Opinion
Kidnapping: Iron Age Dilemma But…
The horrendous act of kidnapping that was targeted at expatriates operating in the oil-rich Niger Delta region has within a few years, spread like the proverbial harmattan fire across the country. Today, the kidnapping targets are not only the expatriates but also senior Nigerian personnel in the oil industry, wealthy people and their relations, public officers and others who can attract or pay huge sums of money that the kidnappers demand as ransom.
The malady, which has touched virtually all parts of the country, has now concentrated in the South-East geographical zone made up of Abia, Imo, Anambra, Enugu, and Ebonyi States. From media reports, no fewer than 1,000 persons have been kidnapped in Abia State alone within the last two years. The one that has raised the highest public outrage is the kidnapping of four journalists and their driver at Umuafoula junction in Obingwa Local Government Area of Abia State on Sunday, July 11, 2010, while returning from Akwa Ibom State where they had attended a National Executive Committee meeting of the Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ).
Having kidnapped the four journalists and their driver – Chairman of the Lagos Council of NUJ, Mr. Wahab Oba, his Secretary, Sylva Okereke, Zonal Secretary, Adolphus Okoronkwo, a reporter with the Abuja-based Fresh Fact Newspaper, Shola Oyeyipo, and Azeez Abdulrauf (driver) – they (kidnappers) initially demanded a ransom of N250 million and later reduced it to N30 million. But knowing that the police were closing up on them, the kidnappers abandoned the journalists and their driver in the forest without being paid any ransom.
President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan, the Inspector General of Police, Ogbonna Onovo, and indeed, concerned Nigerians have been berating the police for allowing kidnappers and other criminals reign supreme in the zone.
Consequently, and considering the negative effects of the operations of criminals on the economy, the Federal Government has now declared war on kidnappers, assuring Nigerians that modern technology would be employed to crush them. The terrible problem of kidnapping should serve as a wake up call for government to face the dilemma of the iron age squarely.
Since man become lord of the earth, he is said to have passed through several ages: golden age, silver age, copper age, and now the iron age. The iron age is the age of physical and moral ineptitude and in- ordinate desire for power, wealth, and fame.
Both the Shariyat-ki-Sugmad and the Bhagavad Gita refer to the iron age by the Sanskrit name Kali Yuga. To the Shariyat-ki-Sugmad, the iron age: “… is the worst and most violent of all ages for crime has flooded the world and all that is and was known in the past as truth and modesty have vanished. Fraud and the cunningness of man have taken their place”.
According to the Bhagavad Gita, the iron age began five thousand years ago. It is the age of quarrel and hypocrisy. And from the book, as the ages proceed from the Satya (golden) to Kali (iron), religion and the good qualities of men gradually decline.
In the Christian Bible, the Book of Daniel says of the age: “Even to the time of the end, many shall run to and fro, and knowledge shall be increased”. And the Book of Matthew states that: “… because iniquity shall abound, the love of many shall wax cold”.
The iron age is one of blood, sweat, struggles, and tears. It is the age of the survival of the fittest. And sometimes, the fittest even finds it difficult to survive. So nobody, family, community, or nation is excluded or exempted from the daily vicissitudes of the iron age. As unknown gunmen are busy causing havoc across the country, particularly the South-East zone kidnapping journalists and other people at different stations in life, several parts of the world are also grappling with their share of the iron age dilemma. As I write this piece, the crisis situation in such countries as Bangladesh, Ecuador, Iraq, Gaza, Uzbekistan, and Myammar are deteriorating day in, day out; leaving so many of their citizens as beggars, refugees, or dead. According to media reports, only last Sunday in Iraq, 48 people including some persons from a government-backed anti-al-Qaeda militia who lined up to get their pay-cheques near a military base, south-west of the capital, Baghdad were killed by twin suicide bombings.
Despite the adoption of Human Rights Charter in 1984 by the United Nations, people are still tortured or ill-treated and are not allowed to speak in many countries of the world. Thus, human rights flashpoints across the globe are demanding immediate action that can set a new paradigm for harmonious co-existence, love, peace, justice, equal rights among the various peoples, races, and nations of the world.
Two major instruments are responsible for this state of affairs in the iron age. They are desire and illusion. When one’s driving force is to make money, acquire power, and accumulate material things as social status, his entire value system changes and one enters into the first stage of slavery. With force or whatever, they may amass the objects of their desire, then their possession of these material things becomes the sword that strikes them down.
Some weeks ago, I attended a worship service in Port Harcourt officiated by an Eckankar Priest, Mrs Rose Ibanichuka. Her topic for the worship service: Life: A Journey and a Teacher – was quite striking to me. In her presentation, she explained how the best teachers in people’s lives are those ones that teach them the pointed lessons which can be turning points in their lives.
The iron age is one of all sorts of perversions but it is also one of great opportunities because the struggle for survival therein provides us with the crucibles of fire by which we can learn and grow.
Therefore, the kidnapping of the journalists and their release should teach the Nigerian nation a pointed lesson that should serve as a turning point for the leaders, and indeed, all of us not only to tackle the security dilemma of the country but to also deal decisively with the features of the iron age which have eaten deep into the marrow of our people.
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