Connect with us

Opinion

#EndSARS: The Deceitful Banning and Mocking The Conscience of Nigerians

Published

on

 

By Ibrahim A ,El-Caleel

“When people complain of your complexity, they fail to remember that they made fun of your simplicity.”

– Michael Bassey Johnson

Nigeria is currently in one of its fragile moments in recent history. Both the protesters and the government don’t seem to have an idea on how this will end well, without any tears.

Complaint on SARS’ brutality has been on for a long time. However, in its typical executive arrogance, the government didn’t care to take it serious even as the extrajudicial killings rose.

Anytime a SARS extrajudicial killing trended seriously on social media, the government will deceitfully ban SARS.

As IG Bans FSARS, what next for Nigerian youth with ASUU still on 7-month strike

Instead of immediately correcting its ways, SARS will still find its way back to Twitter trends with a fresh extrajudicial killing. Thus, the deceitful banning became a mockery of the collective conscience of Nigerians. This is one of the reasons why the recent banning of SARS couldn’t end the protests. It has much do with integrity. When you regularly deceive people, they won’t take you serious even when you are eventually serious.

As a fierce and popular opposition figure in 2013, Mallam Nasir El-Rufai was hosted to a StraightTalk session on TVC news, where he discussed Nigeria’s leadership failure. He made the following remarks:

“In this country, we have a conspiracy of silence by the elites. Everybody just keeps quiet because he is waiting for his turn; and it is not taking us anywhere. We are all going to be consumed by this crisis. This is a keg of gunpowder that we are sitting on, in which 75% of the population is below the age of 35; they have no jobs, no hope, and they have not seen a country that ever functioned. It’s a key of gunpowder that will explode and destroy all of us if we don’t do something about it.”

Advert

El-Rufai painted a true, but dangerous picture of Nigeria above. The convergence of this awful condition with schools closure, frustration and economic hardship is what fuels the EndSARS protest. The government initially took the protests for granted, but lately understood that this isn’t business as usual.

As part of strategies to end the protests, ASUU has been re-called to the negotiation table to get students off the streets. Civil service offices have fully resumed from Covid lockdown. NYSC will soon call-up graduates for the national service. One wonders why the FG didn’t have the conscience to do all these before the protests.

Why didn’t the government take the protest seriously from the onset?

It is simple- the elites take Nigerians for granted. They do not believe common Nigerians can ever do something that will force the government to work. This is evident in their gestures, and some of them have even been able to voice it out.

In August 2013 while rejoining Doyin Okupe and Ahmad Gulak’s attack on his personality, the then Jigawa State Governor, Alhaji Sule Lamido said:

“It (Nigeria) is too weak to break. Who will break it? The ordinary person in Jigawa or the ordinary person in Sokoto or the ordinary person in Bayelsa? Is it the Ibo vulcaniser or the Yoruba woman that is selling kerosene by the roadside or the Okada man in Delta?

“They don’t have the capacity to unite because they are burdened by poverty. We have taken away from them their dignity, their self esteem, their pride and self worth SO THAT THEY CANNOT EVEN ORGANIZE.

“Up there, we (elite) unite, we sing and so we will never allow Nigeria to break because once it breaks, we will lose.

“But the common man loses nothing. What is he losing? He is already living in hell; he cannot lose anything more than this hell.”

This statement of Alhaji Sule Lamido tells you much about how the elites underestimate common Nigerians. The EndSARS protest must have come to them as a rude shock. It was atypical of the regular protest that NLC and TUC used to lead. This was from another planet. The government that usually waits for people to dearly beg it before it talks, started talking without waiting for anyone’s begging.

Governors shouldn’t also keep playing around, especially the northern state governors. The spate of killings in the name of kidnapping and banditry is already trying to create a mass #SecureNorth protests. It will be better if you nip this in the bud by giving it the necessary attention and required action. Alternatively, you can also sleep over it like the FG and SW governors did on the SARS issue, till it blows out of proportion and beyond control.

While I hope and pray that this ends well, Nigerian leaders might be able to learn how they’ve positioned this country to sit on a keg of gunpowder (as El-Rufai would say). They should be able to learn the imminent danger that this country is, and they should therefore work double-time to cover up for the time Nigeria has already wasted fooling around, instead of positioning itself as a competent 21st century state.

 

Opinion

Arewa Media Summit:Big Promises, Little Substance-Tijjani Sarki 

Published

on

 

Tijjani Sarki

I was genuinely amazed that the inaugural Arewa Media Summit ended with a communique. For an event presented as a defining conversation on media, governance and accountability in Northern Nigeria, the silence was difficult to understand. It was only after analysts and observers questioned the omission that a comprehensive communiqué eventually emerged.

I have read the document carefully. It is professionally written, politically appealing and rich in democratic vocabulary. Unfortunately, it is also painfully short on substance.

Beyond the impressive language, there is no implementation framework, no timelines, no measurable targets and no independent mechanism to ensure that its resolutions become reality. That is not how transformational policy conversations are measured. It is how public relations documents are often written.

Advert

Even more disappointing is what the communiqué failed to confront. The media space in Arewa is under siege, not only from misinformation but from increasing political manipulation. Today, media platforms are too often deployed to inflame unnecessary controversies, deepen divisions, promote personality cults, settle political scores and manufacture enemies instead of advancing public enlightenment and good governance. This dangerous trend deserved to be the centrepiece of the summit, yet it received only passing attention.

If the gathering truly sought to reshape the future of media in Northern Nigeria, it should have produced practical strategies to strengthen investigative journalism, protect editorial independence, support indigenous media institutions and insulate the media from political capture.

Arewa does not need another annual media jamboree with polished speeches and elegant communiqués. It needs a platform that speaks truth to power, promotes professional journalism, unites rather than divides our people, and produces measurable reforms. Until then, many will continue to question whether this summit advanced the public interest or merely refined the language of political communication.

Tijjani Sarki
Good Governance Advocate and Public Policy Analyst

Continue Reading

Opinion

IDP Is More Than A Humanitarian Case-Ekanem Joan

Published

on

 

 

By
EKANEM JOAN

When discussions about Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) arise, attention often turns to numbers and relief packages. Yet behind every statistic is a family that has lost a home, a child whose education has been disrupted, and a community torn apart by conflict. While compensation may replace damaged structures, it cannot restore the memories, dignity, and sense of belonging that displacement takes away.

Recompensation does not make it fine; How do you compensate a child staring at the fire and iron as it takes their lands, while uniforms hang up in a room? How do you price the memory of a mother who once called these lands home. She cuddled her children and the savoury flavour of meals each smiles on her family’s faces, or, the men who spent decades building a life, a family, a shelter, only to watch unconventional disasters take it away. The youths! With their lives sketched on a rough map, all gone – indefinitely. IDPs are just victims of a conflict or a humanitarian crisis waiting to be part of a scheme but humans with lives.

Nigeria is transitioning into durable solutions and we must remind the policy makers that a house is not merely a structure to be replaced but a sanctuary that has been entirely erased, some are memories. These compensations do not weigh the emotional fabric of what has been torn away. At first, it was a crisis to put an end to but then the plan changed, by the end of year 2023, statistics recorded by United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees to about 1.1 million IDPs (approximately 1,134,828 persons) with 50.3% below 18 years old and 49.7% above 18 years old. The same year saw 81.2% Boko Haram insurgency, 1.6% banditry and 16.2% herder clashes. This crisis was most prominent in the North-West region. The issue was worsening, leading to a humanitarian disaster and as the years grew the IDP numbers rose to 3.5 million persons.

Advert

This rise in persons is alarming. An increase of 2.4 million estimated is not fine. Compensation is not enough! as the number of internally displaced persons increased the government shifted its focus from protection and curbing the disaster to putting infrastructure in place. These infrastructures included the 2025 financial injection and the African Union Convention for Protection and Assistance of IDPs into law to provide food and shelter (United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees). The policy makers have decided to place these infrastructures but numbers alone cannot capture the true weight of internal displacement. Statistics do not feel hunger, do not grieve the sudden loss of an ancestral home, and do not carry the psychological weight of an uncertain tomorrow.

The last IDP count done in 2026 by United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees shows total displaced persons as over 3.7 million. The causes still remain armed insurgency, farmer-herder conflicts, banditry and climate change across the affected regions including the North-East, Middle Belt and North-West (Borno, Zamfara, Sokoto and Benue).
87% of the IDPs live below the international poverty line and 60% face high levels of food insecurity, close to decades of displacement leads to limited access to healthcare and schooling. How do we fight a problem without digging out its roots. Across Nigeria millions of Nigerians have lost their land, homes and monuments of memories because of armed conflicts, terrorism, communal clashes, flooding and other disasters.
This does not end in loss of structures but lives too. Imagine a mother who carried a child for 9 months – nurtured and bred, that child wasted! or a father who struggled to give a child all that is needed to watch his own flesh and blood lay on the floor, lifeless.

Displacement hits the most vulnerable demographics hardest. Children are exposed to interrupted education and emotional distress or what about gender-based violence? The uncertainty and emotional weight of being displaced in your own country, your own land.

The Government must address the security gap. There must be increased, professionalized, and transparent security presence in vulnerable regions to prevent the “unconventional disasters” that turn citizens into refugees in their own country. Banditry and herder-farmer clashes are often hyper-local. Success requires empowering local traditional leaders, civil society, and grassroots peace committees to mediate disputes before they escalate into armed conflict.

As the policy makes provision for emergency food, clean water and canvas tents. Yet we know that the deepest wounds of displacement are ones that don’t bleed. Displacement is not just a change of address; it is a sudden, violent fracturing of life, identity and dignity. It is the theft of a person’s yesterday and the total blinding of their tomorrow. The approach is shifting from short term “crisis management” to long term poverty reduction and healing but our main focus should be the roots – reduce or eradicate banditry, set infrastructure to settle communal crisis and provide resources for all citizens, it is not just about moving the CSR to invest in vocational rehabilitation but removing the cause for a better Nigeria.
Fight for IDP and fight for a better Nigeria! It could be you and it could be I. Together we fix this humanitarian crisis.

EKANEM JOAN
200LVL STUDENT OF DEVELOPMENT AND STRATEGIC COMMUNICATION, UNIVERSITY OF ABUJA.
1ST JULY, 2026.

Continue Reading

Opinion

Arewa Media Summit:A Political Jamboree-Tijjani Sarki 

Published

on

 

By Tijjani Sarki

The recently concluded Arewa Media Summit in Kano was presented as a platform to redefine the role of the media in Northern Nigeria. From my observation, however, it fell short of the expectations of a summit and looked more like a political jomboree than a strategic forum for regional renewal.

A summit that claims to speak for Arewa should reflect the diversity of the region’s media ecosystem by bringing together journalists, editors, broadcasters, communication strategists, digital influencers, academics, policymakers and development partners. My observation is that many of these critical voices were either missing or insufficiently represented, giving the event the appearance of a gathering of familiar faces rather than the North’s broad media constituency.

Another observation is that no communiqué or clear resolutions emerged in the public domain after the event. If a summit ends without publicly outlining its decisions, implementation framework or policy direction, it becomes difficult to measure its value beyond the speeches and photographs.

Advert

I also observed concerns that the Honourable Commissioners of Information and Internal Affairs from the Northern states, particularly Kano State’s Comrade Ibrahim Abdullahi Waiya the host state, were not visibly integrated into the programme. If that perception is accurate, it represents a missed opportunity to build a truly inclusive regional media agenda.

Politically, this was also a missed opportunity to provide an inclusive platform for constructive engagement on national issues, including the policies of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s administration. Genuine dialogue requires broad participation, not selective representation.

Arewa deserves a media summit defined by vision, inclusiveness, measurable outcomes and institutional credibility, not by optics alone. Until those elements become evident, many will continue to question whether the gathering advanced the North’s aspirations or merely added another event to the calendar.

Tijjani Sarki
Good Governance Advocate and Public Policy Analyst
Can be reach via responsivecitizensinitiative@gmail.com

Continue Reading

Trending