Nigeria’s rights activist and lawyer, Bamidele Aturu, has
criticised Governor Babatunde Fashola of Lagos State over his comment
purportedly directed at critics of his administration while reacting to
the explosions that rocked the state on Boxing Day.
Fashola had said at the scene of the explosions caused by a banger at
Jankara on Lagos Island, Lagos, Southwest Nigeria that “when town
planning laws were made and government insisted on its implementation,
the government was often branded as anti-poor and a tough one. Those who
sought cheap popularity or sought to score cheap political points were
often nowhere to be found when the consequences of agitations to prevent
proper enforcement of regulations, law and order, like in the current
situation.
“Some of the people who canvass this position are not here now where
people have died and they seek cheap popularity when government tries to
set rules and regulations, government is seen as anti-poor but the poor
people have died here and the people who have made those cases are not
here now to come and pick the dead bodies. It is us who are picking the
dead bodies.”
Reacting to Fashola’s comment in a statement, Aturu described the
governor’s comment as regrettable and condemnable, saying “it shows that
the advertised democratic credentials of his government and of himself
are not even skin-deep.
“It is highly hypocritical to posture as a democrat and be so
patently hostile to voices of dissent as the Governor has demonstrated.
The Governor should point out those who asked him not to implement laws
banning firecrackers. If the State has failed to implement any existing
law on firecrackers, the Governor should accept responsibility for that
failure rather than shifting the blame on social critics.”
He added that: “The touchstone for measuring democracy is not
opposition to the Federal Government but a holistic and consistent
defence of the truth at all times no matter
who may feel aggrieved. The Governor should be reminded plainly that he
cannot cow members of the civil society or social critics by the kind
of unnecessary comment he made at the scene of the tragic incident.
“If the military could not, he should know that he cannot. Those like
him who are beneficiaries of the actions of social critics, which were
also ironically described by the military despots as
cheap-popularity-seeking gambits, who were jailed for this ‘democracy’
ought to know that criticism is essential to liberal democracy. We did
not fight for democracy to have governors whose actions, even when
well-meaning, cannot be challenged.”
Aturu said the advisers of the governor have their jobs
cut out for them, saying they need to remind him that his comments
should be seen to be temperate as he appeared “to me to be getting
increasingly authoritarian and hostile to well- meaning criticisms. He
is behaving too much like a military administrator, not even governor,
for my liking. Let him listen to the critics as they are his best
friends.”
He described the explosions at Jankara Market
as regrettable, saying most Nigerians were quite sad that this sort of
tragedy happened at a time when the people were supposed to be
celebrating Christmas. He also commiserated with those who lost lives
and properties in the fire.
Pm news—Kazeem Ugbodaga
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