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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