DD
MM
YYYY

PAGES

DD
MM
YYYY

spot_img

PAGES

Home Blog Page 6116

#ENDSARS: Why Nigerians Don’t Want SARS’ Reform

3

#EndSars! A call that has been heard over and over again in Nigeria from helpless youths, who have become victims of their supposed protectors, started ringing high once again in October.

The reason for the call has always been the same each time; the Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS), whose mandate is to protect the Nigerian people from armed robbery, has turned out to be what they were designed to fight.

The last time the call was near this loud was in 2017, when the horrifying stories of SARS activities became unbearable to the Nigerian people. The End SARS hashtag became top of trends on Twitter and people took to the streets to express what they can’t put out in 280 characters.

The outcry yielded results, and the government promised to reform the unit. In 2018, while acting in the capacity of acting president, following President Muhammadu Buhari’s medical trip to London, Nigeria’s Vice President Prof. Yemi Osinbajo gave marching orders to the then Inspector General of police (IGP), Ibrahim Idris, to carry out reforms that will ensure a service-driven anti-robbery police unit.

Idris went to work, initiating some measures that were geared toward taming the beasts in the men of SARS.

“The Inspector General of police in compliance with the presidential directives has ordered the immediate overhauling of the Special Anti-Robbery Squad to address complaints and allegations on human rights violations against some of the personnel of SARS from members of the public in some parts of the country,” statement from the police said following Osinbajo’s orders.

Among the reform measures taken by the IGP were the change of name for the squad from SARS to FSARS (federal special anti-robbery squad), a new uniform that would include identity tags, medical/psychological evaluation of all FSARS personnel.

According to the reform orders; “FSARS personnel will not perform Stop and Search duties except on distress call to respond to armed robbery and kidnapping offences only.” There was also an arrangement for a training program for the unit, in collaboration with civil society organizations, local and international NGOs and other human rights organizations.

Following this announcement by the Nigerian Police Boss, the voices died down and the hashtag disappeared.

Armed with the belief that the future has come when SARS will not harass, extort or kill anyone for having dread, tattoo, iphone or laptop, Nigerian youths went their daily business with their heads high. But it didn’t last; once again, the reform was short-lived.

The IGP Idris reached retirement age and was succeeded by Mohammed Adamu, who upon ascension to the throne rescinded all the reform measures apart from the new name – FSARS. The squad went back to streets, the outcries began once again and the #EndSARS hashtag crawled back to trends.

It has become a norm of occasional outbursts, emanating from culminating stories of brutality, extortion, killings, and most of all, impunity.

At each of the four times of the major outcries dating back to 2015, there has always been the government’s promise to reform SARS.

So on October 4, 2020, when IGP Adamu, in response to the fresh outcry of Nigerians, issued the ritual orders banning SARS and some other tactical squad units from conducting themselves unprofessionally, the words of the orders were all familiar because Nigerians have heard them many times before.

“The Inspector-General of Police, IGP M.A Adamu, has banned the personnel of the Federal Special Anti-Robbery Squad and other tactical squads of the force including the Special Tactical Squad (STS), Intelligence Response Team (IRT), Anti-Cultism Squad and other Tactical Squads operating at the Federal, Zonal and Command levels, from carrying out routine patrols and other conventional low-risk duties – stop and search duties, checkpoints, mounting of roadblocks, traffic checks, etc – with immediate effect,” the orders partly said.

It is not different from the orders given in the past that were flouted with all impunity, consequently enabling more sad tales of atrocities from members of SARS.

“I lived in the North for years and never lost a finger. Then I came back here (Southern Nigeria) and they (SARS) killed my son. No war. No fight. He wasn’t involved in armed robbery. Just cold blooded, they wasted this boy for me,” cried a man who SARS killed his teenage son.

This was just a tip of the iceberg among the horrifying stories that triggered the current events. The orders from the police chief were supposed to calm the online End SARS campaign, but it instead spurred the youth to hit the streets in united throng, for protests that have unprecedentedly become a global movement.

As the rest of the world lend their voice to the campaign, Buhari who is seen as too slow in responding to domestic matters, was believed to have been forced to make a statement addressing the chaos more than 72 hours after the protests broke out.

“I met again with the IGP tonight. Our determination to reform the police should never be in doubt. I am being briefed regularly on the reform efforts ongoing to end police brutality and unethical conduct, and ensure that the Police are fully accountable to the people.

“The IG already has my instructions to conclusively address the concerns of Nigerians regarding these excesses, & ensure erring personnel are brought to justice. I appeal for patience & calm, even as Nigerians freely exercise their right to peacefully make their views known,” the president said in a statement.

But like the orders of Adamu, the statement failed to calm the avalanche of tweets coming now from all corners of the earth and the accompanying street protests. And the reason could be found in some tweets put out on Twitter in response to the statement.

“There are currently checkpoints in Lagos being manned by SARS while the president is meeting the IG of police to discuss “reforms.”

“Also remember that SARS was banned 2 days ago by same president and IG of police, the 4th ban in 5 years. Enough of empty talks. #EndSarsNow,” Kelvin Odanz wrote on Twitter.

“Show me one SARS operative in prison for killing a citizen?” Henry Shield asked.

The decision of Nigerians not to back down this time stems not only from the ineffective orders in the past, but also current views from members of the president’s circle and the Police, which suggest that the ordered SARS’ reform is all ‘window dressing.’

The president’s media aide, Lauretta Onochie, in response to the campaign said she has no doubt that what is “going on now is a coordinated attack by cyber criminals joined by unsuspecting innocent citizens,” adding that this is not the first time.

It was also a stand taken by the Police spokesman, DCP Frank Mba, who in his defense of the Nigerian Police decision not to scrap SARS, said the unit is also being used in the fight against banditry in Nigeria’s North.

But cyber-related offenses are under the jurisdiction of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), and the protestors are not calling on the government to end the Commission. On the other hand, there are rarely cases of SARS misconduct coming from Northern Nigeria, where the police spokesman claimed the unit is being used to combat banditry.

In Southern Nigeria, there is the everyday story of abduction, disappearance, maiming and killings. Amnesty International documented over 82 cases of atrocities committed by SARS between January 2017 and May 2020, outside the many more cases that didn’t come to light.

“Repeatedly, Nigerian authorities failed to end atrocities of SARS. This is hardly surprising when many of these officers have bribed their way to SARS in the first place. The police chiefs in charge are themselves entwined in the corruption,” Amnesty said.

The human right organization noted that financial gain, not service, has been the force driving recruitment and posting of the unit personnel, and many of them have criminal records.

“Officers sometimes pay superior officers responsible for transfers as much as N300,000 to influence their posting to SARS, as it is seen as a means of earning a substantial amount of money in a short time,” Amnesty said in a report.

All Nigerian authorities’ promises of reforming SARS have, so far, proven to be empty and ineffective. Restructuring SARS is not enough unless the government takes concrete steps to protect Nigerians. The report added.

Some had suggested ReformSARS

Concerned Nigerians believe that the government’s failure to take drastic action to address SARS’ highhandedness and police malpractices once and for all times means endorsement of the rot in the police. And it stems from the belief that the Nigerian Police as it is was designed to serve the interest of a privileged few, mostly those in the corridors of power.

Therefore, having been overdosed by the consequences of ineffective reform promises, Nigerians seem to have had enough, and are pushing for one line of action they believe will end it all.

Among the nine demands the protestors are making is that all tactical squads formations across board of the police be scrapped and their responsibilities be transferred to proper structures within the police.

“You cannot build on nothing. Neither can you reform what’s not willing to be reformed. Nigerians want what’s best for Nigeria, and the most important at this time is to #EndSARS,” former Senator Ben Murray-Bruce wrote on Twitter.

His assertion that the Police are unwilling to be reformed was traced to the streets and confirmed to be true.

The number of video clips showing police’s use of excessive force on people protesting against police brutality, including the fatal shooting of one protestor, Jimoh Isiaq, indicates that SARS reform is far from the answer to SARS’ menace.

“You see, when an organization has lost credibility in the eyes of the public, it is almost impossible to recover,” former DG of Bureau of Public Service Reforms (BPSR), Dr. Joe Abah wrote on Twitter.

“Now when an organization has gained international notoriety for brutality and criminality, you should not be talking of reforming it. You should dismantle it and start afresh. The need for an anti-robbery squad may always be there. The need for SARS, as we know it, isn’t anymore.”

The Place of Public Campaigns in Policy Reforms: #EndSARS Campaign in Focus

0

The most trending issue in Nigeria today is the #ENDSARs protest against police brutality and extra judicial killings. Whether online or offline, the song on the lips of most Nigerian youths today is #ENDSARS now! Protests have erupted in most parts of the country. From Abuja to Lagos, Oyo to Osogbo, the Nigerian youths are calling for an end to the Special Anti Robbery Squad (SARS). In Lagos, protesters were even reported to have kept a vigil on the entrance of the Lagos State House of Assembly to demand an end to the brutality visited on them by this SARS. Today marked the fourth day of protests across the country. And it is not abating as calls were being made for heavier protests that could shut down the country by Tuesday 13 October, 2020. One major casualty has even been recorded in this civil protest that is turning the violent. The police were alleged to have killed a protester in Ogbomosho. The police had denied the allegations.

It was not only on the streets that strong calls were being made to end SARs. Even on the social media, especially on Twitter, the voices were extremely loud. Analysis indicates that both ordinary Nigerians and youth celebrities as well as influencers have been involved in the fight to kill the monster of the special arm of the police in order to fight the beast of harassment as well as extra judicial killings to a justifiable end.

The list of celebrities and footballers who had added their voices to the campaign to end the reign of terror represented by the FSARS keep rising. The street protests in Lagos was led by popular musicians and social media influencers such as Runtown, Falz, Tiwa Savage, Tacha, Toke Makinwa and others. On the football scene, Nigeria’s captain, Ahmed Musa, John Ogu, Simon Moses, Asisat Oshoala, Leon Balogun top the list of the agitators as alleged videos of police brutality, harassment and killing of innocent Nigerians surfaced again online on Saturday. These sportsmen and women lend their voices to the protest on their twitter handles.

As at 3am local Nigerian time on Sunday 11 October, 2020, the calls were getting louder especially online. Statistics shows that a total of 330 tweets have been retweeted several times, analysis indicates. The major hashtag has continued to revolve around the youth demographics call for an end to the FSARS. For instance, the battle cry has been #EndSARS, #EndSARSnow, #EndSARSimmediately, #Justiceforjimoh and #endpolicebrutality. It has also emerged that major social media influencers such as @OgbeniDipo, @mrmacaroni, @segalink and @savvyrinu have been leaders of the online call out of the federal government and president Muhammadu Buhari in the bid to put an end to police brutality through the total disbandment of the tactical squad (See Exhibit 1).

 

 Exhibit 1: Actors Involved in the #EndSARS Campaign; Source: Twitter 2020, Adebiyi (2020)

In the clusters, Nigerian twitterati are seen gathering to discuss issues around four major topics – the protest not having leadership, unfollowing Buhari, not being tired to retweet and the death of  jimoh isiaq who happened to be the first casualty of the physical protest in Ogbomosho (See Exhibit 2). There are implications of each cluster focus as the cluster gathering touches issues as they trend on Twitter.

 

Exhibit 2: Main Topics of Tweets in the #EndSARS campaign; Source: Tweeter (2020), Adebiyi (2020)

The protests coordinated both online and offline has scaled up to international dimension with the protesters already gaining support from Nigerians and non-Nigerians abroad. Similar protests have been slated to hold on Sunday in the UK, Canada and South Africa. Reports have indicated that the UK government is demanding that the Nigerian government takes a look at the demands of the young protesters. The UK High Commissioner to Nigeria, Catriona Laing was reported to have tweeted @CatrionaLaing1 saying “Significant protests over #SARS demonstrating Nigerina people’s desire for police reform. Peaceful protests are powerful. Police Act recently passed by @MBuhari provides good foundation to build more accountable community police force.”

 

 Exhibit 3: Search Interest in the #EndSARS Campaign; Source: Goolge Trends (2020), Adebiyi (2020)

Yet, local interest seems to be more about the Nigeria Police Force than the #EndSARS protests (See Exhibit 3). In an analysis of search interest carried out early Sunday morning, the interest in the Nigeria Police was higher across all the states in Nigeria. Five states out of the 36 states of the federation showed a slight interest in the protests. Perhaps, this higher interest in the country’s police force could be adduced to the lack of information about the men and women in blue. Nigerians sought to understand the NPF more within the demands of the protesters that the anti-robbery squad be scrapped and disbanded. The Force Public Relations unit has a lot on its plate as far as managing the reputation of the force and maintaining a cordial relationship with the public it is paid to police is concerned. Ogun, Oyo, Rivers, Lagos states as well as the Federal Capital Territory are the states with search interest in the protest with interest not even up to 20%. Related search terms included SARS Recruitment, XSquad Nigeria Police, SAR2 and SARZ Nigeria Police.

The need to understand the Nigerian Police Force and how it could be reformed to make it more community-focused and citizen-friendly is critical in this period of public hysteria against the tactical unit of the force. In Prof Ndubuisi Ekekwe’s words – How do you end the fighting police in a nation where insecurity is the order of the day?

The Higher Mentors

1

They were men of great capabilities. They excelled in their fields. They were masters of waters, having core competencies in navigating sea waves as fishermen. But one day, they were on the Sea of Galilee, legendary for its shallow depth – the lowest freshwater and second-lowest lake on earth. Fed by River Jordan, with the Golan Heights by the side, a wave easily gathered momentum, causing problems along the paths.

On that day, the disciples, masters of waters, had their capabilities tested.  Four of them were recruited by Christ while working on that very Sea. The waves were ferocious. Yet,  the men trusted their skills. Then, they gave up, and asked for help. “Peace be still” were the words, and the storm stopped.

Our education, networks, and experiences are things we cherish. We use them to navigate careers. But there are things so powerful: preventing storms or when they do happen, having higher mentors (or plans) to stop them.

Today’s labour market is like the Sea of Galilee. Tech-driven dislocation and globalization are major challenges. We  require alternate plans just in case the skills become momentarily unhelpful just as the fishermen saw themselves nearly imperiled in a sea. But they were lucky, they were in good company, and the men of waters were saved in water.

Invest to be in the right company!

Note: I have used this story to teach and preach many times. My typical title is “Where is your confidence?”. My focus usually is to call people to the path of humility, as even the things we think we are best on, can disappoint us. Yes, our degrees, our skills, etc could disappoint just as fishermen were nearly imperield in waters. If we know that, how we relate with people will change. Yes, we become humble, with decency and honour, because a storm can change anything. But a higher Mentor becomes our confidence.


Bible: Mark 4:35-41

Don’t Just #EndSARS. Do This Instead

0

Besides  police brutality, which has no place in modern society and rightfully deserves all the calls for reform, there’s a growing paralysis which should have no place in modern society as well: Young people who have talent but struggle endlessly because the environment is a killer of talent.

The talents of youths can transform even the worst economic conditions. But that’s when the environment encourages individuals to do so.

More than ever, there are young graduates that are available to transform our society. And more than ever, we are having more youths who have continued to search endlessly for a chance to prove their worth. But the excuse we get is that “they are half baked graduates. Not employable.” Whose fault?

There’s a need for urgent reform in youth development. Can’t we really arrest the paralysis in our education system? It can be done if it’s admitted that enough hasn’t been done for the present generation of young people in Nigeria.

In the 1940s-1960s, young people (men and women who were less than fifty years) were leading socio-economic and political transformation in Africa. They did so because the system of that time provided room for that. Sadly, in the place of the esteemed perception that was held about young thriving youths is the ugly suspicion that now rides the handling of young people. To force men, a young tech entrepreneur that manages to achieve a decent status is either a criminal suspect or a yahoo star suspect. The many cases of police men assaulting innocent citizens, because they happen to look good comes handy. This is however not to excuse bad folks who dupe other people on the internet though. It’s rather to ask that the words of respected leaders like Peter Obi, should be listened to. Obi had called on the government to increase its investment in education, during a recent lecture delivered at UNN.

Invest in youths, in education, so that the talents of youths are properly harnessed for national growth and improvement of the standard of living of young people and seniors. Don’t end anti-robbery and related crimes law enforcement. Reform it and declare an emergency in youth development.

Nigeria Needs Presidential Debates – Mike Ini, INEC Executive

1

I vote Yes, and the National Assembly should make at least two pre-election debates to be part of our (national) democracy in Nigeria. Sure, many will argue that debates do not make you a better leader. Respectfully, I think they are wrong.

As a Library Prefect in secondary school, part of my job was to coordinate debates from JS1 to SS3. I learnt quickly that to help moderate or participate or manage, mastering the debate topic was crucial. And the participants were expected to prepare. Magically, we realized that being asked to debate was one way of pushing students to study things they would not have.

Both did not debate during the last election

If you ask Nigerian politicians to debate, they would be forced to spend time to understand the issues they would deal with before they are elected into the jobs. Yes, on Day 1, they know the issues, instead of wasting months trying to understand the state of the nation. Simply, debates would have “prepared” them, forcing them to seek the right data and insights.

There is one reason why an American or UK leader would have the cabinet ready within days of being elected: as part of preparing for debates, the person has been forced to seek insights from experts. So, before they are elected, they know the best in the land. Yes, they know the person who knows, and by having known all the experts, forming a cabinet becomes easier.

Nigeria needs presidential debates and we need those with the fierce urgency of now. 

It is very shameful, repugnant and extremely unfortunate that Nigeria is yet to grow into a nation where leaders prepare into positions.

Debates matter – they matter. They push you to say “Who knows this area best, get him/her here”. By the time you have done that 3-5 times, you will have your cabinet ready to lead a day after election.

Mr. Mike Ini, you always impress: push this forward for the nation.

PT: You have been calling for the institutionalisation of debates at all levels, for all candidates in our electoral system, what are the prospects?

Igini: In the leadership or executive recruitment process, debates on key policy issues allows the aspirants to present their private and public records for public scrutiny. If made compulsory as the practice in some countries, then those who aspire to public office will know that competence, performance, and character are very important matters of public interest when seeking elective office.

Nigeria’s Presidential Debate Failure