Iran-Saudi Arabia: Winning world peace with wrong peacemaker - By Owei Lakemfa

The runaway Republic of Nigeria – By Owei Lakemfa

The cumulative 29-year military rule left the country in ruins. In the Civil War alone which was triggered by military coups, over two million Nigerians lost their lives.

In the post-war era, thousands more were killed by military regimes including through  seasonal purges in the name of coups, attempted  coups and assumed coups.

In the anti-Structural Adjustment Programme, SAP  protests,  many were killed. In the protests against the military annulment of the June 12, 1993 Presidential elections, hundreds were murdered by the military, including the 118 Nigerians shot dead on July 6, 1993.

Today, twenty four years after military rule, the country continues to suffocate under the  culture of impunity  developed by the military  regimes.

So, you can imagine the tension in the media when news went round that armed men, with at least two in military uniform, had  barged  into the Lagos home  of  FirstNews Editor, Segun Olatunji.

The nightmare began at dusk  on Friday March 15, 2024 when the Editor was watching television with his 7-year old son. Suddenly,  armed men barged into his home with his wife, Mrs Oluwatosin Olatunji, and one year old son who had earlier been abducted. The abductors had forced Mrs Olatunji  at gun point to take them to her home.

The panic in the media was not  because it was  uncommon for armed  bandits donning military uniforms to abduct people. But because under military regimes, journalists had been abducted and simply disappeared. The most prominent case was that of Bagauda Kaltho, abducted without trace, three decades ago. He was being hunted by the military gestapo and had fled his Kaduna home. I had met him in a safe house in Lagos  and, with another journalist, Dapo Olorunyomi who was also on the run, we had agreed  that his plan to go underground in Abuja was a brilliant one. We thought the military gestapo would be out looking for him in Kaduna, his Billiri, Gombe State hometown and Lagos, not right under their noses in Abuja.

So, when Olatunji was abducted and disappeared without  trace, there was palpable fear.

The thought of his abductors being bandits was virtually ruled out. First, the abductors had been patient enough to allow Olatunji, who was in his boxer shots, to go into his bedroom and  pick a trouser and a shirt. Usually, bandits do not display such patience or civility. But  the second and main reason was that  bandits call relatives of their victims to demand ransom. But in  Olatunji’s case, his abductors made no such call.

However,  this also raised other fears. Since the Presidency, the office of the National Security Adviser, the State Security Services,   Military Defence, Army, the  Police and security services denied holding him, could his  abductors have been hired assassins?

After the Chief of Defence Staff, General Christopher Musa and, the Chief of Defence Intelligence, Major General  Emmanuel Undiandeye  had denied  holding the journalist, the  Nigerian Chapter of the International Press Institute, IPI gathered irrefutable evidence that they were holding the Editor.

The IPI held a press conference, not just directly  accusing the Defence Chiefs of abducting  Olatunji, but also demanding that President Bola Ahmed Tinubu should instruct the duo to set the journalist free. The IPI and other media bodies announced that they would hold a more comprehensive press conference the next day to provide further evidence.

The Defence Chiefs were clearly rattled. They did  not know how the media bodies  got such exact information, and were not sure what further information the media bodies had on the case. So, they reached out to the Honourable Minister of Information,  Mr  Mohammed Idris Malagi to confess they were holding the journalist and promised to release him immediately.

This was twelve days into the abduction. Next day, a journalist, Yomi Odunnuga, received a phone call to come for Olatunji. Mr Odunnuga, accompanied by Dr. Iyobosa Uwaghiren, the General Secretary of the Guild of Editors,  set out to receive the Editor. This was not without the Defence  Intelligence service playing ‘James Bond’ by directing the journalists around Abuja before finally handing over their victim at a bridge in the city.

Mr Olatunji revealed he had been tortured with his right hand and leg feeling numb.  He said after his abduction, he was detained at the  National Air Defence Corps, NADC. He was handcuffed, his glasses seized and he was blindfolded before being flown to Abuja. On arrival, he was stripped down to his boxer shots and leg chains added to the handcuffs. He said in Abuja, he was thrown into a cell where he was tortured,  interrogated and his phone scanned  for sources of his information. He was also taken to a clinic where his urine and blood samples were taken. His abductors accused him of a sundry of crimes including terrorism.

So, what do we do  about men who abducted a  citizen and committed the national and international crime of torture? Under the United Nations Convention, torture is any act by which severe pain or suffering, whether physical or mental, is intentionally inflicted on a person for such purposes as obtaining from him or a third person, information or a confession, punishing him for an act he or a third person has committed.

What do we do about public officers who so blatantly violated the constitutional  right to movement and, the   duty of the journalist to hold government accountable to the people?

What do we do about generals in uniform who lied that that they were not holding the Editor and, deprived him of his constitutional right to defend himself in court? What do we do about serving military chiefs who illegally incarcerated a Nigerian citizen  depriving him his right to family life and endangering his life?  Do we pretend nothing has happened and  wait for the next victim?

I think we can collectively ensure that all those involved in these crimes are put under international watch so that if they are above our laws, we can ensure their arrest and prosecution anytime   or day they step outside our shores.

The press  can also boycott the generals’  activities and programmes any of them is featured. Also, the Nigeria Bar Association, NBA can team up with Mr Olatunji and the press to ensure justice.

We also hope the National Assembly would wake up to ensure the constitution prevails.

Those who condone or rationalize the criminality of the Military top brass are like a man riding on the back of a tiger; he may end up in its stomach.

Welcome to the Run Away Republic of Nigeria where might is right and impunity thrives.  However, I am confident that collectively, Nigerians  can put a stop to all things that keep us chained,  backward and underdeveloped.