I don’t step out of the house with my ATM card anymore. It’s just not something I do. It’s enough that I’m a guy, but worse is that my hair is locked. I’m prime meat for what the Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS) have become, what they have now adopted as their primary employ: kidnapping and extortion.
It’s been long we’ve been on this matter. The hashtag #EndSARS was how long ago? 2017! These guys have been assaulting Nigerians and going scot free since 2017!
How many people have died? Just how many people are missing today due to these same people who are supposed to be protecting us?
This link, THIS ONE, has so many stories about the menace these people have become that it’s exhausting to count. And the stories keep piling up that news sites don’t even report it anymore. It’s become a norm. The masses, celebrities, no one is exempt. Your neighbour don chop am, Oxlade don chop am—they’re like agege bread, they don’t discriminate.
Today’s own is chilling af, and it involved entertainment consultant Bizzle. There’s that sense of inevitability, that, If it can happen to him it can happen to any of us. Here’s the story:
SARS arrested someone in Vi and took him to their base in egbeda. Like WTF!!! They tried it with me, wanted to take me from lekki to lere, thank God for AkoNaUche I jumped out when they got to a police checkpoint in lekki and started screaming Kidnappers.
— Bizzle Osikoya (@bizzleosikoya) September 26, 2020
How can police be telling me You escape today, we go jam another day and nobody go save you.
— Bizzle Osikoya (@bizzleosikoya) September 26, 2020
My experience with the Nigerian police yesterday. pic.twitter.com/D1lwEdtf6y
— LamsKardashian (@itsLamLam) September 26, 2020
The truth is that I’m afraid. Every time I leave my house I have to wipe my WhatsApp chats, carry ID cards, wear a face cap, all the while knowing that all these do not matter one bit. If one day it becomes my turn, they won’t matter one bit.
If where I’m going is someplace close, I don’t even carry my phone. But I’ve read about a boy who didn’t carry his phone with him and spent months in a cell. So, really, is there any point to all these precautions I keep taking? I am so afraid.
Back when the #EndSARS hashtag was at its crest, some flimsy measure was discussed. Police bosses went on media rounds, promised reforms. Obviously, all those turned out useless. We’re still suffering today. Citizens are still sending amber alerts on Twitter about police sightings at bus-stops. They’re still stopping us, still kidnapping us, still extorting us, still kidnapping us.
So the question remains: what do we do? What do we do about this issue? Because we can’t continue to live like this. We are so unsafe.
The post What Do We Do About this SARS Issue? appeared first on BellaNaija - Showcasing Africa to the world. Read today!.
source https://www.bellanaija.com/2020/09/this-sars-problem/
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