FIFTEEN years after ceding power to
civilians, the Nigerian military continues to act above the laws of the
land. In its latest show of brutality, Army personnel went on the
rampage in Lagos last week. They destroyed and burnt about seven Bus
Rapid Transit buses. They beat up commuters and violated their rights.
On the excuse that a soldier was killed on his motorcycle by a BRT bus,
the soldiers attacked Lagos commuters, causing a six-hour traffic delay
in the city’s main artery.
This is a most irresponsible act of
lawlessness by men who are supposed to keep the law. The Nigerian Army
high command must investigate this matter and punish the soldiers
involved, particularly the officer who might have authorised the
operation. And it must work to re-build the trust of the Nigerian
people, which has broken down because of the military’s unending
brutality, including that of July 4. The people who are sustained by
taxpayers do not deserve to be paid back by soldiers with such
highhandedness. This brigandage has no place in a democracy.
The defence put up by the Army that it
was street urchins that destroyed the BRT buses is puerile. It stands
against reason and eyewitness accounts. The mayhem bears all the imprint
of a military “gone mad again,” according to Wole Soyinka, the Nobel
laureate.
As unfortunate as the incident was, the
soldier who was riding on the dedicated BRT lane was committing an
unlawful act. The practice of violating extant laws is rife among
military personnel in Lagos. In 2012, Governor Babatunde Fashola
arrested a Colonel – K. I. Yusuf – on the BRT lane. Because the military
did not adequately sanction Yusuf and other lawbreakers like him, such
impunity grows.
Fashola, in condemning the July 4 action,
said, “I do not know how damaging public property is the restitution
for any injury that may have come.” Fashola should see the issue to its
logical conclusion, especially by ensuring that the Nigerian Army
punishes the errant soldiers and their commander.
Soldiering is a serious profession. It is
only in a failing state that the military fail to subordinate
themselves to civil authority. The military, accustomed to intimidating
and harassing civilians when they were in power, must free themselves
from this hangover. They must be subject to civilian authority and
respect the rule of law whenever they feel that the rights of their
personnel have been violated.
Invading police stations and brutalising
civilians belong to the past, and it must stop. When a British soldier,
Lee Rigby, was mercilessly hacked to death by two thugs near his
barracks in Woolwich, London, in May 2013, the military did not rush out
to invade the surrounding area. In fact, it was policemen that took
charge of proceedings and prosecuted the two felons who were eventually
convicted in court.
But it is a different ball game here: a
show of savagery by the Nigerian military. Some soldiers abuse their
uniform, aiding and abetting crime, and driving motorists off the road
with sirens without justification. Other examples of cruelty by military
personnel in the past 15 years of civil rule bear testimony to the
reign of terror by security men who should ordinarily be sobered by the
great challenge currently posed by the Boko Haram insurgency.
In 2006, following a harmless argument
between a soldier and a policeman at a bus station, soldiers from Abalti
Barracks invaded the nearby Area C Police Command in Surulere, Lagos.
They burnt down part of the barracks, freed detained suspects, resulting
in some injuries and death. The government has just finished
re-constructing the barracks. It was a similar story of barbarism in
July 2005 when a commercial motorcyclist, Peter Edeh, hit the car of a
Nigerian Navy officer, Felix Odunlami, at a traffic light stop in Lagos.
Although Edeh begged for mercy, Odunlami shot him dead.
In 2008, Miss Uzoma Okere was shamefully
treated by Harry Arogundade, a rear admiral, who watched gleefully as
his guards stripped and beat the young lady in the public for allegedly
not making way for his convoy to pass. The court rightly awarded N100
million as damages against Arogundade and the Nigerian Navy. It was a
similar story in 2011 in Badagry, Lagos, when soldiers from the 242
Recce Battalion invaded the police station in Iberepo over the death of
their colleague. They maimed every policeman they sighted, burnt down
two squad vehicles, and killed the Divisional Police Officer, CSP Saliu
Samson, and the Divisional Crime Officer, both of whom were returning
from a meeting with military officials to ensure that calm was restored
to the area. As usual, none of the soldiers was prosecuted.
But the military must reform themselves,
first, by punishing their personnel that violate the law. At present,
the silence of military authorities suggests that they condone the
atrocities of their men. Instead of fighting terror and the ineptitude
in their ranks, the military have become a byword for kowtowing to
illegal duties.
Last May, soldiers intercepted,
confiscated and destroyed newspapers in an unprecedented assault on free
speech. Obeying a questionable “order from above,” soldiers stopped
Governors Rotimi Amaechi and Adams Oshiomhole of Rivers and Edo states
respectively, from entering Ado-Ekiti to campaign for their party’s
governorship candidate in the June 21 ballot in Ekiti State. Soldiers
are currently on illegal duty in Adamawa State, in a purely civil matter
between the governor and state House of Assembly.
Nigerians have suffered from the actions
of deviant soldiers for too long. Things must change. The top hierarchy
of the military must be quick to investigate and punish errant soldiers
who take the laws into their hands. The military must wean themselves of
this needless air of superiority, which makes them to see other
citizens as “bloody civilians.”
Defining its role in national life, the
United States National Military Strategy, in 2011, aptly said, “We will
remain an apolitical institution and sustain this position at all
costs.” The Nigerian military should take a cue from this well
constructed response.
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