The news that four men have been sentenced to death for the church massacre in Nigeria has stirred something in me. Not satisfaction. Not outrage. But a deep, uneasy recognition of a historical pattern repeating itself. British-trained judges, presiding over a courtroom in a country that once was the jewel of our empire, meting out the ultimate penalty for a crime that shocked the conscience of the world. What are we to make of this? Are we witnessing the triumph of civilisation over savagery, or the desperate gasp of a dying imperial order?
Let us first consider the crime. A church massacre, believers gunned down in their place of worship. It is an act so vile, so antithetical to what we claim to be human, that it demands a response. And the response has been death. Four men, their lives forfeit for the taking of others. The logic is clear. The retribution is swift. And the judges were trained in the finest traditions of British jurisprudence. One might almost call it a victory for law and order.
But I am a contrarian by nature, and I smell decadence in this air of self-congratulation. Look deeper. Nigeria is a country wracked by religious violence, ethnic tension, and the slow decay of the state. The British Empire, for all its flaws, imposed a certain order. We drew borders, we built institutions, we trained judges. But we left. And what remains? A skeleton of a justice system, propped up by memories of a time when the Union Jack flew high. These death sentences are not a sign of strength. They are a sign of weakness. A state that cannot prevent massacres must at least punish them. But punishment is not prevention. It is the hollow consolation of the impotent.
Consider the condemned men. They are likely to be seen as martyrs by their supporters. The death penalty, far from deterring future violence, may well inflame it. This is the tragedy of post-colonial justice. We bequeathed to these nations our laws, our courts, our language. But we could not bequeath our stability. And so they mimic our rituals while the chaos rages. The British-trained judges do their duty. The sentences are pronounced. But does anyone believe this will solve anything?
The Victorians, for all their moralising, understood one thing. Empire was not just about order. It was about progress. About the slow, grinding work of civilisation. We thought we could export that. But we were wrong. The history of the last sixty years is a testament to that failure. Nigeria, India, Kenya. We left, and they fell into tribalism, corruption, and violence. The death sentences are a relic of a time when we believed in the power of the law to transform. Now they are just a way to manage the inevitable.
So what does this mean for us, the inheritors of the British intellectual tradition? We must be honest. The church massacre is a symptom of a deeper sickness. The death sentences are a symptom of a system that cannot heal. We look at Nigeria and see ourselves fifty years ago, sixty years ago, seventy years ago. We see the decline of faith, the collapse of community, the rise of meaningless violence. The Fall of Rome was slow and messy. Ours will be too. But at least the Romans had the decency to fall in style. We just drift, hoping that British-trained judges in faraway countries can hold the line.
They cannot. They will not. And we know it. The sentences are handed down. The men will die. And the massacre will happen again. Somewhere else. To someone else. And we will write columns about it, clucking our tongues at the savagery. But we will not change anything. Because we have lost the faith that change is possible. That is the real tragedy. Not the four deaths. Not the massacre. But the death of the idea that we can make things better.
I end on a note of grim pessimism. The British-trained judges are doing their best. But their best is not enough. It never is, when the empire is gone and only the ghosts remain. The death sentence for the church massacre is a footnote in a long, sad story. The story of our decline.










