Thursday, 25th April 2024
To guardian.ng
Search

Drop Charges Against Jelili Atiku Now!’

By Editor
31 January 2016   |   7:56 am
The community of artists in Nigeria and around the world have called on the Commissioner of Police in Lagos to drop the 4-count criminal charge (Charge No MM/E/01/16) instituted against the performance artist Jelili Atiku, widely believed to have been sponsored by the traditional ruler of Ejigbo community, Oba Morufu Adekunle Adisa Ojoola, the Oojon…
One of Jelili Atiku’s performance art, Obaranikosi PHOTO: KABIRU ADEOLA ABDULRASHEE

One of Jelili Atiku’s performance art, Obaranikosi PHOTO: KABIRU ADEOLA ABDULRASHEE

The community of artists in Nigeria and around the world have called on the Commissioner of Police in Lagos to drop the 4-count criminal charge (Charge No MM/E/01/16) instituted against the performance artist Jelili Atiku, widely believed to have been sponsored by the traditional ruler of Ejigbo community, Oba Morufu Adekunle Adisa Ojoola, the Oojon of Ejigbo/Ijan kingdom in Lagos State.

Hearing will resume on February 1, 2016, against the artist, who is being arraigned on criminal charges of “constituting public disturbance, and inciting the public with his performance of January 14, 2016.” The toughest accusation laid in front of the Magistrate court is that the artist conspired with four others to “commit felony” with his art.

Jelili Atiku, winner of the 2015 edition of The Netherlands-based Prince Claus Prize for Culture Development, was arrested on Monday, January 18, 2016, after staging a performance art, a genre of visual art conflated with elements of dramatic arts. He spent three days in jail in the last two weeks.

In a statement jointly signed by Committee for Relevant Art – CORA’Arterial Network and Society of Nigerian Artists (SNA) said, “We are deeply worried that a display of a visual work of art, expressed without violence, would have been criminalised by policemen, who arrested and brutalised the artist, and some others involved in the performance of the art.

“We express misgivings that an artist would be detained in prison, for three days, in Nigeria, 17 years in the life of the fourth democratic Republic, for simply expressing his view.

“We are disturbed that community chieftains would so easily take advantage of the state agencies of coercion, to inflict harm on individuals who haven’t themselves resorted to violence in expressing their opinions.

“As citizens, we have faith in the country’s judicial process for adjudicating matters of law and disturbance of the peace, but the circumstances surrounding Mr. Atiku’s arrest, harassment and detention are so deeply troubling that they compel us to demand the dismissal of the case.

“Mr. Atiku’s recent creation, ‘Aramagamo,’ a masquerade motif that he proposes as a campaign against the reign of executive terrorism, is at the heart of his current challenges. In parts, it is an attack on rentier tendencies in Nigerian communities; it bears similarity with many local artistic productions that assail the extremes of the rentier economy in Nigeria, including Benson Tomoloju’s Jankariwo and Wole Soyinka’s Alapata Apata”.

Aragamago Will Rid This Land of Terrorism, staged Thursday, January 14, 2016 in Ejigbo community, located in Lagos West, obviously rankled the traditional ruler of the town, Oba Morufu Ojoola, who felt that the performance was targeted at him, and promptly got the artists arrested. The fact that an arrest of persons performing visual arts could lead to three days in prison indicates a heavy hand of the state in favour of the accuser.

The statement further said, “The brutalization of members of Mr. Atiku’s nuclear family, including his 13-year old niece Rofiat Azeez by elements of the Oodua People’s Congress (OPC), at a time of the face-off, insinuates that all avenues are being exploited to intimidate Atiku.

“We insist that an artist has a right to provoke thoughts and generate debate in society. Attempts at censorship will unnecessarily bottle up opinions, and lead to consequences that are not guaranteed to be positive. A society in search of change from a corrupt state to progressive ethos should be encouraging valuable dialogue”.

0 Comments