AS
GIHL RETAKES ITAKPE IRON ORE MINING COMPANY, ANOTHER LOOK AT THEIR ANTECEDENT
IN OUR COMMUNITY IS NECESSARY TO REMIND THE GOVT AND THE COMPANY OF THE OLD
WOUND THAT MAY BE RE-OPENED BY THEIR RETURN.
The links below reference the agony in a community that
dared sharp practice of a company now hailed by the gullible Nigerians!
1. Black Day in Ogaminana
http://ebiraview.blogspot.com/2008/02/black-day-in-ogaminana.html
2. Nigeria: Tears, Sorrow Trail Police Invasion of
Ogaminana
http://allafrica.com/stories/200803030508.html
3. Images of Ogaminana after invasion http://ebiraview.blogspot.com/2008/03/images-of-ogaminana-after-police.html
…and
the article below reveals more!
Category:Politics | Date:2008-03-27
|
Olafemi and the Ogaminana massacre
|
By Adinoyi Ojo Onukaba
AS expected, there have been lots of
finger-pointing and denials between the people of Ogaminana in Kogi State and
the Nigeria Police since last month when a senseless orgy of killings and
burning left over 50 people dead, hundreds injured, 5,000 rendered homeless
and more than 20 vehicles, 65 houses and 150 stores burnt. The true sequence
of events and the roles played by each group in the horrific killings of
defenseless people in Ogaminana remain contentious. But here is what has been
established so far:
On February 22, this year, six trucks
loaded with iron ore concentrates were on their way to Port Harcourt from
Itakpe Iron Ore Mining Company in Kogi State when youths from nearby
Ogaminana intercepted and detained them. The youths, who were peacefully protesting
against the systematic looting of the Itakpe iron ore deposits by Global
Infrastructures Limited, the Indian firm to which it was concessioned in
controversial circumstances by the Olusegun Obasanjo administration, were
said to have deflated the tyres and smashed the windscreens of the trucks.
Two days later, on February 24, a
unit of the Police Mobile Force was dispatched to Ogaminana "to prevent
further damage to the (detained) vehicles and products", according to
Kogi State Police Commissioner Ibe Aghanya. It was in the process of carrying
out this assignment that the police clashed with the protesting youths,
leaving an Inspector, a Sergeant and a Corporal seriously wounded and
Corporal Raphael George abducted. A search and rescue police team sent on
February 26, according to police official report, found Corporal George’s
mutilated body along Kabba Road after another bloody clash that the police
said claimed the lives of two of the intrepid youths.
Police Commissioner Aghanya cleverly
left out in his report the fact that after retrieving the body of their
fallen colleague the police descended on Ogaminana at 8.30 pm on February 26,
killing and brutalizing mostly elderly men, women and children in a reprisal
attack that has sent shock and outrage throughout the country. Aghanya also
did not admit that it was the summary execution of one Haruna Sule - shot
several times by the police - that provoked the youths into attacking his
men. Of course, Aghanya’s selective account of the mayhem his men visited on
Ogaminana is designed to demonize the community and to make the police look
innocent. Already, Clarence Olafemi, the acting governor of Kogi State, is so
convinced of the collective guilt of the Ogaminana people that he has been
raining curses on them for the death of Corporal George.
Olafemi did not care to conduct an
independent investigation into the killings before rushing to condemn the
entire people of Ogaminana and the Kogi Central Senatorial District for their
penchant for violence and other anti-social behaviour. He has not even cared
to visit the community to see things for himself before apportioning blame.
It will be surprising if Olafemi knows where to locate Ogaminana on the map
of the state he claims to be governing. This is the real tragedy of the April
2007 elections. The charade threw up all sorts of persons at the helm of our
affairs, including those ill-equipped to run a hunters guild who have
suddenly found themselves in charge of complex entities like states.
In a manner reminiscent of Odi (in
Bayelsa State) and Zaki Biam (in Benue State) reprisal attacks by the army
following the killing of their colleagues by the two communities during the
Obasanjo administration, it was reported in the newspapers that the police
ran amok killing anybody in sight including women, elderly men and children.
They did not spare even domestic animals. Gated houses had their fences
pulled down before being broken into. Petrol station attendants were ordered
at gun point to fill up containers that were later used to douse houses and
shops before being set on fire. Vehicles passing through the area, the report
added, were stopped and passengers were ordered to disembark "and any
Ebira man or woman found in the vehicles was allegedly shot
instantaneously".
Who authorized the attack? Did the
leadership of the Kogi State Police Command inform Olafemi about the plan to
wipe Ogaminana out of the state? How much did Olafemi know and when did he
know it? How come that Olafemi and Police Commissioner Aghanya are only
concerned about the death of Corporal George? What about the 50 or so
innocent souls killed by the police? Is each of those killed by the police
less important than the one killed by the youths of Ogaminana? Has Olafemi
ever queried Aghanya about the killings – assuming he did not know about the
attack? Is it possible for the police to embark on such a murderous raid
without the permission of the chief security of the state?
At a memorial ceremony for Corporal
George in Lokoja recently, Olafemi spoke in a manner unbefitting of a man
occupying the high office of a governor, even if in acting capacity.
"May they never see favour in their lives again", he said of the
killers of Corporal George while announcing some monetary compensation to his
survivors. He went on to describe the killing of the police man as satanic
and that "the incident has to be condemned in its entirety". What
about the 50 victims of police killings in Ogaminana? Olafemi made no mention
of them beyond categorically ruling out payment of any compensation to them.
Barely hiding his disdain or contempt for the people of the Central
Senatorial Zone, Olafemi said "nobody had briefed him about the
magnitude of the damage". Yet, he was quick to blame the traditional
ruler of the area for the crisis.
The Ogaminana massacre has already
been raised on the floor of the Kogi State House of Assembly by Hon. Momoh
Jimoh Anda and it was unanimously condemned by members. Both the Senate and
the House of Representatives have set up separate investigative committees to
look into the killings – thanks to the efforts of Senator Salihu Ohize and
Hon. Abdulkareem Salihu. Yet, acting governor Olafemi said he had not been
briefed about its magnitude. Is he running Kogi from outer space? With such
an incompetent and highly partisan fellow running the government - not matter
how briefly - any wonder therefore that Kogi is in such a mess. Again, the
state government has failed the people from which it derives mandate. The
callous disregard for the plight of the people of the area by both Olafemi
and the previous government of Idris Ibrahim continue to confirm lingering
suspicions that the state government prefers to treat the area as a lawless
fiefdom because it is the base of opposition Action Congress (AC).
This is one massacre that cannot be
swept under the carpet. Without prejudice to the outcome of the
investigations by the National Assembly, the families of those killed as well
as those who lost their houses, vehicles and shops must sue the Nigeria
Police to court and demand compensations. The Nigeria police will have to pay
for this. It cannot be swept away like Odi and Zaki Biam. People must be held
accountable, including the youths who killed Corporal George. Aghanya should
be sent on compulsory leave pending the completion of the various probes. We
will never have a country we can all be proud of if our supposed protectors
kill us with such impunity.
The Nigerian Police Force has long
been notorious for abusing the very people it is supposed to protect. Its
style of operation, crime fighting approach and general orientation are
outdated, crude, immoral and anti-people. The force behaves with absolute
disdain for the rights and dignity of the people whose taxes sustain it.
Members of Hitler’s murderous special squad would appear far more civilized
and humane than some of the men and women in our police force. The question
being asked by reasonable Nigerians was why the police did not fish out the
killers of Corporal George instead of waging a senseless war against a whole
community. Was Corporal George killed by the entire Ogaminana community? Why
visit the sins of a few youths on a community? Can the loss of 50 lives in
Ogaminana bring back Corporal George?
• Onukaba, a journalist and playwright,
lives in Abuja.
|
Comments
Post a Comment
Please include your name in your comments.
Thanks.