NIGERIAN YOUTHS SPEAK AGAINST JUNGLE JUSTICE
Last week, the picture of a
boy, said to be eight years old, who was mobbed and killed for stealing garri
took the social media by storm.
While some people believe he
was not eight years old as purported, some people believe the picture was only
doctored. But be it true or not, it does not stop the fact that we have cases
on jungle justice here and there all over Africa.
Just some years back, 4
innocent students were beaten to death in Port Harcourt, Nigeria, by a mob, who
believed they were armed robbers. It is in this regard that Nigerian youths
take SRAF, a WhatsApp group to express their thoughts about jungle justice.
The discussion which took
place on the 20th November, 2016 was moderated by Soul’e Rhymez, a Poet and Public speaker
from Nigeria.
According to Adeniyi Maryam, a student from Osun
State, who opened the floor on the night, Jungle justice is nothing to write
home about. People pass jungle justice in order to get justice for themselves,
so they say, but I must say it’s wrong.”
Adenle Oluwaseun, a student from Ondo State
talked about the one he witnessed, saying, “just a few months ago, a driver was
beaten mercilessly by an angry mob only for them to realize later that he was not driver who had committed the crime they thought he committed.
Jungle Justice is an irrational response to situation beyond our control.
People prefer to carry out jungle justice because they fail to think twice,
questions of "what if" and "what if not" are not answered
before action is taken and this has led to death or mutilations of some
innocent souls.”
Saying his mind on the topic, Oluwasegun
Timothy Opeyemi, a student from Ilorin, kwara State stated thus: “from
my own point of view, it is only an abnormal person that carries out Jungle
Justice. A person with the right mental attitude can never be motivated to kill
or join hands in the killing of his fellow human.
These people are sick, they have no conscience because if they have one,
there should be some reluctance in hurting animals not to talk of human like
them.”
According to Udekwe Johnmary
a student, currently living in Enugu state, who used a biblical example to
portray his view, “Jungle justice is absolutely condemnable. Christ in His days
condemned such justice. There was a woman who was caught in adultery and
brought to him; the question asked the woman’s condemners should also be
channel to those that participate in Jungle Justice.”
Kenneth Omovevah,
also known as the Student of Life, from Lagos State has this to say: “Jungle justice to me is
justice rendered out of selfish thoughtlessness and absolute ignorance. My stand is this: if I steal
or commit any punishable offence to you, beat me, get me arrested and probably
seriously punished, but to kill me? That's just commuting a crime worse than
mine.
What is there to gain from ruthless killing, sugarcoated as jungle
justice?
Mac Henry Imafidon, from Lagos believes Jungle
Justice is a very disgusting act and can’t be stopped, relating to his experiences, he said, “At a tender age, I encountered this act, first at Gowon
Estate, Egbeda, Lagos, and second, at Aba, Abia State. I discovered at that
age, that many are heartless, killing humans and burning them alive. And let me
remind you, it can't be stop because it's not different from politicians, who
kill with their sword. There is no difference between burning one to death and
killing by sword. Killing is killing, but the fact still remains that it's
barbaric.”
Iyanda Mukhtar .O
from Osun State Nigeria made it clear that
Jungle justice is an act perpetuated by jobless and uneducated people, in his
own arguments he said, “From a religious perspective, killing is not good. So why
do you have to take life's for something not worth it?
A lot of innocent people have been beaten and killed for crimes they did
not commit.
Most of those involved in making the justice are also not clean. They
are jobless and uneducated, but I believe the judiciary is to blame for not
performing their duties well enough.
As for Ness, a student of
Lautech, Oyo state, jungle justice is a slap
on the face of the judiciary. He believes they have a lot to do to curb the act
and also urged the citizen to trust in their interpretation of the laws.
When asked how such act
could be curbed, Maryan Adeniyi
believes it could be curbed if the police are well mobilized and equipped.
Oluwasegun believes it can only
be curbed if thugs and area boys are taken off the streets.
Kenneth said it can only be
curbed by paying attention to the small crimes that later turn big and that the
authority should not take any situation for granted if they are to stop Jungle
Justice.
Mac, who believed it
can’t be curbed, says it will only take God to stop it because the judiciary
has lost her neutrality.
Finally, Soul’e Rhymez ended the discussion by
admonishing the members of the group never to be involved in Jungle Justice and
to report it to the nearest authority whenever they see it happen.
He stressed further by
saying no great mind or resourceful youth, as they address each
other in the group, will involve in Jungle Justice. He also pleaded with them
to desist from crimes that could make them a victim of Jungle Justice.
Moderator:
Soul’e Rhymez, Lagos
Correspondents:
Samuel Abigail, Lagos
Rebecca Awe, Ogun
Mahmud Sufiyan, Lagos
Editor:
Soul’e Rhymez, Lagos
Soul’e Rhymez
For: SRAF Administration
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