NIGERIA HAS A CRIME CULTURE PROBLEM THAT NEEDS FIXING


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It is enervating to see our people taking the inglorious front row in ‘’ money crimes’’ – drug peddling and internet fraud – abroad.
In August 2016, an Igbo drug dealer was guillotined in Indonesia. But his funeral in Anambra was a rambunctious shin-dig. He was even described as a “hero” by his people.
I have skimmed through the list of alleged online fraudsters indicted by the FBI, in what is regarded as the biggest scam bust in history, and I could see familiar names. It is heartbreaking for me. The refrain that criticising your own people for shortcomings is an act of sanctimony is obtuse. Crime has no ethnic face, but does that imply condoning or rationalising a persistent ill? 
I have said it before, we have a problem. 
All the groups in the South of Nigeria have a problem. Out of the 21 Nigerians on death-row for drug peddling in Indonesia, 20 are Igbo. The 23 Nigerians on death in Saudi Arabia are mainly from the Yoruba.
A few months ago, some armed robbers of Igbo origin launched an attack on a bureau de change in Dubai, but they were arrested. It is painful, instead of exporting the durable products of Aba, we are exporting crime and violence. That Nigerians are a pariah in South Africa is partly due to the activities of some Igbo drug cartel. 
But what happens when these drug gangs return to Nigeria? A bazaar of bloodshed! A few years ago, there was a massacre at a church in Ozubulu, Anambra. The killings were linked to a drug war between rival gangs in South Africa. The gangs took their battle out of the turf to native soil. Really, we are baiting the hurricane. 
And now, out of the 77 names listed for online fraud in the US, 74 are Igbo. We have a problem. We cannot solve this problem by living in denial.
I agree, there are millions of us doing great things in our fields, but we must condemn the activities of these criminals among us. They do not represent us, but their actions are capable of making an execrable impression of all us.
The argument that the Igbo are marginalised and that they are deprived because of the civil war, so very few among them are forced into crime is puerile. This is a terrible way to rationalise a problem that dents the entire group. There is no excuse for crime.
One drop of dirt is enough to make a basin of water impure. We must have serious conversations on this atypical criminality.
We have a culture that glorifies "money’’ crime – the culture of money-grubbing and worship, as the be-all and end-all of everything. It is a pervasive culture in the south of Nigeria.
We need value re-orientation, and this should be actuated by all groups – age grades and traditional institutions. We must stop celebrating people of unknown fortune. We must name and shame those with illicit wealth in our communities. We should upbraid them instead of giving them chieftaincy titles and front-row seats in the church.
We have a problem. A crime culture!

By Fredrick Nwabufo

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