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Nigerian Lawyers Liken Recent Killing Of Protesting Enugu Traders To 1949 Massacre Of 21 Coal Miners By British Colonialists

Nigerian Lawyers Liken Recent Killing Of Protesting Enugu Traders To 1949 Massacre Of 21 Coal Miners By British Colonialists
August 11, 2023

 

The Oriental Lawyers for Justice (OLJ), a leading civil society organisation in the Southeast region, has called for a detailed psychiatric examination for every person seeking an elective office in Nigeria. 

 

In a statement issued in Enugu on Friday by its chairman, John-Bosco Aninwede, and publicity secretary, Mrs Ifeoma Ejike, the OLJ explained that in making the recommendation, it was merely following in the footsteps of a former World Health Organisation (WHO) Deputy Director General, Prof. Thomas Adeoye Lambo, who famously in the 1980s called for psychiatric tests for African leaders on account of their outrageous conduct.

 

The CSO said that the immediate context of its proposal is the ongoing prosecution of Ogbete Market traders and other businesspersons in Enugu by Governor Peter Mbah's government before a magistrate court in the coal city over the observance of the Monday sit-at-home order imposed by non-state actors.

 

The group said, “The nation can only ponder the emotional stability of a state regime which can shut down the businesses of poor traders for not opening their stalls on a day the government did not provide buses to convey them from their homes in various parts of the city to the Ogbete Main Market, nor did it provide security forces to protect them from their homes through the roads to the market on a weekday" that terrorists kill people in the region.

 

Worse still, according to the attorneys, when the non-armed traders protested against the government’s action, they were killed in broad daylight by trigger-happy soldiers acting on the government’s instructions.

 

The activists regretted that the state government had neither apologised for its action nor even commiserated with the families of the murdered or injured traders. 

 

“This action is reminiscent of the colonial government’s massacre of 21 coal miners in Enugu protesting against the racism of the government on November 19, 1949, a sad chapter in Nigeria’s colonial history,” the lawyers observed, contrasting the traders’ killing with the non-harassment of members of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) and the Trade Union Congress (TUC) who recently protested against the removal of petrol subsidy by President Bola Tinubu's administration. 

 

“If Tinubu couldn’t use the Federal Might against Nigerian workers, we wonder why Peter Mbah should launch an all-out war against poor Enugu traders and people,” the statement said. 

 

The OLJ accused the state government of “doubling down by arresting, brutalising and persecuting innocent traders and other business people under the guise of fighting IPOB terrorists over the weekly sit-at-home order”.

 

The lawyers counselled Mbah against further injustice.

 

“He should rather borrow a leaf from other Southeast governors who are not brutalising their people, despite facing the same challenge,” the lawyers' group stated.

 

“The origin of all this terror in Enugu is that all Nigerians know that Mbah was never elected by the Enugu people last March 18, but rather by a handful of extremely corrupt Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) officers who wrote a result that they could not defend anywhere.”