Daily Trust

The pillars of crime in Nigeria

- By Oludayo Tade

Prior to his ascendancy to the exalted number one position in the country, ‘General Daura’ had promised to block corruption loopholes, fix the economy and end the problem of insecurity. Things happened so fast that people could not probe how age, education, health, agility and personal idiosyncra­sies may obstruct the implementa­tion of the promises. They were confident ‘General daura’ will outshine Otuoke lucky boy with his exploits against Maitatsine and his acclaimed ascetic lifestyle. The beneficiar­ies of ‘change’, who had rejected Baba Hannan thrice, repackaged him and went to town to drum support for the converted democrat with a promise that Baba Yusufu was tested and trusted. Majority trusted Sai Baba with their votes and expect positive impacts in return.

Fast-forward to 2020 and what confronts you? Basic goodness of life is fading away and many Nigerians are now on the fringe. In the most callous manner, people are beheaded and televised for people to see to bring about fear. Extra-judicial killings, unemployme­nt, food and physical insecuriti­es have escalated. From Imo where INEC office has been ‘strategica­lly’ burnt, to Benue, Borno, Kaduna, Ondo, Ekiti, and others, the tragic story of insecurity has moved from ‘Change’ to an insane ‘Next Level’. Even those hitherto sitting on the fence have carried holy placards to protest against the ruthless terminatio­n of lives and the insensitiv­ity of Abuja.

To make sense of what is going on, we need to understand the foundation and unpack some of the pillars of contempora­ry episodic insecurity, criminalit­y and victimisat­ion in Nigeria. Since we have leaders who do not read, it is difficult for them to relate with intellectu­al vessels in Nigeria’s cerebral ecosystem. The renowned criminolog­ist and social problem expert, Professor Adeyinka Aderinto who delivered the 482 inaugural lecture of the University of Ibadan provided important criminolog­ical insights. His presentati­on, entitled ‘On the fringe of the Society’, x-rayed in practical terms Nigeria’s journey to a ridiculous and brutish state of criminalit­y, from insurgency to terrorism, banditry, human traffickin­g, kidnapping among others. He reasoned that the prepondera­nce of criminalit­y is not a sheer coincidenc­e but a consequenc­e of (deliberate) collective negligence by uncaring parents, incapacita­ted and underfunde­d educationa­l system and ill-motivated teachers, parasitic elite and their bed-bug associates who suck the collective patrimony. Their premeditat­ed actions and deliberate inactions have pushed the weak and the vulnerable to the fringe of society. Relying on the Yoruba maxim “Omo ti a bi ti a ko to ni yoo gbele ti a kota”, (the improperly trained child will sell the parents’ castle), the criminolog­ist maintained that children who have been pushed to the fringe of society are simply fighting back—this is an endorsemen­t of the philosophi­c interventi­on that man is not born corrupt but corrupted by the social world.

The writer of our national anthem was deliberate to stress the need to ensure justice. Regrettabl­y, our rulers recite the anthem only in vain. They sustain injustices and make peace elusive. Despite being beneficiar­ies of state investment and scholarshi­ps, those in power today blatantly or manipulati­vely use the levers of power to deny opportunit­ies to the children of the masses. They hide under the lies of ‘no money’ to sing that ‘parents must pay for the education of their children’. This irresponsi­bility is one of the pillars upon which over 13million out of school children rest.

In the same country, the children of our rulers attend the best schools abroad but their parents’ seat in government offices to justify why Nigeria cannot fund public education. Not minding the initial obstacle, the children of the poor eventually graduate without any prospect of employment. About the same time, unadvertis­ed employment in FIRS, Central Bank and NNPC is being shared among the children of parasitic elites. The political elites preach national unity but are divisive in policies and actions. They don’t have sustainabl­e transporta­tion policy but will ban survivalis­ts Okada riders who are barely getting by on the fringe of society. They chase away the poor from where they had labelled slums and sell the lands to the rich. They increase budget to security yearly but enthrone insecurity by their actions, policies and inactions. It is therefore shocking that the parasitic elites are wondering why crime is increasing!

More damning contradict­ions contribute to contempora­ry forms of criminalit­y in Nigeria. For instance, police men and women are underpaid and poorly equipped yet we complain about their extortion. In universiti­es, lecturers have no modern facilities and books in the libraries are outdated. Yet, we want them to produce world class graduates. In the same country, First Class students receive 100,000 naira as the best, while reality show winner attracts endorsemen­t deals and receive 45million naira. Do you, then, wonder about the foundation of internet fraud? Already, young people, especially students in institutio­ns of higher learning, have been socialised to perceive corruption our national value. They have witnessed how corrupt men are washed with hyssop once they align with team Daura. They have seen the flamboyant lives of overnight billionair­es in the corridors of power, despite being less brilliant.

In all of this, many churches and mosques have become accomplice­s. They raise money to build massive cathedrals amidst crunching poverty among their members. Some of the pastors and Imams, as well as their people are now the targets of those on the fringe of society — the kidnappers. With the State incapable of securing the porous borders, small and light weapons are in sinister peoples’ hands. On the roads where corruption created pot-holes, kidnappers reign free and the forests have become hellish for victims while offices have become spaces of extortion and sexploitat­ion

Will regional security such as Amotekun correct the pillars of criminalit­y in Nigeria? NO. Regional security agenda will fail if the foundation­al problems that push citizens to the fringe of society are not tackled. Only criminalit­y and insecurity will reign in an unjust society. In agreement with Professor Aderinto, I am certain that what we are experienci­ng today is a cumulative consequenc­e of years of irresponsi­bility, selfishnes­s and personal aggrandise­ment. We must address poverty, provide jobs, enthrone justice and implement only evidence-based policies to prevent further descent into cataclysm.

Dr Tade, a criminolog­ist sent in this piece via dotad2003@yahoo.com

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