andoni and its environs. In fact, gun men were unrelenting in other local governments like Asari-Toru, Akuku-Toru, Khana, Gokana, Okrika, Abua-Odual, Ogba-Egbema-Ndoni, Eleme, Obio-Akpor, Tai, Ogu-Bolo, and even the hitherto peaceful Opobo-Nkoro. Their aim apparently, was to attack those courageous enough to challenge them and also scare voters. The operational template of unleashing violence and intimidating the people was essentially the same across the communities and LGA’s.

    Aside human targets, properties were also targeted during the presidential and governorship elections.  However, the attacks came to a climax during the April governorship election.  In Asari-Toru local government area alone, over eight major cases of arson were recorded. It began with the bombing of the RAC Centre which caused total destruction of both sensitive and non-sensitive electoral materials.

    As if that was not enough, four INEC delivery vans were also burnt. The height of the destruction however, was the separate attacks on the houses of two prominent APC members in the local government: Mrs. Joeba West, Commissioner for Women Affairs in the Amaechi-led government and Dr. Dawari George, a former member of the House of Representatives. Earlier on, APC offices in Okrika, Bonny and Ogba-Egbema-Ndoni local government areas had been bombed.

    One similar thread that runs deep through all the incidents of violent attacks across the length and breadth of the entire Rivers State is hijack of electoral materials. This desperation obviously gives the impression that certain persons where either opposed or not prepared for a fair contest from start. Unfortunately, the police did not help matters as they watched while terror was visited on the people.

    I wish to state here that prior to the election, everybody who felt excluded repeatedly pointed accusing fingers at the direction of the PDP, a fear that necessitated the countless meetings and joint statements by other aggrieved political parties who complained endlessly about the unfair advantage of the then ruling party.

    But we must stop groaning at some point and seek solutions.

    No country becomes prosperous without a solid foundation. Nigeria, therefore must look inwards because she is neither lacking in insightful report documents or the right calibre of individuals that can make a difference. As a people, we can actually begin this self-examination by revisiting for instance, the Justice Uwais National Electoral Reform Committee report, amending the Electoral Act and energizing our electoral legal framework to avoid the revelations in Rivers and Akwa States where results were written in private homes.

    All said, one terrifying truth that will haunt our people as we come to terms with reality is the fact that we have lost a good opportunity to show our true selves. For many years now, the entire country has associated us with violence and death but I know we are definitely a misunderstood people. This unfortunate profiling, clearly is a fallout of immoral actions of some desperate politicians in our dear state but we have a duty to redeem our image.

    Political struggle is not only a contest; it is also a competition among prepared and capable contenders.  Can we, in all sincerity, say in the midst of all the violence and death that characterised the elections, that our State’s representatives at all levels of leadership are truly our choices? Can we also say confidently, irrespective of party affiliation, that our representatives are all products of our collective decision via the ballot box? As a people, I think we must think deeply through this calamity and pray that never again would we allow impunity thrive on our land.

    And for our country, there are wider implications for the Nigerian nation state. If the nightmare that took place in Rivers State is left unaddressed, then we will all be guilty of setting a dangerous precedence. Heart-warming however, is the repeated promise by President Muhammadu Buhari that the electoral violence in Rivers State will be definitely addressed.  But beyond the painful fact that the electorates were denied their inalienable right to vote for their preferred candidate, there is the growing belief that crime pays, even under the guise of political contestation.

    •Princewill, a public commentator, lives in Port Harcourt

     

  • Post-election violence dominates stakeholders’ summit

    The general elections have come and come, but pockets of violence and disagreements over results of the polls have continued to trail the outcome of the election in some states. To prevent ýthis trend, especially in Oyo State, a non-governmental organisation (NGO) has organised a stakeholders’ meeting to address the development. SIKIRU AKINOLA reports.

    Whenever elections are conducted in the country, there are disagreements and pockets of violence over the outcome of the polls. Most times, this propensity, according to political pundits, is well conspicuous in the Southwest part of the country, with Oyo State as one of the most bothersome areas. It is never without casualties.

    As a precautionary measure in subsequent elections, the Women Advocates Research and Documentation Centre (WARDC) ýhas urged all stakeholders to join hands in ensuring sustainable violence mitigation.

    While welcoming participants to the meeting, the Executive Director of WARDC, Dr. Abiola Akiyode-Afolabi said the summit became imperative judged by the historical antecedents of the state, adding that “reactions from opposition still trail the 2015 general elections, leading to court cases by the opposition which are challenging the results of the elections.”

    Noting that the governorship election in Oyo State was tough not only because the candidates had pedigrees, but because “three of them had been at the Agodi Government House as governors. So, there were lots of expectations as we were not sure of who was ýgoing to win. It was very glaring that it was not going to be an easy win.

    While thanking the contestants for cautioning their supporters in order to avert violence, she advised government at all levels to address the problem of poverty and unemployment in order to reduce the spate of violence before and after elections.

    Dr. Olusola Ishola of the Institute of African Studies, University of Ibadan who delivered a lecture on “Issues and Challenges of Peaceful Co-existence in Oyo State” said the state has always been turbulent as politicians who carry over bitter politics and unhealthy rivalries of First and Second Republics are still present in the state.

    According to him, the involvement of the members of the National Union of Road Transport Workers (NURTW) in politics often make Oyo politics highly volatile and violent, adding that there was the need for reconciliation among the various communities.

    He noted that history of political compromises among the security agents is worrisome, citing the examples of political killings at Oke-Ado, Odinjo and other areas during the electioneering process.

    “There were unguarded utterancesý among politicians while many media houses also compromised ethics. They were divided along political lines. Mudslinging, name-calling, hate speech were common during political campaigns. There was a deep political disunity among the people,” he said.

    He revealed that there was deep-seated political antagonism among the dominant political parties, calling for reconciliation among the various communities in the state.

    “No government can succeed without people’s support. Government needs to make itself available to the people. Our leaders must address the cases of unemployment, poor infrastructure, inadequate workers’ salary and epileptic power supply. Our education and judicial systems must be strengthened to address injustice and inequalities,” he said.

    He urged people to expose criminals within their communities, saying that “apart from that, they should be counselled against evil doing. You recall that former Governor Rashidi Ladoja was impeached by a motor-park tout.”

    Contributing, the Baale of Ikolaba, Chief Safiu Amoo commended the people for shunning violence during the last election.

    “People shouldn’t take laws into their own hands. Anybody that is not satisfied with the outcomes of the election should approach the law court and they should wait till judgment is delivered. With the emergence of a new government, I pray God to let us witness the needed change,” he said.

    Mrs. Brenda Bepeh of the International Foundation for Electoral Systems (IFES) said her organisation was committed to peaceful polls, saying that “after the elections, we did an analysis of the states that needed intervention and we discovered that Oyo, Ogun and Lagos states are still not peaceful. We should all join our voices in our community and pass on the message in our different network so that we can move violence out of the South West and Oyo State, especially.

    Participants also spoke about their perception of the summit.

    Mrs. Omidiji commended her colleagues for the successful monitoring of the elections, noting that everybody must embrace peace from their respective homes till it gets to every part of the country.

    Mrs. Balijis Apanpa urged the broadcast media to help in sensitising the people about the consequence of post-election violence, adding that she doesn’t have anything against those who are not satisfied with election results and have gone to court for redress.

    For Abdulhamid Olawale of the Centre for Disaster and Crisis Reduction, first-class traditional rulers such as the Alaafin of Oyo, Olubadan of Ibadanland and others should call the two major gladiators in the state to order.

    “They should tell them the importance of peace. Also, market leaders should desist from joining partisan politics in order not to cause rifts among members of the market association,” he said.

    For maintaining peace before and after the election, Ishola Ibrahim thanked Governor Abiola Ajimobi of Oyo State, even as he disagreed that no amount of peace talk by traditional rulers can settle the rift between the two major gladiators except God.

    “Traditional rulers should be banned from politics. If there were to be three Orubebes during elections, the rest would have been history.

    At the event were the representatives of the police, traders, community and religious leaders.