IBK & CAO:
I think this whole issue goes beyond simply for or against protests particularly when youths are involved. It was on this forum that I quoted a seminar of Norbert Okoye (UI psychologist) where he asserted that the youths see life through ' rose
tinted glasses' This is still largely true. The youths are easily impressionable precisely because they lack the 'reality checks' afforded by life's good old experience. This is why youths are enlisted in armed forces in their late teens rather than their
late twenties: at that age fear of death is not palpable.
Political columnists can write all sorts of alluring scenarios which become achievable when people lay their lives on the line ( that is except themselves, or how else can you explain a columnist secure with his children in the United States
wishing his 'prophecy' of youth uprising coming true in Nigeria, knowing fully well there may be a security crack down in which forces are ordered to shoot to kill if possible to restore law and order?) Yes, IBK I accept your position that people need to
take practical steps to demand changes for the better in the way they are governed but the modalities are not as simple as that. Spontaneous uprisings mean 'knee- jerk' response by government to restore order.
Yes, the youths most likely have been coached in advance that so long as they stuck to peaceful protests then all would be well ( which begs the questio by columnists' how spontaneous is spontaneous if it is peaceful protests across the country?')
We know how intractable youths generally are by nature. ( I went to give a police witness statement only yesterday how a peaceful gathering of youths at a gas station degenerated to a bedlam near homicide by the group.)
I have myself been part if THREE student youth protests in three consecutive years: as an ' O' Level high school student, as 'A' Level student at the polytechnic and as a university undergraduate. I know how fluid and dicey situations could
be and indeed unfolded.
In the first occasion, easily the best student among us who in the two previous years including the year of the riots ' carted away' 13 of the 15 prizes available at valedictory ( leaving the rest of us over 150 students to struggle for the
two remaining prizes) this non assuming student was roped in among the ring leaders and rusticated and could not come back for our final year and final year exams. Luckily like yours truly he tried his hands on GCE external in his penultimate year but unlike
yours truly cleared all subjects taken in his usual grand style and that was why on gaining admission for undergraduate studies I found him there too to top his elec tronics and electrical engineering class mates with a FIRST CLASS. Other rusticated class
mates weren't that lucky.
This was why my father said to me on going for my 'A' Levels i'f there are protests and demonstrations dont stay at the front and dont bring up the rear': both are equally dangerous. True to his premonition I had the ill luck there was one against
Obasanjo's military policies. At the high school it was against the newly appointed princioal's policies. We were tear gassed on both occasion. We escaped to nearby houses and vegetation outside the secondary school precincts in the first occasion at the
polytechnic we retreated through the northern gates connecting with the university of Ibadan where we nestled in the grass surrounding the lecturers quarters. By 1am we were roused by a cry the ' godogodo' were on our heels inside UI everyone scrambled and
scampered in the process several used by chest as raft to safety and my rib cage almost collapsed before I could struggle tiomy feet.
As an undergraduate I was again part of Ali Mungo against Obasanjo. Anti riot police were sent in. Some of them followed us to the knoll on the left approach from the gates to the campus. One of them became detached from the main group and
one of them was about to be cornered and captured by some students when I heard the unmistakable sound of live rounds being fired by the security personnel under threat.
I say all these to underline how youth protests can be in part always potentially dangerous CAO maintained and as a response to the columnist charge that compromised organised labour betrayed an earlier youth uprising. Yes organised Labour
is part of governance and as the Russian Revolution teaches us the Boksheviks on seizing power had to
negotiate with other national stake holders. That is not betrayal, it is facing reality and not being inexorably doctrinnaire. Organised labour is mature and does not view life through'rose tinted glasses.'
The safest way to ensure change in a democracy is that contained in the contributions of one Stevek posted by Toyin Adepoju stressing that the youths be re-organised to put their demands into a manifesto of a party they want to deliver
their mandate and VOTE that party in.
OAA
Mr. President you took an oath to rule according to the Constitution.
Where are the schools to promote the teaching of the country's lingua francas?
Sent from my Samsung Galaxy smartphone.
-------- Original message --------
Date: 21/10/2020 10:32 (GMT+00:00)
Subject: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Accomplices Of The Lekky Toll Gate Massacre