I have listened to Asa’s music “Jailer” many times, each time
I listened to it I get goose pimples all over my body but I have never been
anywhere near jail but the way she intelligently painted the picture and
analyzed the relationship between a Jailer and a Prisoner will make you realize
that the relationship between the two is most times not convivial.
Reading Nelson Mandela autobiography “Long Road to Freedom”
also gave me a clearer understanding that Jailers anywhere and everywhere are
almost the same especially when the SYSTEM is fighting you or vice a visa.
Their psychology approach towards prisoners is the same and this treatment
transcends culture, colour and languages.
Jailers sometimes lose their civility and most times throw
away all their profession ethics, they forget that first and foremost the
prisoners are also human beings. I’m sure you are wondering “wetin concern
agbero with overload- what concerns her with jail matter”. The late Gani
Fawehinmi (SAN), late Fela Anikulapo Kuti and most of the activists jailed
during the Abacha’s era all saw the very bad side of these errand men whom Fela
(Baba 70) referred to as Zombies
because even when they know the truth and their conscience is not settle about
the treatments they melted on the prisoners they can’t definitely go against
their bosses who most time dictate the tunes of their operandi from their Palais de chef.
I love my job with every blood in my system, meeting the
stars which people pay a lot of money to watch.
My job has given me the opportunity to see them not only as stars but to
see them at the early stage of their career, trust me this is a fantastic
feeling.
One of the major points of my career is when the local stars
start blooming into an international acts and the one on one friendship you
share with many of them. Meeting the big act like Chief Sunny Ade which I’ve
known as a young girl for many years as a guru in the music industry is
historic, the day I personally met him and later having to sit with him for a
meeting is a great moment for me.
The day I finally met Beautiful Nubia, the man that I adore
his music rendition and his rhythms and rhyme prowess is magnificent. It’s a
delight to watch him perform any day anytime, relating with him on a profession
level, having the complementary copies of his works every time them, the
friendship that ensued after our meeting and the VIP treatment I get at his
show is usually terrific,( I’m sure you
are green with admiration for my career now……lol), don’t worry I could get you
some tickets so that we could get to see his shows together someday, I would definitely sure work on this, it’s a promise.
Travelling to major cities and villages across Nigeria
scouting for music stars is one of the many blessings of my job; eating
different delicacies of these special people are rear privileges which money
can’t buy. The beauty of Nigeria’s landscape is breathtaking that any tourist
will pay many millions of naira to see, these are the perks of the job I have
come to love passionately.
But after seven years sojourn on this job, nobody told me
that the hazard of the job will be man-made which will be caused by a set of
lawlessness officers of the regulatory body which is meant to oversee the
operation of my organization. On early morning of Tuesday I resumed to
work like any other days and ready to commence work in high spirit as I have
listed my work schedule for the day.
As I started to tick
one after the other my itinerary and ready to set out for my management
meeting, about 20 stern looking men including police officers came in and
demanded to see my boss, unfortunately he was not in the office and told them so
but the man that led the team which I later learnt was Mr. Matthew Ojo told me
that some of our officers would have to come along with them to their office
for questioning and chat. Oh, I guess my very sharp mouth put me in trouble
with them ‘cos I asked them for their warrant of arrest, which of cause they
couldn’t provide except for the Identification card they showed us (That may be the new warrant of arrest method in Naija now). They arrested five
of us.
Lo and behold, we were in their office, they did not tell us
one thing that we have done that has brought about the arrest, they seized all
our phones. As the day was winding up, we discovered that they did not have the
intention of releasing us that day, we asked if we could see our lawyer but
they declined. After being adamant on our request to see our lawyers they
allowed our lawyers in and we wrote our statements. That was the beginning of
our journey to meet the jailer.
We were transferred from their office at about 9.45pm to an
unknown destination, this place looked like police stations because I saw plain
cloth officer carrying guns. The man that led the team that drove us to the
unknown destination exchanged pleasantries with the man that was in charge of
the facility and spoke briefly in Hausa language.
All of us have not had any healthy meal since morning except
for me that was on diet plan, one of my colleague asked if they could get us
something to eat, the leader of the team responded and asked where we expected
him to get food for us at this time of the day that he was very sorry because he
could only help with water, and true to his word he gave us one bottle of water
each though I rejected mine but he pleaded that I should take it because I
might need it. On a second thought I took the water from him.
The team leader told
his friends that he’ll come to take us the following day, he left us at the
mercy of the chief security officer (CSO), and the CSO asked that we fill a
form where we registered our names, ages, occupation and state of origins. We
were asked to submit our personal effects like wrist watches, belts, money, and
jewelries. After the submission, he carefully labeled, taped and kept them
away.
After this routine, we were asked to queue up. Two fully
armed policemen were detailed on each of our sides as we were marched on barefoot
to another compound, but I was thinking maybe we were going to sleep in the staff
quarter but alas I was dead wrong. We were ordered to a quiet building which I later
found out to be a prison cell for drug barons, the CSO read the cell order for
us and asked that we should be of good behavior if we wanted to enjoy our stay
in our new chamber.
As they put the light in the prison corridor on, the
prisoners all woke up; their actions showed that it was the routine if new inmates
were to join them. As soon as they saw the CSO they started hailing him from
different directions of the cell, “say Baba”, “Baba of bad boys and girls” ,“the
husband of prisoners” they called him all sort of names.
He opened the gate and asked us to move in, I was terrified
and asked him if we (ladies) were to go in too because the only people I saw
there were men, but my question angered the man. He shouted on me and said “do
you think you are in your house or office where you’ll enjoy air-condition,
fan and watch soap opera, you better enter before I lose my temper”.
As I entered sluggishly with my other colleagues, the
prisoners we woke and disturbed their quite sleep started throwing jibes at us,
some asked us “how many grams did you carry?”, where did they arrest you?, why
are you just being brought in at these time?, some said “people in suit have
also jammed the law”, one said, “so
butties are also business people”. My fear vanished as the officer open the
female cell for my female colleague and I, we met three elderly women, they quietly
rose from their sleep and greeted us, they asked what brought us in but were we apparently
too tired to talk but we were left alone as one of my male colleagues gave them full
account of our predicament.
After they listened to his gist they started pitying us, one
said we should sweep the floor because there is no bed to sleep, but we sat a
small girls whose mother just eloped with a lover. Mama Onome was fully of pity
for us as she told us what brought all of them in. From her discussion she was
an Indian hemp seller, how she has spent four months without trail but
she was pleasant and so were the other two, she also told us about some
male inmates who have spent 10 months without trail.
I noticed that there were all sort of buckets at the other
side of the room, I did not waste time in asking my new friends if that was
their toilet and they answered in affirmative shocked me. The cell wall was
defaced in charcoal and pen with name of past prisoners, their offense and the date
of days they each left. Amidst my thought on how my parents, family and friends
would be feeling and how worried they would be I slept off on the floor, it was the
Muslim morning call to prayer that woke me around 5.00am.
After their prayer, the Christians also took turn to
pray, the prayer sessions were overwhelming. At about 8.30am in the morning the
warder started opening the gate for the prisoners one after the order to clean
up themselves, I also asked if I could ease myself but to my greatest surprise the
Jailer told me he would not allow me to go because there was no instruction
from above that has authorized him to do so, that if I needed to do anything I
should used the bucket provided in the cell.
I raised my voice saying it will
not happen while I was alive because I was not a prisoner and I refuse to be
treated as such, on self-pity he finally allowed be to use the closet which is
not worthy for an animal but are allowed in our prison system.
At about 10.00am breakfast, one small wrap of eba and egusi soup with no meat, was served, I also learnt from my friends
that it was the only meal for the day. I was forced to ask how they survive this
double hardship but they told me that they buy food from food vendors that sell
around the prison with the money given them by their family members who visit
once a week.
At about 10.45am my name and those of my colleagues were
called and about 25minutes after they brought special packed rice and beans
delicacy with one meat and kpomo with
one sachet of pure water. Unfortunately, I did not have the appetite to eat the
food so I gave it to my friends.
We were called out at about 1.45pm, as they opened the gate
for us to back to free world that I have known and I hugged my new found friend
in tears as i bid them bid goodbye. Mama Onome specifically asked that I should not forget
her in my prayers that she me promise if she ever regain her freedom she would
not go back to drug again. Since I left there my prayer are with them, I pray
that they will regain their freedom and they will sin no more.
We returned back to the CSO’s office, he returned all our
items to us though he wanted to become our friends but I was too engrossed with
my freedom that I never notice his friendliness.
I waved the jailer goodbye and returned to the warmth arms of
my other colleagues, family and friends who were all worried about our
whereabouts and safety; I can’t stop thinking about the condition of the prison
and idleness of the prisoners.
3 comments:
you must sue this people big time o.
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