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#EndSarsNow: SARS Is Not A Creation of Law

Daily Law Tips (Tip 673) by Onyekachi Umah, Esq., LL.M, ACIArb(UK)

Introduction: 

Nigeria Police Force is a creation of the constitution of Nigeria. It is created by law just like other law enforcement agencies, like State Secuirty Service (SSS) and Nigeria Secuirty and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC). Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS) is a tactical unit of the Nigeria Police Force focusing on combating armed robbers. With the recent public outcry for disbandment of SARS because of indiscriminate  abuse of human rights, many wonder if SARS is even known to law. This work examines the legal status of SARS and the powers of the Inspector General Police to disband SARS. 

Formation  of SARS:

In the Nigeria Police Force, there is the Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS), under the Force Criminal Investigation and Intelligence Department (FCIID). SARS was setup to deal with; “armed robbery, car snatching, kidnapping, cattle rustling, and crimes associated with firearms”.

SARS was formed in 1992 by a former police commissioner (CP. Simeon Danladi Midenda), with only 15 police officers. During its formation, there were three (3) other existing anti-robbery squads and the prefix “SPECIAL” was added to SARS to differentiate it from the other anti-robbery squads. 

Legal Status of SARS:  

The Inspector General of Police (IGP) is the head of Nigeria Police Force and he is answerable to the President of Nigeria. Among other powers and duties, the IGP can administer and organise the Nigeria Police Force into various components, units or groups for overall optimal performance and effectiveness. There are few units and services in the Nigeria Police Force that are created by law, like the Police Public Complaints Response Unit and the Traffic Warden Service are created by the Police Act of 2020. Most of the units in Nigeria Police Force are created by the IGP and his subordinates. Units that are not created by law are not legal persons that can be sue and be sued. 

Although, the Nigeria Police Force is a creation of law, Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS) is not a creation of law. It is not unlawful and illegal even though it is not statutorily created by any law. SARS is an administrative and operational creation of Nigeria Police Force to assist in attainment of the overall goals of Nigeria Police Force. Hence, SARS like any other unit that is not statutorily created, can be dissolved by the IGP. The IGP has powers to form and disband units, departments and groups under the Nigeria Police Force. On Sunday 11 October 2020, bowing to nationwide agitation and protests for disbandment of SARS (#EndSarsNow), the IGP (Mohammed Adamu) disbanded SARS. 

Conclusion: 

The Nigeria Police Force is a creation of law but SARS is not a creation of law, rather a creation of an officer created by law. SARS is a creation of the Inspector General of Police (head of Nigeria Police Force) and as such can be dissolved and disbanded by the said head of Nigeria Police Force. Since SARS is not a creation of law, no amendment of a legislation is needed for SARS to be disbanded, rather an order from the Inspector General of Police is sufficient. The IGP has powers to form and disband units and same has been properly used in the interest of justice and the public. 

My authorities, are:

1. Sections 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 33 to 46, 214, 215 of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999.

2. Sections 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 9(1)(c), 122 and 134 of the Police Act, 2020

3. “Nigeria: Special police squad ‘get rich’ torturing detainees and demanding bribes in exchange for freedom” (Amnesty International, 21 September 2016) <https://www.amnesty.org/en/latest/news/2016/09/nigeria-special-police-squad-get-rich-torturing-detainees/ > accessed 5 October 2020. 

4. “Special Anti-Robbery Squad” (Wikimedia Foundation, 5 October 2020) <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special_Anti-Robbery_Squad > accessed 5 October 2020.

5. “End SARS” <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/End_SARS > (Wikimedia Foundation, 5 October 2020) accessed 5 October 2020

6. “Demand justice for Police Brutality in Nigeria” (Amnesty International) <https://www.amnesty.org/en/get-involved/take-action/nigeria-end-impunity-for-police-brutality-end-sars/ > accessed 5 October 2020

7. “Nigerians want police’s SARS force scrapped”, Aisha Salaudeen (Aljazeera, 17 December 2017) <https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2017/12/15/nigerians-want-polices-sars-force-scrapped/?gb=true > accessed 5 October 2020

8. Onyekachi Umah, “Any Security Agency’s Manual/Protocol That Allows Torture Even For National Security Cases Is Unlawful And Its Officers Are Liable”. (Daily Law Tip [Tip 412] <https://learnnigerianlaws.com/any-security-agency-s-manual-protocol-that-allows-torture-even-for-national-security-cases-is-unlawful-and-its-officers-are-liable-daily-law-tips-tip-412-by-onyekachi-umah-esq-llm-aciarb-uk/ > accessed 5 October 2020. 

9. Onyekachi Umah, “What Is The Punishment For Any Person Including Police Officers That Tortures Another Person”. (Daily Law Tip [251]) <https://learnnigerianlaws.com/daily-law-tips-by-onyekachi-umah-esq-tip-251-what-is-the-punishment-for-any-person-including-police-officers-that-tortures-another-person/ > accessed 5 October 2020.

10. Onyekachi Umah, “Is Obeying “Orders From Above” A Defence For Torture In Nigeria” (Daily Law Tips [Tip 409]) <https://learnnigerianlaws.com/is-obeying-orders-from-above-a-defence-for-torture-in-nigeria-daily-law-tips-tip-409-by-onyekachi-umah-esq-llm-aciarb-uk/ > accessed 5 October 2020. 

11. Direct access to previous works on Torture in Nigeria <https://learnnigerianlaws.com/?s=torture+ >  

12. Direct access to previous works on Nigeria Police Force <https://learnnigerianlaws.com/?s=police+ >

13. Kingsley Omonobi, “IGP disbands SARS, pledges advanced Police reforms” <https://www.vanguardngr.com/2020/10/igp-disbands-sars-pledges-advanced-police-reforms/ > accessed 12 October 2020. 

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NBA Ibadan Offers Pro Bono Legal Services To #EndSARS Protesters

The Nigerian Bar Association (NBA), Ibadan Branch, on Tuesday announced that it is offering free (pro bono) legal services to #EndSARS protesters.

The announcement was made through a statement signed by Mrs Adelayo L-Oriekun, Vice Chairman, NBA Ibadan and chairperson, NBA Ibadan Human Rights Committee.

It said: “Following the recent #EndSARS protest by Nigerians and the pronouncement by the Inspector General of Police dissolving the Special Anti-Robbery Squad with its attendant abuse of human rights, the Nigerian Bar Association, Ibadan Branch in pursuance of its object under Section 2(4) of the Uniform Bye-Law is committed to promoting the rule of law, protection of protesters’ fundamental human rights and holding the government accountable for breach of constitutional rights of members of the public.

“As a result, the NBA, Ibadan Branch has authorised the Branch’s Human Rights Committee to: provide free legal representation to victims of police brutality and harassment; receive report of cases of police harassment to the NBA Ibadan Branch by calling the helpline on +2349040000079; convene a public enlightenment session in collaboration with relevant stakeholders for the protection and enforcement of fundamental human rights of members of the public; call for legal practitioners to volunteer their services to support the Human Rights Committee in defending the rights of members of the public.”

The statement added that: “Consequently, we enjoin all legal practitioners and members of the general public to assist and support the Nigerian Bar Association, Ibadan Branch in achieving the above-stated tasks in whatever reasonable capacity possible.”

Renowned Poet, J. P. Clark, Dies At 85

Though born in the creeks of the Niger Delta, he went ahead to bestride the literary world, getting international recognition not just for the lyricism of his poetry but also for his plays. Though he grew up in a small fishing village that had no elementary school, he went ahead not just to become a literary giant, but also a distinguished academic.

Still, an intriguing thing about him is that his greatness lies in his simplicity, his assertiveness and bluntness when occasion demanded. And that was also where his genius lay: the ability to express himself and assert his views, the ability to be what he had always wanted to be, no matter the odds. Little wonder he always dressed simply – in short sleeved shirts. But underneath that simplicity is a strong resolve, courage of conviction and strength of character, which were accentuated by his infectious confidence, smiles and wisdom associated with the elderly.

Welcome to Professor J.P. Clark-Bekederemo, poet, playwright and academic who just joined his ancestors today, Tuesday, 13 October 2020. He was aged 86. Though born John Pepper Clark Clark-Bekederemo, to an Ijaw father and an Urhobo mother, he chose J.P. Clark (which indeed speaks volumes about his independent and free spirit} and that was the name he was known by in the literary world.

Not only was he known for the lyricism of his poetry which he showed in poems such as Night Rain, Abiku and Casualties, he also made great impact in drama and known chiefly for plays such as Song of a Goat, which was premiered at The Mbari Club in 1961, The Ozidi Saga, The Raft, Masquerade and The Boat. His 1966 play, Ozidi, was an adaptation of an Ijaw story that in its traditional setting would have been told over seven successive days, using music, dance, and mime.

He was also known for his controversial book, America, Their America (which was published in London in 1964 and appeared in the United States five years later. In that travelogue he wrote about his experiences in the United State, criticizing its crass materialism, obsession with sex and ignorance about the world.

Controversy was indeed his forte. Clark also created not just a stir but also a controversy when he his 28 war poems were collected in a 1970 volume called Casualties. Those poems addressed the Nigerian civil war from various perspectives. For instance the poem that gave the book its title examined the stance of Nigerians who fomented the war from abroad, attempting to whip up support for one side or the other. “The casualties are many,” he wrote, “and a good number well/Outside the scene of ravage and wreck;/They are the emissaries of rift,/So smug in smoke-room they haunt abroad,/They are wandering minstrels who, beating on/The drum of human heart, draw the world/Into a dance with rites it does not know

That collection, as well as America, their America didn’t do his literary reputation any good, as many believe he infuriated and alienated a large audience and some influential critics. In his defence, Clark maintained that he merely portrayed events as he saw them.

Clark was a writer who raise question, crossed boundaries and not afraid to speak his mind. He was also at times cantankerous, a trait which showed in his controversial book, America, Their America. His work moved back and forth between Nigeria and the West, between traditional modes of expression and European-derived forms ranging from ancient Greek tragic drama to modern image-centered poetry. And he caused controversies in both worlds. He felt distinctly out of place when he visited the United States, dismaying his hosts, but his unsparing depictions of Nigerian civil war likewise unsettled many.

Still, the kind of education he received prepared him for his literary career. He attended Native Authority School, Okrika (Ofinibenya-Ama), in Burutu Local Government Area (then Western Ijaw) and the prestigious Government College in Ughelli. He then proceeded to the University College Ibadan where he distinguished himself not only by editing magazines such as The Beacon and The Horn but also as a lyrical poet.

On graduating from Ibadan in 1960, he worked as an information officer in the Ministry of Information, in the old Western Region of Nigeria, as features editor of the Daily Express, and as a research fellow at the Institute of African Studies, University of Ibadan.

As a young African writer with a fairly high profile, he came to the attention of university programs in the United States that were set up with the goal of cultural exchange in mind. Clark-Bekederemo was the recipient of Princeton University’s Parvin Fellowship and spent the 1962-63 academic year in the United States.

He was for many years a professor of English at the University of Lagos, a position from which he retired in 1980. While at the University of Lagos he was co-editor of the literary magazine Black Orpheus. In 1982, along with his wife Ebun Odutola (a professor and former director of the Centre for Cultural Studies at the University of Lagos), whom he met while they were students at the University College Ibadan, he founded the PEC Repertory Theatre in Lagos. The PEC Repertory Theatre became Nigeria’s first repertory theatre institution, an ongoing theatrical company dedicated to the performance of a mix of classic and new works.

As one of Africa’s most distinguished authors, even after retirement, he continued to play an active role in literary affairs, a role for which he increasingly gained international recognition. In 1991, for example, he received the Nigerian National Order of Merit Award for literary excellence and saw publication, by Howard University, of his two definitive volumes, The Ozidi Saga and Collected Plays and Poems 1958-1988. In spite of his advancement in years he still took part in literary activities and events. He was a regular presence in book festivals, notably of which was the Port Harcourt Book Festival

His exit has indeed brought an African proverb, which says when an elder dies, a library burns to the ground, to the fore. He will indeed be sorely missed by all in the literary world.

“Prof. J. P. Clark has paddled on to the great beyond in comfort of his wife, children and sibling, around him.

“The family appreciates your prayers at this time. Other details will be announced later by the family,” the statement reads.

J. P. Clark was a younger brother to elder statesman and Ijaw national leader, Chief Edwin Kiagbodo Clark.

Court To Hear Suit On Police Permit To Use Tinted Glasses On November 3

Justice Peter Affen of an FCT High Court has fixed November 3 to hear a suit filed by an NGO against police permits to some persons to use tinted glasses on their vehicles.

The Prisons and Civil Rights Development Foundation, an NGO, filed the suit against the Inspector-General of Police, Mohammed Adamu.

The suit with No. CV/1800/2020 filed by the foundation’s counsel, Henry Ebu, alleged that the police is granting the permit to “every Tom, Dick and Harry”.

Mr Ebu prayed the court to determine whether by the provision of the “Motor Vehicle Prohibition of Tinted Glass Act, CAP M21, Laws of the Federation of Nigeria (LFN 2004), citizens are allowed to use tinted glass without genuine reasons.

The NGO is also asking the court to determine whether citizens are allowed to use and drive vehicle with tinted, shaded, opague or any glasses which disallowed others from seeing the occupants of the said vehicle.

They further asked the court to determine whether by the provisions of Section 4 of the police Act, CAP P-19 and the duties provided thereof, the continuous and random issuance of tinted glass permit to motorist does not amount to a negation of primary duty of the police to safeguard life and properties.

Specifically, the applicant sought five reliefs to justify the suit, said that such act of granting permit was capable of promoting crimes like kidnaping, robbery and other social vices.

He said that, tinted glass permit could only be granted to people on health and security wise, adding that the police was doing the contrary by granting tinted glass permit to so many vehicles.

He also prayed the court an order directing the police to published full pages of editorial in three newspapers to compel the 36 states and FCT Police commissioners to order motorist with factory fitted shades or dark glasses to remove it and replace them with transparent ones.

The NGO also sought for an order directing the respondent (police) to pay the sum of N1 million as the cost of litigation, and a perpetual injunction, restraining the police, it agents from further granting tinted glass permit to motorist as it is causing anxiety in the mind of the pedestrian. NAN

Cristiano Ronaldo Tests Positive for Covid-19, Out of Portugal, Sweden Clash

Portugal — Cristiano Ronaldo has tested positive for the coronavirus, the Portuguese soccer federation said Tuesday.

The federation said Ronaldo was doing well and had no symptoms. It did not say when he tested positive.

Ronaldo played in the 0-0 draw at France in the Nations League on Sunday, and also in the 0-0 draw against Spain in a friendly last week.

Ronaldo is in isolation and has been dropped from the country’s Nations League match against Sweden on Wednesday in Lisbon.

On Monday, the Juventus forward posted a photo on Twitter showing him and the rest of the Portugal squad having a meal together. The players were all close to each other at a table, with Ronaldo apparently taking the photo himself at the front end.

The 35-year-old Ronaldo last month became only the second male soccer player to reach 100 goals for a national team, after former Iran striker Ali Daei.

The federation said Ronaldo’s result prompted another round of tests for the rest of the Portugal squad. It said everyone else in the team tested negative.

Tuesday’s practice session was moved from the morning to the afternoon so there was time for all the results to come back.

Two other Portugal players had tested positive for COVID-19 recently, José Fonte and Anthony Lopes.

Portugal coach Fernando Santos said last week the positive results among players were “happening everywhere in the world.”

“We are the most tested people and we have the guarantee that everyone who will be traveling to France with us are negative,” Santos said before the match against France.

The Portuguese federation did not immediately release details about where Ronaldo was in isolation, or for how long he would stay there.

He could miss Juventus’ Serie A match at Crotone on Saturday and the team’s Champions League opener at Dynamo Kyiv next Tuesday. And depending on his condition and the results of future tests, he could also miss the much-anticipated match against Barcelona on Oct. 28.

Juventus had been in isolation following positive tests for two staff members with the club. There has been some controversy that Ronaldo and six other players were allowed to leave the isolated group and join their national teams.

Man who dismissed Covid-19 and then survived it says he is an example for doubters

For months, Tony Green was skeptical that the threat of Covid-19 was real. Then he hosted a small family gathering in June where everyone got sick.Green told CNN’s Anderson Cooper on Monday that he sees himself as example to others.”We have to be the example to, I guess, bring awareness (of what can happen at a small gathering),” he said. After all six people — Green, his partner and their parents — at the weekend event got sick, eight more people in their families tested positive, bringing the total to 14.Green, who lives in Texas, ended up in the hospital and doctors saved him from a having a stroke, he said. He was better in a few days.

His father-in-law was hospitalized and seemed to be getting better. But he turned very ill, very quickly and he stayed a ventilator for six weeks. He didn’t survive.In an essay for the Washington Post, Green wrote that there was no goodbye.”He was just gone. It’s like the world swallowed him up. We could only have 10 people at the funeral, and I didn’t make that list,” he wrote.One of the secondary Covid cases was his father-in-law’s mother. She also died in the hospital.Green carries guilt for hosting the get-together.”The feeling that I have is kind of like what, I would say, a drunk driver would have if they killed their family,” Green said. “It was unintentional. This was my home. This is where it happened. So, you know there is a sense of responsibility.”

Green said no one knows who was already sick when the family had the get-together and some people might have still gotten Covid-19. For all he knows, some might have still died. But he still feels responsible because of the gathering.He wrote in the Post: “How many people would have gotten sick if I’d never hosted that weekend? One? Maybe two? The grief comes in waves, but that guilt just sits.”Green told CNN he would tell people who are preparing for Thanksgiving or Christmas to approach family time with care.”Take a little bit of extra precaution,” he said, recommending events be held outside if possible or in spacious place. But “if you’re nervous about it, I don’t say to don’t be afraid of it, I think that you’ve got a reason to be afraid of it. I think maybe you should bow out this year.” (CNN)

PHOTOS: Lawyers join #EndSARS protest in Lagos

A group of lawyers in Lagos State has joined the ongoing protest against the brutality by men of the Nigeria Police Force.

The legal practitioners who marched out in their numbers on Tuesday morning with placards warned the police force against extra-judicial killings and attacks on unarmed protesters.

They vow to seek justice for victims of the Special Anti-Robbery Squad, SARS brutality.

Also, the lawyers warned against harassment of legal practitioners by the force, urged the government to provide better welfare and funding for the police force so as to stop them from having to take bribe from citizens and as well harassing them on roadsides.

See photos below from the scene of the protest held today by the Lagos lawyers;

#EndSARS: Almost A Revolution

By Reuben Abati

The increase in the pump price of fuel, in 2020, a fall-out of the deregulation of the down stream sector, did not compel the youths of Nigeria to troop out onto the streets. The additional hike in electricity tariffs was not enough to ignite their anger either. The government of the day explained to the people that the additional burden of higher prices was part of the sacrifice they had to make as citizens. The impact of COVID-19 was hobbling the country: loss of revenue, inflation, a weak national currency, foreign exchange crisis. The people showed understanding. The strongest point about the average Nigerian is that he or she is resilient, long-suffering, yet ever ready to give up a little comfort for the country’s sake. Nigerian leaders do not show as much readiness or patriotism in the same manner. Nonetheless, Nigerians continue to endure, but the lesson of the #EndSARS crisis that has now engulfed the country is that it is not good to take the people’s patience for granted.

Last week, it took an encounter between a young man and the notorious Federal Special Anti-Robbery Squad (FSARS) in Ughelli, Delta State, for the people to cry out and show their outrage over unending cases of police brutality. A young man by name Ochuko, was first said to have been killed by the men of the FSARS. It was later established that he did not die. He was brutalized. His vehicle was seized by the police. He ended up in hospital. The Minister of State for Labour and Employment, Festus Keyamo, SAN who was born in Ughelli intervened and tried to explain. He said the victim was alive and that in fact, the outfit involved in the encounter was not SARS, but Operation Delta Safe. These were policemen all the same. The youths of Ughelli therefore turned their anger on the police. Whether it was Operation Delta Safe or SARS did not matter, the truth is that the Federal Special Anti-Robbery Squad established in 1992 has over the years become synonymous with impunity and brutality.

CSP Simeon Danladi Midenda (assisted by DSP Taiwo Lakanu) who helped to set up the unit as a default strategy at the time, is on record as having said that the unit, one of 14 in the Nigeria Police Crime and Intelligence Division, has “deviated from the original concept.” The exact nature of that deviation is that over the years, Nigerians concluded that FSARS had transformed from being a crime-fighting unit of the Nigeria Police into a criminal unit, granted automatic immunity by official status and the guns that they wield. Rather than fight armed robbery, SARS officials spent more time terrorizing Nigerians. The many stories that have been written about this unit of the Nigeria Police convey a picture of how Nigeria itself has deteriorated and how institutions of state can be easily used to condone and promote impunity. In 1971, Nigerian policemen killed Kunle Adepeju, a promising Nigerian student at the University of Ibadan, who was not even involved in a protest about the inefficiency and incompetence of a University catering manager.

In April 1978, the police killed Nigerian students for daring to query the then Olusegun Obasanjo military regime. The government had increased the cost of meal on campuses by 50k per day. The students revolted. The Nigeria Police, this same one, joined by soldiers who were called out to quell the protests, littered every campus from Zaria to Lagos with corpses. In 1981, they killed Dele Udoh, a 24-year old, award winning athlete. He was gunned down for having the temerity to argue with a policeman. With the emergence of a unit of the Nigeria Police Force called Nigerian Mobile Police (MOPOL) Nigerians were finally confronted with the spectre of police brutality in full force. It was a para-military police unit. It would eventually distinguish itself internationally and bring laurels to Nigeria in UN, AU, ECOWAS international peace-keeping operations. But locally, the MOPOL, as it was called, was known for its human rights abuses. Under Inspector-General of Police, Sunday Adewusi (1981- 1983), the MOPOL became so notorious, so evil, that it was called the “Kill and Go Police”.

After dismissing the civilian Shehu Shagari administration in 1983, the military rulers that came after had to whittle down the influence of the MOPOL. It had become a threat not just to society but also the military. MOPOL may have been bad but SARS is worse. Nigeria’s Special Anti-Robbery Squad inherited the “Kill and Go” label and turned it into a shameless brand. Nobody is spared. You only need to drive a good car, wear dreadlocks, look like you had just returned from an overseas trip, speak with a foreign accent, or look like the son or daughter or wife of a rich man, or make the mistake of being seen with an expensive phone or tablet, and you automatically become a target. Walking too confidently on the streets of Nigeria is now regarded as a crime by SARS policemen and yet, the Nigerian Constitution guarantees the freedom of movement. SARS officials pry into people’s bags, enter their houses and look into soup pots and refrigerators, and ask for a share of family assets or else, they will “kill and go” and as they often say, “nothing will happen.” And indeed, often, and always, nothing happens, and if anything happens at all, such policemen are protected by the police and subsequently rewarded with promotion and better postings. They are not answerable to anybody in the state to which they are deployed. They operate as a Federal Force! This is exactly the problem. A Police system that is supposed to protect the safety of lives and property but which operates like an enemy of the people, and the state lacks the will to do what is right, is a threat to everyone.

It has been argued that we should never have expected, and should not expect much from the Modern Nigeria Police. It was established by the colonial authorities as a force of domination, division, suppression, and control, and so the argument goes, we should expect the Modern Nigeria Police Force to remain true to its antecedents. The weakness of that argument is that it props up colonial determinism. It has been 60 years after independence. We can’t keep blaming the past. My take, in fact is that the colonial police master is much better than the post-colonial police masters we now have. Present day internal colonialists are far less human than the British colonialists. There are many Nigerians who will readily argue that colonialism had its good sides, highlighted ironically by the wickedness of a generation that inherited independence and subverted it.

Too many panels and committees have been set up to reform the Nigeria Police: why has that not worked? For more than 40 years, civil society groups in Nigeria and the International Community have been drawing attention to human rights abuses by the Nigeria Police: why has nobody listened? Every Inspector General of Police since the 1990s has talked about Police Reform, Police decentralization, Police restructuring, but that has also not worked. The current #EndSARS protest is a response to years of inaction and the deafness of the Nigerian state. The argument is not about a colonial heritage. It is about the failure of leadership. This is worsened by the fact that the protesters do not trust the Nigerian government anymore. There is nothing new about police brutality and the violation of human rights by the Nigerian State, but the people have seen that it may never end. For the past four years, there have been similar protests and demands. This is not the first time Government will restructure the notorious SARS or direct that checkpoints should be disbanded. In 2017, 2018, 2019, the police hierarchy gave the same directives. The police simply went about their duties and punished the people even more. It is tragic to have a Police system that the people do not trust.

After the aforementioned Ughelli incident, the Inspector General of Police – Mohammed Adamu announced that SARS officials had been ordered off the streets, checkpoints banned and that every SARS official must wear a uniform. The public laughed. They dismissed the directive as “an audio directive.” AUDIO used in that context in Nigeria’s street talk means mere sound, nothing of substance, it can be heard but there is nothing to it because it is deceptive and dishonest. The people have been proven right. When a people begin to call those who are supposed to protect them liars and hypocrites, something has gone crazy in that society, and a bomb is ticking. Indeed, within 24 hours after the IGP’s mollifying directives, SARS officials were seen again on the streets, acting like emperors as usual. The people then resolved that “Enough is Enough”. In Ughelli, Lagos, Osogbo, Abuja, and elsewhere, they confronted the SARS officials. The Police fought back. Nigeria now looks like a scene out of William Shakespeare’s Coriolanus. “Na on top that matter we dey since oh” as the people say.

The people standing up to the Nigeria Police are to be exact, the youths of Nigeria. The #EndSARS campaign is an expression of youth power. What we have seen is a whole generation speaking up. Their protest goes beyond police brutality. It is an outflow of pent up anger about how Nigeria has been mismanaged over the years. It is a protest about the failure of the state, the reign of impunity and the abuse of uniform, not just by the police, but Customs, Immigration, Civil Defence, Road Safety officials, and anyone who wears an official uniform and thinks he or she has been empowered to humiliate and oppress less privileged Nigerians. But the Phoenix has risen. Before now, many young Nigerians kept calling on the older generation of activists to speak up for them about contemporary issues. The majority actually thought the duty of liberating Nigeria should be carried out by the same set of old actors. This time, new heroes and heroines have shown up from the most unlikely quarters. Their protest goes beyond police brutality. It demonstrates the power of technology and the nature of a modern revolution and its potency. The Arab Spring was triggered off in December 2010, by an act of self-immolation by a Tunisian youth in protest over police corruption and brutality. In Nigeria, a Revolutionary Spring has been afoot for days. Well, almost.

Nigerian youths took over not just the streets of Nigeria, they possessed the international social media space. They ignited the fire of patriotism at home and in Diaspora. There have been protests by Nigerians across the world- in Paris, London, Johannesburg, Monrovia, Dublin and elsewhere. On Twitter, a dedicated team called out international celebrities and governments to help defend the rights of Nigerians to live in peace in their country. Within 24 hours, the #EndSARS campaign became the Number one trending topic on social media worldwide. Governments and embassies joined the protest, calling on the Nigerian government to address the grievances of its angry citizens. I saw Drake, Cardi B, John Boyega, Trey Songz, Chance the Rapper, Estelle, global cultural figures asking questions about Nigeria. It was in the government’s interest to respond. The IGP has now announced a complete disbandment of the Special Anti-Robbery Squad, but two days later, nobody trusted him. Nigerian youths shouted “AU-DI-O”. They have remained on the streets. They have asked that the President of Nigeria Muhammadu Buhari must address the nation. He has now done so. It was in his interest to do so. Every step that has been taken by the Nigerian government in the last three days is not because the government listens, but a response to a desperate situation. #EndSARS was beginning to graduate to an #EndNigeria campaign. Even the Vice President and one of his daughters joined the campaign. One of the President’s daughters, Zahra Buhari also tweeted on the side of the people. The children of both billionaires and the poor are united. One of them, DJ Cuppy, has said she had to defy other people’s counsel but as a young Nigerian she felt obliged to speak up.

The #EndSARS campaign has produced new heroes. We have seen an expression of youth anger and patriotism that we never expected was possible. Omoyele Sowore, the activist who ignited the fire that now burns, must be pleased. The other hero is Aisha Yesufu, the foster daughter of the North, who has emerged as a symbol of the protest. There is Rinu, the young lady who acted as spokesperson at the Lagos State House of Assembly. And Segun Awosanya, the #EndSARS architect and spirit. Deji Adeyanju. Dipo Awojide. Reno Omokri. There are others: those who lived, those who died, the living ancestors, and members of Corporate Nigeria who stood up to be counted. The Nollywood and Creative Industry team gave verve to the protest: Falz the Bad Guy, Wizkid, Davido, Tiwa Savage, Paul Okoye, Rema, Don Jazzy, Mike Edwards, Genevieve Nnaji, Toke Makinwa, too many to mention… and the BBNaija queen – Tacha showing that far beyond beauty and brains, conscience matters… Notably, there is no single hero. The youths of Nigeria led themselves. They blocked politicians from hijacking the protest, and therein lies the strength of this unfolding Nigerian story. We have not yet seen the end of it. It is a much bigger story: the story of how a strategic police unit that used to be known as the “Scorpions” ended up as a group of “Monkeys”, looking for “Bananas”, so badly they became involved in land matters, snatched ATM cards, and became “AsSARSins.”

EVAPWD Kicks Against Onochie’s Nomination

…Asks Senate To Reject The APC Apologist

The Campaign for Equal Voting Access for persons with disabilities (EVAPWD) has asked the Nigerian Senate not to confirm Lauretta Onochie’s nomination as INEC National Commissioner.

The group believes the confirmation of Ms Onochie, whom it described as a foot soldier of APC, would raise credibility issues for the Independent National Electoral Commission given that the presidential aide has not hidden her sympathy for the ruling All Progressives Congress(APC).

David Anyaele, chairman of the group also queried the integrity of Mrs Onochie, haven displayed unparalleled partisan support for the ruling party contrary to relevant provisions of the constitution.

“The Campaign for Equal Voting Access for persons with disabilities (EVAPWD) is worried over the nomination of Ms. Lauretta Onochie, a foot soldier and senior sympathizer of the ruling APC, and Senior Special Assistant to the President on Social Media as National Commissioner of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) representing the South-South.”

The honesty and integrity of Ms. Onochie to serve as INEC official is questionable as she has been very partisan in the last 5 years. Hence, Item F, paragraph 14 of the third schedule of the 1999 Constitution of Nigeria (as amended) prohibits a person with questionable integrity from serving as a member of INEC

“EVAPWD calls on the Nigeria Senate to reject her nomination to avoid contamination of the successes recorded so far by INEC and protect the election management body from political party influences”.

thenigerialawyer

TIPS