In
recent times, the rate of gun crimes in Nigeria has increased
drastically, thanks to a porous boarder that has allowed Nigerian
streets and cities to become flooded with guns of different makes and
qualities, one fears a war looms.
Anthony
Cardinal Okogie is Archbishop Emeritus of Lagos and in this piece he
x-rays the troubling development of guns making their way illegally into
Nigeria.
It was reported, a few days ago, in almost all national dailies, that the Nigeria Customs Service seized 49 boxes containing 661 pump action rifles unlawfully imported into Nigeria.
The rifles were said to have been concealed in a container of steel products and other merchandise.
Three suspects were said to have been arrested.
According
to retired Colonel Hameed Ali, the Comptroller of Customs, the arms
were cleared at the port with the assistance of two customs officers who
have since been apprehended and are now being investigated.
First, who are those behind unlawful importation of arms into Nigeria and what are their intentions?
Unlawful
importation of arms: At a press conference, in which Colonel Ali
triumphantly reported the arrest of three suspects, he also informed the
Nigerian public that a team of customs officers on intelligence patrol
had, on Sunday, January 22, 2017, along the Apapa-Oshodi Expressway in
Lagos, intercepted a truck with registration number he gave as BDG 265
XG, purportedly conveying the arms in a container whose number he gave
as PONU/825914/3.
Such news would
have been sweet in the ears but for the fact that nothing was said of
the owner of the truck and nothing was said of the owner of the
container.
Playing to the gallery
That raises further questions: in whose name was that truck registered and in whose name was the container registered?
Are they registered in the same name? Have their owners been investigated?
When shall they and their foot soldiers appear in court? Not to raise
these and related questions, and not to address them, will leave us
where we have always been, that is, a place where a criminal act is
committed but there is neither trial nor conviction nor sanction, a
country where criminals are phantoms, a strange land where there are
crimes but no criminals.
That is why
the triumphant account of the Comptroller of Customs comes close to
another episode playing to the gallery. But there is another issue to be
raised, and that is, whatever happened to intelligence in this country?
Newspapers reported that the
Comptroller of Customs informed Nigerians that impounding the truck
containing the unlawfully imported arms and the apprehension of three
men suspected to be involved in the crime of unlawful importation was
the achievement of a “roving team of the NCS’ federal operations unit, while on intelligence patrol”.
But
on closer scrutiny, this advertisement of prowess is in fact an
advertisement of colossal but recurring failure of intelligence.
A dictum has it that prevention is better than cure
Intelligence
is crime prevention. Nigeria’s security agencies—the Customs in this
case, the Police, the Army, to mentioned but these—have repeatedly
demonstrated their ineptitude when it comes to preventing acts that are
inimical to security.
The Police arrives at the scene of a crime after the crime and after the departure of the perpetrators.
The
Directorate of State Security neither locates nor arrests makers and
users of Improvised Explosive Devices before they strike.
The Police and the Army were only deployed to Southern Kaduna after massacre of Nigerian citizens.
Nigerian
Customs officers fail to do their work at the ports only to mount
roadblocks on highways at spots where stopping your vehicle would
constitute a danger to other road users.
But the Comptroller of Customs
wants Nigerians to believe that what his officers have done is a heroic
accomplishment of a “roving team of the NCS’ federal operations unit,
while on intelligence patrol”?
In his words, “This
feat was no doubt commendable and represents the new normal in the
service, where most officers and men are on a daily basis ensuring that
illegalities are not allowed unchecked.”
For this, he lauded his officers, saying, “I commend the FOU Zone A Comptroller, all officers and men involved in this great seizure.”
Locking the stables after the horses have escaped
The Comptroller General’s assessment should give sleepless nights to discerning minds.
For this, in fact, is by accident or design, another of many instance of abysmal failure of intelligence.
It
is best described as locking the stables after the horses have escaped.
Colonel Ali spoke with candour about the obvious when he said, as
reported in the dailies, that unlawful importation of arms into Nigeria “is even more unacceptable considering the fragile security situation in some parts of the country.”
But,
precisely because of this precarious security situation, the Customs
and other security agencies in Nigeria need to act in ways that
demonstrate that they are able and willing to secure our beloved Nigeria
and its peoples.
The high level of insecurity in our land is no longer news
It
has led to the death of many innocent Nigerians. Deadly weapons From
the Niger-Delta to the North East, passing through the Middle Belt,
there is so much bloodshed.
People are abducted in broad daylight, in their homes and on the streets.
Guns are openly used before, during and after elections in this country.
Everything
shows that Nigeria is saturated with deadly weapons, and these weapons
are in the hands of people who are ready to innocent Nigerians.
The three men who have been arrested and the customs officers under investigation are suspects.
They
are innocent until proven guilty in a properly constituted court of
justice. If indeed they are guilty, they may be errand boys. But let’s
look beyond suspects.
Let’s go look for those who sent them on their deadly errand.
In
the midst of high level of insecurity, this recurring decimal of
unlawful importation of arms is symptomatic of the wild and savage
politics of Nigeria.
Being in government is synonymous with access to Nigeria’s wealth.
Some are ready and willing to kill in order to be “elected” or appointed.
That
is why successive classes of political office holders have demonstrated
a lack of political will to deal with the situation.
Rather than fail to be in government, many of our politicians would prefer to make the country ungovernable.
Like the proverbial mouse who cannot eat the nuts, they will scatter the nuts.
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