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Monday 8 October 2012

"I Am Devastated", Former Word Bank Chief, Oby Ezekwesili on student killings in Mubi and Port Harcourt


Oby Ezekwesili, a former Vice-President (Africa) of the World Bank who retired a few months ago, has expressed devastation at the killing of students in Mubi and Port Harcourt in the past week. In Mubi, Adamawa State, on National Day, unknown gunmen called out the students by name, and slaughtered them.  In Port Harcourt, in an incident caught on videotape, the students were killed and set on fire.

Mrs. Ezekwesili, who had also served in the Olusegun Obasanjo government, told members of the press as follows:

I am shaken; I am outraged, I am devastated, I feel mortally wounded. The situations in Mubi and Port Harcourt were terrible. Did you see the video-recording of how students were killed in Port Harcourt? Is this not the same country where it is emotionally difficult when you see a corpse on the street?



I am sorry; I am totally outraged like any decent citizen of a nation that we love. The killings were barbaric, mere savagery and very devastating. Some people are acting or behaving as if there are no people in charge of the government. “Something is fundamentally wrong with our society: To see the dastardly mob killing of four misguided youths(Port Harcourt’s) who stole sank my optimism. Noo! Even in death, these four must get justice. My voice shall be heard on this. What have we become?

“We used to be better than this. What has psychologically traumatized our people? There is a fundamental problem; there is a breakdown in something that is proudly Nigeria. I cannot believe that   our society has got to this level. We are broken, we need to be mended and nobody will mend it other than ourselves
We are getting to the precipice and we need to pull ourselves back. The government has to take full responsibility; it has to be in charge to prevent anarchy. The only way out is for the government to prove that it is really in charge.

We are a nation of 150million people; we are not a small country. If the situation continues like this, we cannot survive a large-scale conflict. It does not do us good to befell into a nation of conflagration.
We have to watch it. A lot of countries that have had genocidal experience started like this.

We have too many problems to descend into a state of anarchy again. How can we all sit and watch impunity becomes the order of the day. The government has to re-establish itself. The killing of these innocent students must not go off the news

These killings must not be swept under the carpet. There must be a rapid response from the government within the nuances of the law. The government must not just act, they should bring investigations into logical conclusion. If people watch and nothing happened,  by tomorrow we will have worst scenario of killings.

The leadership of the entire justice(the Judiciary, the Ministry of Justice, the police and allied agencies) and security system should consider this a slap on their faces. Citizens taking the law into their hands in such barbaric manner suggest a loss of confidence.

They have a duty to speedily work at restoring that confidence and they  can start with these two cases through rapid response.

They must successfully and speedily investigate and bring culprits to trial. We need to restore deterrence as a guiding principle of our justice system again!

When people know that the Rule of Law is predictable, they do not behave recklessly as we are seeing now.

But when you have a society and people believe the consequences are profitable, it suggests a breakdown of the Rule of Law

The whole world will be looking at us and say, what is wrong with these people? We do live in a new Nigeria now where life means nothing. We cannot allow the situation to continue like this. I hope this doesn't get swept under the carpet, reminds me of the girl that was raped in the East

1 comment:

  1. Pls, this so called mrs world bank chief or whatever should spare us this nyanyampu stories of a silly Nigeria with none sense rule of law. Who on earth that knows Nigeria would ever talk about self confidence in their police or even the judiciary or so called allied security services, that ve set nigeria to this urgly records. How else, does she expect people to believe there re people incharge of the government that can't provide the simplest basic amenities talk less of providing security to their lives & properties. Hasn't this degenerated to people struggling to provide securities for themselves by the way of local vigilante groups without adequate trainings, thereby leading to this awful jungle justice demonstrated on these young lads of future leaders. Was she not part of the OBJ administration of two terms & a desired third term that ruined nigeria of today sadly. How many security personnel has she got at her disposal at the expense other indegent citizenry.....she had better kept quiet on matters of national issues / security as she has nothing to offer for its developmental process which she failed to do having been part of a failed administration of the Obj government.

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