Opinion
Uniforms As Cloak For Lawlessness
They are those
trained to uphold the very spirit of the law, but most of them appear to have lost touch with their institutional orientation, revelling in the abuse of the tenets of the law.
Law enforcement officers as custodians of social rules and regulations are expected to show examples of decency and strict adherence to law and order in the society. Ironically, laws are today, deliberately flouted by security personnel who use their uniforms as a cloak to engage in illegality.
Perhaps, the most obscene of the abuses of laws in our society today are carried out on our roads. Recently, a mild drama ensued in Port Harcourt, the Rivers State capital, at the Olu Obasanjo axis of the city linking Waterlines bus stop. Some passengers, had boarded a taxi from Agip, Abacha Road junction, enroute Waterlines. We had a smooth ride from the point of loading until our cab was trapped in a traffic jam at Evo Road junction. Two female traffic wardens were on duty trying frantically to put the situation under control.
We the passengers admired the dutifulness of the traffic wardens conducting the traffic, and we encouraged our driver to be patient and follow the traffic. But our driver ignored pleas and beat the traffic by detouring through a one-way lane to get to our destination.
But unfortunately for him, a combined patrol team of security personnel in a black hilux jeep arrested the defaulting driver. The incautious driver attempted to drive into a bank premises unauthorized, but the combined team of security personnel quickly apprehended him. But our driver was the least perturbed about the unfolding event, and I wondered what goaded him to treat the issue with such note of casualty.
He moved to the team of security personnel and identified himself as a TIMARIV official. Then I realized why he had the audacity to flout the rules with such impunity.
Rather than conform to the filial note of e-spirit-de-corp and let the defaulting TIMARIV official off the hook, the security operatives were infuriated, as one of them, a Mopol, shrieked, “God don punish you”. He was quickly bundled away, while the passengers in the cab were asked not to pay him, if they had not given him their fare earlier. But they had all finished transaction with him.
As they alighted from the cab, the passengers, commended the security operatives for not giving the erring TIMARIV official, the soft landing he expected. It was no doubt nemesis at work.
Coincidentally, another incident occurred at Garrison bus stop, along Aba Road where a young, Airforce officer using his unpainted private car to carry passengers was arrested by a female traffic warden for wrong parking.
The young Airforce officer took his arrest as an offence and engaged the police lady in a fisticuf. It took the intervention of other security personnel to put the situation under control.
Such defence on the part of security personnel shows that laws are made for the civilians, mostly described by the uniform men as ‘bloody’.
Most men in uniform, no doubt, breach the law just to massage their ego and prove their perceived superiority over the ‘bloody civilians’.
Another area where security operatives exercise arbitrariness on our road is through the use of siren. The use of siren has become so ubiquitous that it is difficult to discern the real emergency situations from the gimmicks of outlaws who connive with gullible and susceptible security operatives to commit crime through the use of siren. For all it takes for such men of the underworld to evade the law is to compromise security personnel who give them escort to beat Security points.
However, there are still some security operative who are cognizant of their role as agents of order, and as such maintain decorum in the discharge of their duties. They are the direct opposite of those security personnel who engage in constant molestation of the civilian populace even without provocation. They are the arrow heads of the laws who do not compromise standard no matter the circumstance and they deserve commendation.
The hierarchy of the various security apparatus has a lot to do to fish out the bad eggs that smear their reputations through their unprofessional actions.
The planned introduction of traffic control centres in Port Harcourt is also commendable, as the policy will check the excesses of both civilians and security personnel on our roads.
Taneh Beemene
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