OPINION: The Looting of Public Food Warehouses and Consensus Crimes! – Dr. Misbau Lateef

As a fallout of the legitimate #ENDSARSNOW protests and their subsequent degeneration into disturbances, anarchy (leading to arsons and jungle justice acts of murder), and then the unfortunate state-violence leading to murder of citizens by security agents in different places, we have also seen a sudden rise in the alarming discoveries of “food banks” leading to spate of looting of public warehouses and stores across different States in the South of Nigeria. The unfortunate events of the past weeks, particularly the latest criminal acts of looting of food items and other supplies carefully stockpiled in different public warehouses, have helped to further expose the fragility of the Nigerian State and the tensed situation between the few haves and the multitudes of have-nots in the society. Put differently, these events have removed all doubts about the level of discontents in the land from the poverty stricken masses who are in the majority and against the few elites feeding fat on the commonwealth.

To be sure, the spate of looting of the supposed COVID-19 palliatives from different public warehouses and stores across different States in Nigeria is nothing but acts of criminality that could well earn the perpetrators some terms of imprisonment under the criminal laws of the affected States. However, the kind of “public” support and applause that the acts of criminality (looting of public warehouses) have enjoyed appear to have overwhelmed the States to submission, thereby frustrating the capacity of the States to either resist the crimes or apprehend the perpetrators. In fact, the States have become helpless.

But why have the people been so emboldened to commit these crimes of looting the public warehouses of food items? Why have the people been so brazen to cart away food items and other supplies as we have seen in different videos? Why have those in governments decided to keep and failed to share the palliatives weeks after they received and warehoused them? Why have the bureaucracies of distribution of the palliatives taken so long even as the targeted or supposed beneficiaries were/are dying of hunger? Are the people justified to commit the crimes of looting of the food items? Clearly, there are more questions as there are answers.

One of the immediate answers to the above last question on whether or not the people are justified to commit the crimes, is to attribute the acts of criminality here to the unpardonable level of poverty in the land. Yes, poverty in the land is a plausible explanation here, but this explanation itself poses another question of whether or not poverty is enough to justify the acts of criminality or any criminality at all. The answer to this latter question requires a value judgement that is neither here nor there. This value judgement criminologists have tried to explain by their classification and explanation of crimes.

Therefore, in the sociological study of crimes and acts of defiance in the society, certain social structural factors such as poverty and social disorganisation can validly explain, if not justify, the incidences of some crimes called consensus crimes. These are crimes that almost everyone is defiant to their legal consequences. People simply deviate from the norm almost spontaneously. They are the sort of crimes which evoke near-unanimous public agreement. Such crimes are so classified because of their perceived non-severe harmfulness, the degree of consensus concerning the norms violated or deviated from, and the severity of the response to them. For example, does the Nigerian populace of the common folks see the looting of the warehouses of food supplies as something reprehensible or severe or harmful to anyone or the public? No. Does that make the looting non-criminal acts? No.

So, given the level of support and seeming consensus from the public, can the ongoing looting spree across different public warehouses in some States be regarded as consensus crimes? I think YES! For clarity, arson, murders and like crimes that we have equally seen in the recent time DO NOT fit into the ball of what sociologists and criminologists call consensus crimes. Crimes such as arson, murders, and the likes are generally regarded as morally intolerable, injurious, severe, and subject to harsh penalties. Looting of public warehouses for foods by hungry or desperate or angry members of the public, on the other hands, will definitely be viewed as more tolerable and less harmful – if harmful at all, than destruction of public properties by the same people.

This then brings me to my last question. Will the States at some auspicious time in the nearest future go after the perpetrators of the acts of criminality (looting of public warehouses) in order to serve as a deterrence to others in the future? I don’t think so. While it is necessary that States take steps to enforce their laws and punish acts of criminality to deter others, I do not think the States will be justified at this time and in the present circumstances to take that routes with respect to the looting of the public warehouses of food items by hungry and justifiably angry people.

Why do I think so? Because I am convinced that the looting of those public warehouses are consensus crimes as I have explained above. I am not in the least justifying the acts of criminality. I am simply explaining them. The States should just move on and learn lessons to prevent future occurrences that could be worse than we have witnessed at this time. How many people can the States prosecute in the circumstances of the consensus crimes that we are seeing now?

Going forward, the States should just take definite steps to bridge the widening gap between the haves and the have-nots. The States should make efforts to pull down every factors of DELAY in the bureaucracies of supporting the poor and the needy. As a matter of fact, I do not think any public support that is worthy of being called palliatives should take more than 78hrs between the time of receipt and distribution to the rightful beneficiaries.

Why stockpiling food items and allowing the bureaucracies of delay in their distribution to the beneficiaries, in the midst of palpable poverty side by side with opulence in the land? Why????

The Looting of Public Food Warehouses and Consensus Crimes!

As a fallout of the legitimate #ENDSARSNOW protests and their subsequent degeneration into disturbances, anarchy (leading to arsons and jungle justice acts of murder), and then the unfortunate state-violence leading to murder of citizens by security agents in different places, we have also seen a sudden rise in the alarming discoveries of “food banks” leading to spate of looting of public warehouses and stores across different States in the South of Nigeria. The unfortunate events of the past weeks, particularly the latest criminal acts of looting of food items and other supplies carefully stockpiled in different public warehouses, have helped to further expose the fragility of the Nigerian State and the tensed situation between the few haves and the multitudes of have-nots in the society. Put differently, these events have removed all doubts about the level of discontents in the land from the poverty stricken masses who are in the majority and against the few elites feeding fat on the commonwealth.

To be sure, the spate of looting of the supposed COVID-19 palliatives from different public warehouses and stores across different States in Nigeria is nothing but acts of criminality that could well earn the perpetrators some terms of imprisonment under the criminal laws of the affected States. However, the kind of “public” support and applause that the acts of criminality (looting of public warehouses) have enjoyed appear to have overwhelmed the States to submission, thereby frustrating the capacity of the States to either resist the crimes or apprehend the perpetrators. In fact, the States have become helpless.

But why have the people been so emboldened to commit these crimes of looting the public warehouses of food items? Why have the people been so brazen to cart away food items and other supplies as we have seen in different videos? Why have those in governments decided to keep and failed to share the palliatives weeks after they received and warehoused them? Why have the bureaucracies of distribution of the palliatives taken so long even as the targeted or supposed beneficiaries were/are dying of hunger? Are the people justified to commit the crimes of looting of the food items? Clearly, there are more questions as there are answers.

One of the immediate answers to the above last question on whether or not the people are justified to commit the crimes, is to attribute the acts of criminality here to the unpardonable level of poverty in the land. Yes, poverty in the land is a plausible explanation here, but this explanation itself poses another question of whether or not poverty is enough to justify the acts of criminality or any criminality at all. The answer to this latter question requires a value judgement that is neither here nor there. This value judgement criminologists have tried to explain by their classification and explanation of crimes.

Therefore, in the sociological study of crimes and acts of defiance in the society, certain social structural factors such as poverty and social disorganisation can validly explain, if not justify, the incidences of some crimes called consensus crimes. These are crimes that almost everyone is defiant to their legal consequences. People simply deviate from the norm almost spontaneously. They are the sort of crimes which evoke near-unanimous public agreement. Such crimes are so classified because of their perceived non-severe harmfulness, the degree of consensus concerning the norms violated or deviated from, and the severity of the response to them. For example, does the Nigerian populace of the common folks see the looting of the warehouses of food supplies as something reprehensible or severe or harmful to anyone or the public? No. Does that make the looting non-criminal acts? No.

So, given the level of support and seeming consensus from the public, can the ongoing looting spree across different public warehouses in some States be regarded as consensus crimes? I think YES! For clarity, arson, murders and like crimes that we have equally seen in the recent time DO NOT fit into the ball of what sociologists and criminologists call consensus crimes. Crimes such as arson, murders, and the likes are generally regarded as morally intolerable, injurious, severe, and subject to harsh penalties. Looting of public warehouses for foods by hungry or desperate or angry members of the public, on the other hands, will definitely be viewed as more tolerable and less harmful – if harmful at all, than destruction of public properties by the same people.

This then brings me to my last question. Will the States at some auspicious time in the nearest future go after the perpetrators of the acts of criminality (looting of public warehouses) in order to serve as a deterrence to others in the future? I don’t think so. While it is necessary that States take steps to enforce their laws and punish acts of criminality to deter others, I do not think the States will be justified at this time and in the present circumstances to take that routes with respect to the looting of the public warehouses of food items by hungry and justifiably angry people.

Why do I think so? Because I am convinced that the looting of those public warehouses are consensus crimes as I have explained above. I am not in the least justifying the acts of criminality. I am simply explaining them. The States should just move on and learn lessons to prevent future occurrences that could be worse than we have witnessed at this time. How many people can the States prosecute in the circumstances of the consensus crimes that we are seeing now?

Going forward, the States should just take definite steps to bridge the widening gap between the haves and the have-nots. The States should make efforts to pull down every factors of DELAY in the bureaucracies of supporting the poor and the needy. As a matter of fact, I do not think any public support that is worthy of being called palliatives should take more than 78hrs between the time of receipt and distribution to the rightful beneficiaries.

Why stockpiling food items and allowing the bureaucracies of delay in their distribution to the beneficiaries, in the midst of palpable poverty side by side with opulence in the land? Why????

Misbau Alamu LATEEF, Ph.D.

Unemployment: We will engage youths through direct labour system, says Makinde

Oyo State Governor, Engineer Seyi Makinde, on Friday, said that his administration would address the growing youth unemployment in the state by engaging a teeming number of them through a direct labour system for public works and infrastructure.

“This step, he noted, will reduce the number of unemployed youths and keep them occupied and able to make ends meet.

The governor stated this while inspecting an ongoing road project at Jankata-Benbo-Apata Road, via Akala Express, Ibadan, saying the government needs to engage the youths, as, according to him, an idle hand is a devil’s workshop.

A statement by the Chief Press Secretary to the governor, Mr. Taiwo Adisa, indicated that the governor made the position against the backdrop of youth restiveness in the last few days, stating that his government has heard the youths and that it will design a sustainable way to engage them so as to make them self-reliant.

He said: “Well, I will still say to the people of Oyo State that we have listened to the youths. We are designing a sustainable way to engage them, because I will continue to say that an idle mind is the devil’s workshop. We have to engage our youths. We will design means.

“One of the things we are currently considering is a direct labour agency that can absorb some of the youths, even if it is just for fixing our roads, putting our drainages in place. We just have to engage them one way or the other.

“Also, from the agriculture standpoint, we want as many of them as possible to be attracted to agribusiness.”

While inspecting the road, which has been abandoned since 2011, but was re-started by his administration, Governor Makinde said that the road is quite strategic, adding that when it is completed, it will help to decongest roads and ease vehicular movement in the areas.

He added that despite the fact that the contractor handling the road has not been mobilized, he has demonstrated the readiness to do the work.

The governor said: “This project has been abandoned since 2011. It was started during Governor [Adebayo] Alao-Akala’s time and it is very strategic, because people going to Lagos from Abeokuta and vice-versa, can bypass Ring Road.

“If you are coming from Lagos and you want to go to Apata, you also don’t need to go through Ring Road anymore if this road is completed.

“The contractor has mobilised but we are still putting together the paper works for their payment. But, at least, even without payment, they have demonstrated readiness to do the work. I think we are on course with that road project,” he added.

Addressing the pockets of violence and youth restiveness in some parts of Ibadan, the state capital, in the last few days, Governor Makinde stated that the situation has been brought under control, saying that things had become better as people could move peacefully and do their business activities without any hindrance.

“Things are getting better. We passed through Beere, Yemetu, Challenge and we saw that people were just eager to carry on with their lives and go on with their business activities. I believe we are doing better,” he said.

#EndSARS: Akeredolu orders closure of schools in Ondo State

Ondo State Governor Oluwarotimi Akeredolu has directed that all schools that resumed on Monday 19th October 2020 are closed for the meantime because of the engulfing nationwide protest and the need to ensure safety of students and staff.

This was made known today via his official Twitter handle.

He directed Parents and the public to take note the directive and all schools should comply with immediate effect.

He said, any inconvenience the recent decision might have caused is regretted,while the State Government would ensure resumption of our schools as soon as possible.

Reprisal attack: Angry youths set Ojoo Police Station ablaze, kill one Police officer

OduduwaNews has just gathered now that one Police Officer has been shot dead at Ojoo Police Division, Ibadan. It was reported that the Police Station was later set ablaze by angry youths reprising the death of their colleagues.

According to an eyewitness who spoke to OduduwaNews said, the police officers started shooting into the sky in an attempt to disperse the protesting guys and Army officers intervened by driving into the Station and engaged in a talk with the trigger-happy officers telling them about the consequences of their actions.

“In fact the the army guys really had the ears of the protesters. Unfortunately, the police officers turned deaf ears to the professional plea of the Army officers.

“It was just shortly after this that stray bullet hit three persons and the youths got infuriated.

Immediately the angry youths swung into action by getting petrol and set the Station ablaze. They really engaged the Police officers and one of them called Officer Sunday was killed and cremated right in front of the Station.

“He lives around one funfun before Igbo oloyin, arulogun road ojoo. The army guys was really commended for their actions today, said the eye witness.

#EndSARS: Oyo govt orders closure of schools

Governor Seyi Makinde has ordered the closure of Schools in Ibadan.

He made the statement known today while speaking on the state of security in Oyo State amidst the ongoing protest against Police brutality which reads in part:

“As a result of unrest in Oyo state, especially in Ibadan metropolis, the state governor, engineer Seyi Makinde, in his broadcast speech, directed that all schools in Ibadan, should be closed from tomorrow, Wednesday, October 21st, 2020 for the rest of this week, noting that the situation will be reviewed on Friday, October 23rd, 2020, after which further directives will be given”.

#EndSARS: Makinde orders deployment of men of Operation Burst to various hotspots in Ibadan

The governor of Oyo State, Engr. Seyi Makinde has ordered Join Task Force, Operation Burst to take over hotspots in Oyo State. This was made known today via his Official handle which reads in part:

“I address you at this time to talk about some of the issues that have been thrown up by the End SARS protests in Oyo State. I have always said that peaceful protests are an important part of our democratic process, and no one should be harassed or brutalised for protesting.

“For this reason, we deployed members of Operation Burst to protect protesters. And we are happy to report that there have been no cases of disruptions of protest grounds in Oyo State since they started work.

“However, the past two days have seen a new dimension to the ongoing protests. Thugs and hoodlums have taken advantage of the situation to perpetrate uncivil acts and harass citizens who are going about their day-to-day activities. Some thugs are going as far as forcing people who have businesses open to close shop and join in the protests. We know these are criminal elements. And so, as a state, we must act to protect the citizenry.

“Therefore, we are deploying members of Operation Burst to various hotspots in Ibadan to arrest the situation and restore normalcy. The members of the team will continue to protect genuine protesters and their right to protest. But we can not allow persons with ulterior motives to hijack the protests.

“We remain committed to the process of meeting the demands of these protests. Already, as promised, the Director of Public Prosecution, Ministry of Justice, Oyo State, has withdrawn cases against End SARS protesters, and those in custody have been released.

“Also, the Oyo State Government has set up platforms for reporting past and present incidents of police brutality and injustice.

“This will naturally pave the way for the next steps in our quest to get justice for the victims. I urge the good people of Oyo State to trust the process that we have set up and rest assured that every case will be pursued to a logical conclusion.

“I have directed that all schools in Ibadan, should be closed from tomorrow, Wednesday, October 21 2020 for the rest of this week. The situation will be reviewed on Friday, October 23 2020, and then further directives will be given.

“Please call 615 should anyone attempt to disrupt your legitimate business activities.

“We will continue to seek ways to engage with peaceful protesters. Our plan is that in the shortest possible time, we can finally say the days of large-scale and wanton police brutality and injustice is a thing of the past. Let me also use this opportunity to call on members of the Nigeria Police Force to remain professional in the discharge of their duties as they will be held responsible for their actions”.

JUST IN: One killed as protest turns violent in Ojoo, Ibadan

OduduwaNews has just gathered now that one person allegedly killed at Ojoo, Ibadan as the peaceful protest later turns violent.

It was reported that the person that lost his life to the violent protest that broke out at Ojoo area of Ibadan was a teenager. As at the time of filing this report, there is also a claim of some sustaining gunshots. Details later.

#EndSARS: Lagos govt declares 24-hour curfew

“I have watched with shock how what began as a peaceful #EndSARS protest has degenerated into a monster that is threatening the well-being of our society. Lives and limbs have been lost as criminals and miscreants are now hiding under the umbrella of these protests to unleash mayhem on our State.

“As a government that is alive to its responsibility and has shown a commitment to the movement #ENDSARS, we will not watch and allow anarchy in our dear state.

“I, therefore, hereby impose a 24-hour curfew on all parts of the State as from 4pm today, 20th October, 2020.Nobody, except essential service providers and first responders must be found on the streets, said Lagos State Governor, Babajide Sanwo-Olu.

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