One of the greatest country in West Africa is in crisis, apart from issues of insecurity, hunger is biting harder, job losses are on the increase, frustration is at the highest ebb.
This
moment in Nigeria is considered the toughest phase in the history of the
country since the return to democracy in 1999.
No doubt the citizens utilize every available opportunity to ventilate their anger. Sadly though, the victims of such situations- jungle justice are the same commoners.
Several
cases of jungle justice have been recorded in the country since January.
Wikipedia
defines jungle justice or mob justice or lynching as a form of public extrajudicial
killings, where an alleged criminal is publicly humiliated, beaten and
summarily executed by vigilantes or an angry mob.
It stated
that, “Treatments can vary from a “muddy treatment”, where the alleged criminal
is forced to roll in mud for hours, to severe beatings followed by execution by
necklacing”.
One of the
reported cases of recent jungle justice in the country was a case of two people
suspected to be motorcycle snatchers in Ibadan. The duo were burnt at General
Gas under bridge in Ibadan on Wednesday, 20 July, 2022.
Two
suspected motorcycle snatchers were also set on fire last month in the same
town.
It was
also reported on June 8 this year that two suspected armed robbers were killed
in Uyo, the capital of Akwa Ibom State.
Samuel
Deborah, who was until her death a student of a College of Education in Sokoto
State, was killed in a controversial manner by some suspects who are yet to be
prosecuted.
A
suspected thief was in March last year set ablaze in Delta State.
In Enugu
State, two persons, including a native doctor, were also stoned to death a few
weeks back for allegedly using a minor for ritual.
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