Thursday, October 4, 2012

The Mubi Poly Students slaughter; matters arising

The sanctity of life in Nigeria is fast becoming a mirage as incidence of outright murder of innocent citizens is now a daily occurance.Its either people are cut down in there prime by insurgents such as Boko Haram or armed bandits. Even those in there houses are not left out. We have heard stories of airplanes falling from the sky and killing people right inside there homes.Bombings in churches and offices that claim huge numbers of death That is why the recent killing of over 42 students in Mubi Adamawa state should not be allowed to be swept under the carpet like others before it making it pertinent for Security agents to fish out the gunmen who invaded Mubi, Adamawa State, that night, killing about the students from three higher institutions in the state as a deterrent to others . May that was why their search for the killers led to a house-to-house search in Mubi during which an unspecified number of suspects were arrested. The state Police Commissioner, Mohammed Ibrahim, who confirmed the arrest , declined to give further details. The search began just as President Goodluck Jonathan ordered the security forces to intensify efforts to fish out the killers, widely believed to be Boko Haram insurgents, while Senate President David Mark called for capital punishment for the attackers. The gunmen who had attacked students of the Federal Polytechnic, Adamawa State University and the School of Health Technology, all in Mubi, were said to have gone from room to room in a building in the town on Monday and killed the people they found there with guns and machetes. However, the police were also said to be investigating whether the killings were as a result of a feud inside the college. Ibrahim said the police were still keeping an open mind on whether the killing spree was carried out by militants or rival students, but there were signs of an “inside job”. “Relatives of the slain students said the assailants called their names out before killing them. The majority were killed with gun shots or slaughtered like goats,” he added. One possibility was that the killings were related to a dispute between rival groups at the Federal Polytechnic, Mubi, following a student union election on Sunday, Ibrahim said. “The second day after the election winners were declared, you have the killings ... Really we cannot rule out the possibility that the attack may have been carried out by either the Boko Haram or a gang,” he added. Jonathan, who was briefed about the incident, along with other cabinet members, by the Minister of Education, Prof. Ruqayyatu Ahmed Rufa'i, at a meeting of the Federal Executive Council (FEC) Wednesday in Abuja, condemned the attack. According to the Special Adviser on Media and Publicity to the president, Dr. Reuben Abati, Jonathan described the killings as tragic, sad, barbaric and shocking. “The president has directed security agencies to investigate the matter and get to the root because this kind of incident, where people are called out and shot, is really shocking,” he said in a statement. Mark, while reacting to the attack, advocated capital punishment for the killers to serve as a deterrent to others. Mark, in his remarks while the Senate was considering a motion by Senator Bindowo Jibrilla, from Adamawa North Senatorial District, said the time has come for the country to test the capital punishment clause as enshrined in the statute books. Before observing a one-minute silence for the victims of the attack, the Senate urged the Federal Government to swiftly bring the perpetrators to book. Mark added that the need to provide security in the area had become expedient because of the swelling insecurity in the region. He said: “The security challenges before us in this country are grievous and we have to tackle them headlong. On the specific issue of this are the Mubi killings. “I think it is a pity that people will go from one room to the other calling names and slaughtering the people. It is totally unacceptable. Even if it is just attacking the symptoms now, those involved must be arrested and brought to book. “I know that this is a democracy and with due respect to all of us, but capital punishment is still in our statutes.” He said the time and opportunity had come for the country to apply the death clause in the statute books and use it as a deterrent to others. It will be recalled that at least 42 students were shot dead by unknown gunmen in Mubi, north-eastern Nigeria. The attack happened at a student hostel away from the Federal Polytechnic Mubi campus, A lecturer of the university said that more than 40 students were short . The reported killing came a few days after a major operation against the Boko Haram militant group in the town. The lecturer, who did not want his name to be used, said that the students were asked to say their names after lining up. He says it is not clear why some were killed and others spared - some of those killed were Muslims. "Everybody is scared and staying indoors now," he said. He added that students left left the town placing tree branches over their cars, which is a traditional sign of neutrality in Nigeria.

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