It is time the
authorities in Nigeria did the right thing and arrest Mr. Temitope
Balogun Joshua, the self-styled General Overseer of The Synagogue,
Church of All Nations (SCOAN). Here is why:
On Friday, September 12, 2014, a guest hostel located within the
premises of Mr. Joshua’s sprawling church at Ikotun-Egbe, Lagos,
collapsed. The most recent media reports put the death toll from the
calamity at 115. So far, rescuers have pulled out more than a hundred
survivors from the rubble. Because Mr. Joshua’s church has always drawn
an international audience, the continental profile of the list of
victims is hardly surprising. For instance, at least 84 South Africans
have been confirmed dead. There are also Nigerians and citizens of other
African (and possible non-African) countries among the dead. Continue...
Mr. Joshua has done everything
humanly possible to cover up the truth about this tragedy. First, in the
first three days after the incident, he illegally barred officials of
the National Emergency Management Authority (NEMA) from accessing the
site and rescuing survivors. Second, while this illegal interdiction was
in effect, Mr. Joshua attempted to dictate the narrative and deflect
possible culpability by blaming the incident on a mysterious ‘small
plane’ which had purportedly hovered above his church complex moments
before the collapse. Claiming that he and not his church building was
the target of the alleged attack, he even released an ‘exclusive’
footage of the ‘strange’ plane. Third, as public anger mounted in South
Africa, Mr. Joshua declared the dead ‘martyrs of faith’ and sought to
change the subject by promising to ‘take his teachings’ to the country
every month for the foreseeable future. Fourth, an audio recording has
just emerged of Mr. Joshua paying a gathering of journalists N50, 000
each in exchange for suppressing the truth and privileging his version
of events. The recording, whose authenticity has not been challenged,
was released by Mr. Nicholas Ibekwe, a Premium Times correspondent who
was present at the meeting.
Mr. Joshua obviously recognizes that the version of events he is
seeking to promote is implausible, hence his latest attempt to
manipulate public opinion by inducing journalists.
He should not be allowed to get away with it. His entire conduct
since the tragic news broke has been that of a man who feels that he is
accountable to no one, and who is too preoccupied with his image as a
‘man of God’ to worry about the many victims of this tragic incident,
whether injured or dead. His attempts to somehow portray a collapse that
most probably has to do with failure to comply with building
regulations as a personal attack is an example of his self-promotion and
is nothing short of callous.
Yet, if Mr. Joshua has comported himself as one above the law, it is
precisely because the Nigerian state has offered him every license. In
this wise, neither President Goodluck Jonathan nor Governor Babatunde
Fashola has covered himself in glory. The president’s visit to the scene
of the collapse in which he commiserated with Mr. Joshua was painful to
watch. Why would the Nigerian president visit and express solidarity
with the leader of a church who should be a person of interest in an
ongoing police investigation?
And is this the same president who does
not know the way to Chibok? Whatever his motive, President Jonathan
strengthened Mr. Joshua’s arm, gave him the assurance of presidential
protection, and threw police investigations in jeopardy. In the same
vein, the cloak and dagger nature of the meeting between Governor
Fashola and Mr. Joshua can only have comforted the latter. Nigerians
deserve to know what transpired during their meeting, and whatever
assurances, if any, Mr. Fashola gave Mr. Joshua. That said, Mr. Fashola
is putting at risk his own hard-earned reputation for transparency and
legality. Simply put, should visits have taken place, they should have
been to the hospitals where the injured are being treated and the homes
of the deceased. The site should have been barricaded by the relevant
authorities—the police, town planning, etc.— to secure evidence, given
that the presumption ought to be that even if it is not immediately
clear that a crime has been committed, something definitely has been
remiss in the entire tragedy. Getting to the root of the matter should
be the only concern next to solicitations for the welfare of the
survivors.
The police should arrest him. Today. At a minimum, he should be declared a person of interest regarding a crime scene and be invited for a ‘chat’.
Signed:
Olufemi Taiwo, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York
Ebenezer Obadare, University of Kansas, Lawrence
Akin Adesokan, Indiana University, Bloomington
Wale Adebanwi, University of California, Davis
Tejumola Olaniyan, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison


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