• Friday, April 19, 2024
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BusinessDay

Between the justified protesters and the vindicated government

OUR LIVES MATTER – ISHA SESAY

The few weeks ago, have no doubt been a rite of passage for the nascent democratic ruling in Nigeria. The Nigerian ruling class never, has not collectively been so convulsed into unthinkable precipice, signaling the end to their mischief rule. The halo of Nigerian political class triggered reversionary reaction from the downtrodden youths who had for their entire life been oppressed without any glimmer of hope for a country. The attendant effect is unquantifiable, both in figures and as well as in the mental wellbeing of every inhabitant in Nigeria. The Youths had gone on rampage just like weeds, springing out from the blues, starting with a teething call for the abolition of a unit in the Nigeria Police Force codenamed SARS.

It is regrettable that what started as a peaceful protest soon degenerated into what could be regarded as a clear shadow of civil war. The questions that could be asked are that, in the long run, can it be said that the warring parties have actually learnt, at least, both didactic and punitive lessons from their undoing? Should we conclude that the consequent actions of the government toward dealing with the carcass of the demi-war really portrait a danger to those who were actively at the vanguard of the protest?

Amidst hasty formulation of Panels of Inquiry, both at state and the Federal level, shall we be right to say the cyclonic formulation of various Panels of enquiry is a fair prediction of speedy trashing of whatever recommendation that maybe coming from all the Panels, just like what we have witnessed in previous historic bogus Panel similar to the Oputa and 2014 National Confab? The answers to these questions are riddled in the antithesis, stating that the more you look, the less you see. The truth is, only time shall tell, as unfolding scenarios coming after the quenching of the protest are for posterity to judge.

On the part of the rampaging youths, there seems to be a strong tone of justification for the wanton destruction of monumental properties in the various parts of the country. The salient questions here are that, are our irascible actions during the protest commensurate with and justifiable looking at the government’s persistent, cavalier attitude towards its citizen sordid plight? Is the government really propelled into taking a sincere action towards changing the narrative of bad governance in this country?

The big question is, have the youths really made their points known to the authorities, loud and clear? The widely assessment from the youths with a number of the old generation among the citizens is that, the protest is unarguably a justifiable action in a democratic setting, and where it resulted into wanton vandalisation of properties, looting jamborees and other malfeasance, then such should be attributed to the government’s irresponsive prompt action towards the outcry of the irate youths. However, they further hold the belief that rather than violence, instead dialoguing should be engaged.

In 1948 Henry David Thoreau conjoined the phrase civil disobedience wherein he used that in describing his dissident refusal to pay the state poll tax implemented by the American government to prosecute a war in Mexico and to enforce the Fugitive Slave Law. It is undeniable that civil disobedience has made martyrs, heroes and great reformers of great countries to reshape and reconfigure the odious narratives of their countries. While it is very correct to say that a civil disobedience is justified in a society where the situations of life is stiflingly unbearable, where the government has blatantly failed in fulfilling the basic terms of its social contract at the detriment its people, where government’s successive policies irredeemably decimate the hope for a better Nigeria, it is however subject to philosophical debate where protest degenerates into civil disobedience and where it is continuously staged without a clear rule of internal assessment. The EndSARS agitators, I mean the genuine youths, were mistaken, thus need to adhere that without sincere sense of common identity, there can be no real struggle.

Throughout history, it is observed that acts of civil disobedience famously have helped to force a reassessment of society’s moral parameters. the Boston Tea Party, the suffragette movement, the resistance to British Rule in India led by Gandhi, the US civil rights movement led by Martin Luther King Jr., Rosa Parks and co, even the resistance of apartheid in South Africa, Students sit-ins against the Vietnam War, the democracy movement in Myanmar/Burna led by Ayng San Suu Kyi, are all instances where civil disobedience proved to be an important mechanism for political reconfiguration and social change.

The youths were, and obviously are still justifiably enraged by the cluelessness of the successive governments in Nigeria. They are despondently despaired, consequently, the ruling class should bear in mind that, as a matter of justification against hopeless political contraption called Nigeria, the evidently quailed youths would always cash in on the government’s habitual inconsiderate attitudes to the country’s sickening plight, and thus, they are restive and are expected to take to recurring revolutionary actions against bad governance, ravishing employment and overall deplorable state of things in the country.

While the genuine protesters had had to learn from their undoing with the way event twisted from a protest that’s initially taken as a justifiable civil disobedience to anti-normative, cum justified disobedience, the government and its agency; the Police, cannot cunningly claimed vindicated. One is bewildered, how does a government who has, for over 7 months shut down tertiary institutions just over a fuss that could have been resolved without any national attention?

I am of the strong opinion that unjustified action that is extreme or a hijacked civil disobedience should not be leveraged on as a pedestal to vindicating an incompetent government, who has become incorrigible with crass mismanagement of public trust. I dare say that in our self-acclaimed democratic system, to glorify democracy and to silence the people is a farce; to discourse on humanism and to negate people is a lie.

No sooner had the youths taken their destiny by their own hands, by breaking into warehouses where covid-19 palliates were hoarded, had the President’s daughter self-indicated her father, thus exonerating him of all the rots associated with Nigeria’s political system. Rather than attracting exoneration as she projected, it is in fact a further indictment on Mr. President’s sheer incompetence to genuinely deliver the promises in his campaign manifesto. No doubt, the president cannot physically be present everywhere, but then, this technically will point to the fact that, except President Buhari himself personally handles every core program of his government, Nigerians should erase the thought of benefitting in the dividends of the so-called democratic government in Nigeria, because it’s becoming an open secret that the Aso Rock figure is swamped by opportunist jaguda, who take advantage of the laxity on the side of the head of government!

The nexus between the justified and the vindicated in the recent EndSARS protest is that, while the youths inadvertently transformed from being the justified to the anti-justified, the government cunningly undressed itself off the garment of global disgrace, and non-justified to the self-justified. Permit me to conclude by saying that, in the coming days, it is projected that we, the oppressed shall shine our eyes and be at alert for the sudden realignment and smuggled identification of the members of the oppressor class, joining the oppressed in the struggle for “liberation”, thus, moving from one poll of contradiction to the other end. I project their scripted shenanigan by saying that, they would pretend to have ceased to be identified as proponents of the exploiting class or indifferent spectators or simply the heirs of exploitation and move to the side of the oppressed Nigerians.

The masses should be mindful of the fact that they are inseparably glued to their marks and origins of prejudice, embezzlement, anti-democracy and all forms of corrupt practices. Accordingly, these adherents to the people’s cause constantly run the risk of falling into a type of generosity as malefic as that of the oppressors. I must say that the generosity of Nigeria’s political class that shall be identifying themselves with the course of the genuine EndSARS protesters is nourished by an unjust order, which they would want to maintain in order to justify their mischievous alignment.

As a weapon for scabbard, they will talk more about the people, though, with innermost distrust in the masses’ action. In all, the factual fact remains that trusting the people is the indispensable precondition for revolutionary change. A real humanist and democrat can be identified more by his trust in the people, which engages him in their struggle, than by a thousand distrustful actions in their favour, without that patriotics trust.

Balogun is a legal practitioner and public affair analyst, wrote in from Lagos sent this piece via [email protected]