Monday, 19 October 2020

Benin Violence: Looking Beyond the Surface

By Ohikhuare Isuku

Hoodlums have hijacked the peaceful protest in Benin-Ciy. Robbery, arsons, rapes, intimidations, etc have been reported across the city. On Monday 19th, the worst yet happened: there was a jailbreak, and from the videos circulating the online space, thousands of inmates may have been let into the wild. 

But my curiosity is: how did a peaceful protest meant to press home key demands for the betterment of our country degenerate to such a shameful anarchy? How did a federal correction facility meant to be fortified by humans and technology become so exposed to be broken into?

There is a painful irony that bares itself in all these occurrences, and it points to the fact that our systems which gulp billions of our budgets to maintain on a yearly basis are in real sense wobbly fortresses which break down when a little quake occurs. 

It should be noted that pockets of violence are normalities of purposeful and genuine struggles in every clime and time. Sure, we'll have anarchists among us who will lend themselves to be used by the oppressors to foil the struggle for a better life. But this won't deter us. We must run this race to the finishing line and touch the tape with our torsos. We move! 

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Sunday, 18 October 2020

Police Reform is Long Overdue

 by Ohikhuare Isuku



In April 2013, right before my eyes, some policemen opened fire on a group of defenseless youths in front of a shed. The policemen didn’t point their guns upward when they fired neither did they aim at the legs of their victims. The firing was direct. It could have hit their heads or chests if they had not miraculously escaped. Later on, when the vicious policemen had gone with the victims they were able to arrest – bonded away like animals to be slaughtered – I began to ask what the root of the provocation was. Were they criminals? Have they been condemned by a reputable law court? The revelations I got from those around shocked me. It happened that the only crime of these young men was showing grievance against the local election which had been rigged with impunity by the incumbent government. A local leader in the area who was pro-government had ordered policemen to open fire on these youths in order to stem the agitations which may arise as a result of the ruined election. This is just one of the thousands of cases where the NPF have been used by the powerful people to oppress, maim and kill defenseless Nigerians.

            It’s not uncommon for a wealthy man to call the police on a poor man just because the later is packing his keke close to his camry. These things happen on daily basis. Take a ride around the busy routes of Lagos especially in still traffic and see how the wealthy threaten commuters with the statement: “I’ll beat you up and lock you up! You won’t be released until I ask the police to do so.” And most times, this threat is followed by action. A little scratch on his car because of his own recklessness and the big man jumps out from his car, dishes some blows on his poor victim while dialing a police contact he knows to come and whisk the common man away. And as you’d guess, the police will only work for those with fat pockets.

            Like all public institutions in this collapsing republic, the rich have hijacked the police for their own salvation. From the suppression of justice to the oppression and extortion of the masses, the police have deviated from their core responsibility of enforcing the law to breaking it, inflicting untold hardship on poor Nigerians. The time to overhaul the entire police structure is now. There’s no going back. Police brutality, injustice and extortion against poor Nigerians must end. Time for an utter police reform has come.

 

Ohikhuare Isuku

 

 

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Sunday, 27 September 2020

Looking Again at How Achebe’s Works Are Interpreted

 by Ohikhuare Isuku

I recently reread Chinua Achebe’s masterpiece – Arrow of God – after about a decade. The revelations from the novel were by far more nuance and clearer than they were a decade ago. As I finished the last word, a notion about Achebe’s work I had held for over a decade based on reviews by foreign and local reviewers alike suddenly fell apart. The truth is that Achebe’s work didn’t actually elevate the Igbo cultural norms. Instead, it portrayed the inefficacies and inferiority of the Igbo customs and traditions and then clashed these customs and traditions together with that of the Whiteman.

In every scenario in Achebe’s works, the Whiteman’s ways triumphed above the indigenous culture. For instance in Things Fall Apart, Achebe portrays how the Whiteman first enters Umuofia and conquers the stubborn clan, making Okonkwo – the book’s hero – to hang himself. In Arrow of God also, Achebe portrays a weakened system already subdued by the colonial government of the early twentieth century. The people of Umuaro do not resist the authority of Captain Winterbottom. Not even Ezeulu, the great Chief Priest of Ulu, dares resists on a second thought when Captain Winterbottom summons him. But there is one thing Umuaro do not let go of their culture– their regard for their deities and festivities. In a way, Achebe finds way to picture these deities and festivities ineffective, and thus proclaims the triumph of the European religion – Christianity.  

            I bear no ill against Achebe for writing things the way he saw them. I respect the literally icon immensely for the great wits in his books. Somehow, I do bear some hidden resentments against some retrogressive African customs and traditions still in existence today. But my confusion is this: why did Western critics of Achebe’s Trilogy feel he was upholding the culture of his Igbo people in his work? Why didn’t they interpret the books the way they had read them?

            I have found one answer to this puzzle. They were simply hiding away the obvious. The Western critics loved Achebe’s trilogy because they spoke in their favor. In a way that Achebe perhaps didn’t realize, these books add credence to how mighty and reverend the Whiteman’s power was in the days of African conquest.

The question now is: Why did the western critic fail to review these books as they were starkly? Achebe’s books appeared in an era of mass protests against racism across Africa, America and elsewhere. Book critics who were feigning liberal views at that time may not have wanted to interpret the books as they were. Yet they wanted the books to be popular even though they didn’t want it to look as if they were portraying Western culture above African culture. Thus, they may have decided to praise Achebe’s work for its rich African language content rather the message it actually passed. Once this interpretation was popular, it became the definitive interpretation that even African critics bought into. In any case, the popularity of Achebe’s trilogy became a triumph for Western culture in disguise.

 

 

Ohikhuare Isuku.

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