Friday, December 30, 2016

Nigerian of the Year 2016 - Mrs. Rose Oruru

by Eze Eluchie,

In a year when the national economy nosedived with inflation spiraling out of control forcing many Nigerians to dispense with their cultural and traditional hospitable nature; when terror elements had a field day blowing up stuff and maiming at will despite bogus claims of the terrorists having been ‘technically defeated’; and when some erstwhile intellectual role models for the youths incredulously somersaulted from Olympian heights to unfathomable depths from which they will most probably not be able to climb out before their demise – one of them who had climbed to prominence via criticizing societal ails turned to abusing the entire population for daring to point out his glaringly silly gaffe concerning electoral outcomes in foreign lands, and the other who had through the course of his life pretended to be interested in true Federalism and supremacy of the constitution turning round, for lucre, to praising brutal attacks by security operatives on the judiciary and mocking the practice of separation of powers upon which our pretense at democracy is hinged; it would ordinarily appear that all hope is lost for the Nigerian contraption and there is none in the land worthy of being singled out as a positive role model, a person of the year.

Far from it! It is in the midst of adversity and tribulations that the goodness in our peoples shone the more. 

People who seem to have comparatively less prove more generous. Families who had a sole bag of grain willingly shared out measures from their store to those less endowed; Cooperatives emerged where none had hitherto existed to soften the economic strain on their members; neighbors anonymously paid for the school fees when they noticed youngsters who ought to be in school loitering around long after their mates had returned to school; Muslim families risked all to harbor and accommodate non-Muslim neighbors when that bout of murderous lust for blood that has become the norm in our northern fringes sets in; Our peoples, in their various localities, live and exhibit the best qualities of humanity, giving lie to the perception their ruler wants the international community to know them by – as a ‘fantastically corrupt’ specie of the human race.

In Year 2016, one woman rose head and shoulders above her country folks to best exposé the virtues of an irrepressible spirit, fearlessness and never-say-die-till-goal-is-achieved attitude imbued in the average Nigerian and qualify to be recognized as the Nigerian of the Year, a role model most worthy of emulation.

When her 14-year old daughter (Ese Oruru) was kidnapped from right under her nose in Yenegoa (Bayelsa State) in Nigeria’s Niger Delta region by a philanderous butcher (Yunusa Dahiru) who disappeared into the uncharted Nigerian wilderness, Mrs. Rose Oruru did not consign herself to wailing and gnashing of teeth. This Amazon, in the face of the usual and most unfortunate failure of the local police authorities to conduct proper investigations apprehend and prosecute culprits, plunged herself head-on into rescuing her daughter. Mrs. Oruru’s personal investigations led her, over a thousand kilometres away, to the Palace of the Islamic ruler of Kano city, the Emir, where her daughter’s kidnapper had taken refuge and where a sham marriage had been conducted to forcefully join the kidnapped under-aged girl in matrimony with her kidnapper.

At great risk to her life, Mrs. Oruru, who was making her very first visit to Kano State, pestered the entrance of the Palace of the Emir of Kano (a huge fortified premises with hundreds of rough thugs serving as a first-layer of security) imploring on anyone who cared to listen to help retrieve her daughter from the kidnapper and his very ‘politically powerful’ overlords. Mrs. Oruru’s uncommon valour and insistence caught the police and state authorities flat-footed with all manners of despicable denials and statements emanating from the various Commands of the Nigerian Police (Bayelsa and Kano State in particular) through whom the kidnap case had passed through without any real actions being taken and the Inspector General of the Nigeria Police Force, Mr. Solomon Arase, who elevated the shame of the Police to  arduous levels when he asserted that though the Police Force knew where the kidnapped girl was being kept, the release of the under-aged girl was dependent on approval by the Emir of Kano, Mr. Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, (a former Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria) who was then performing the holy pilgrimage in Mecca, Saudi Arabia. True to the IGP’s words, the under-aged girl was only released to her mother upon the return of Mr. Sanusi to Nigeria a few days later.

As a result of the publicity generated by Mrs. Oruru’s heroism, several other instances of parents (mostly Christians) who were suffering from helplessness at the kidnap and forced ‘marriage’ of their under-aged children under the patronage of Islamic rulers across several cities in Nigeria’s northern region were brought to light. The diabolical pattern of kidnap of under-aged girls and forced ‘marriage’ of such girls to their kidnappers has continued unabated without any efforts at quelling this most inhumane of crimes by Nigerian authorities.

Ese Oruru has since given birth to the product of rape during her ‘forced marriage’ to her kidnapper; The kidnapper of Ese Oruru remains a free man.

For her tenacity of purpose, efforts at self-help which resulted in the rescue of her kidnapped daughter, bringing to limelight the dastard vice of kidnap of under-aged girls and forced marriage under Shari’a which has continued till date in Nigeria, helping others in her situation to come out with their own tales of woes and seek solution, her dexterity, her leadership and serving as a role model worthy of emulation, Mrs. Rose Oruru is the 2016 Nigerian of the Year!





Picture: Mrs Rose Oruru (in red) surrounded by Police Officers. 


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