It was a display of various kinds of comical skills in Anambra state on Wednesday morning when it was rumored that 3 pupils died after they were forcefully injected with unknown substance at a school somewhere in Ozubulu.
Below are some of the hilarious photos captured as the drama was ongoing.
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One of the first photos that hit the internet on Wednesday. Some students of Nnewi High School were captured taking "Ben Johnson" in other to run away from the "killer injection" LOL. |
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NIGERIAN ARMY & THE SOUTH EAST
"There is something we call law of association in psychology. There is also what we call learning by classical conditioning.
"It means that the people of the south east have cognitively formed an association between the Nigerian army and killing, especially due to the incidence that took place in Nnamdi kanu's home recently.
"Therefore, that association has classically conditioned the mind of the easterners to think/learn that anything that comes from the Nigerian army is intended to killing. That is just the core reason behind this immunisation saga#psychologically speaking#. "
"Do you blame the people ? The so -called Operation Python Dance has sown the seed of mistrust. That seed has began to germinate. We are awaiting its fruits.
"A national army which ordinarily our people should trust & approach for protection is now seen as a predator."
Below is what Victoria Ibezim had to say
ReplyDelete"We have all seen those laughter-inducing pictures coming out of Ozubulu. They remind of a similar incident in Maiduguri in 2011. I was in Maiduguri when JTF launched a soft program to provide water tanks, clean water (and other therapeutic supplies) to Budum residents days after the military launched a brutal reprisal attack in the area, killing and injuring many. JTF was perplexed when residents shunned the gifts and supplies.
I don't know which is more hilarious: the fleeing residents in Ozubulu or even the idea of launching a medical outreach in an atmosphere of intense trust deficit between the military and civilians. But come to think of it: was there any catastrophic medical condition or disease outbreak in the area that necessitated the medical outreach? Is the military also a humanitarian organisation delivering emergency medical aid in peace time? Is it safe to administer any sort of treatment on school children without parental consent? Does medical ethics support this?
I have too many questions to ask....But the videos and images from Ozubulu have been quite entertaining...enough to last the whole week 😂😂😂😂"