Tag: Lekki

  • Lekki shootings: South West ministers want role of military probed

    Lekki shootings: South West ministers want role of military probed

    Ministers from the south-west who were directed to go home and sort out the #EndSARS agitation, have presented their report to the Federal Executive Council (FEC), recommending a thorough investigation into the Lekki Toll Plaza shooting incident particularly the role of the military.

    “We also urged that the federal government should undertake a thorough investigation into what happened in the Lekki Toll Plaza, particularly the role of the military and ensure that the outcome is made public with a view to achieving closure on the matter,” the Minister of Works and Housing, Babatunde Fashola, who briefed State House correspondents in Abuja after the meeting on Wednesday, said.

    Apart from Fashola, the ministers who briefed the council at its Wednesday’s meeting are Otunba Niyi Adebayo representing Ekiti, Rauf Aregbesola representing Osun, Sunday Dare representing Oyo, Olamilekan Adegbite representing Ogun, Olorunimbe Memora Lagos and Tayo Aladura representing Ondo, was in regards to how we executed the directive on the October 21st to ministers, for us to visit our state’s governors in our states.

    Fashola disclosed that the ministers also recommended that the federal government should assist businesses affected by arson and looting in Lagos and other parts of the country through the Central Bank and the National Economic Council (NEC).

    He said: “The highlight of the brief was to make recommendations to the federal government to support Lagos State to restore damaged facilities especially those related to the maintenance of law and order and the administration of justice such as police, court buildings and forensic laboratory.

    “To also consider supporting the Lagos High Court Judges either with the provision of some office accommodation as a temporary relocation when that request is made. Of course, it was hinted during the visit.

    “To also urged the federal government to consider short to medium term support to small and medium businesses who were affected by the looting and arson which took place in Lagos and other parts of the country, to see if something can be done through the Central Bank Intervention Mechanism under the COVID-19 funding or any other related funding mechanism.

    “And to also ensure that whatever is approved should also involve the National Economic Council, the platform on which state governors meet, so that other states across the country who were also affected, businesses were damaged can benefit in addition to Lagos residence who may so be supported.”

    The ministers also recommended that the federal government re-mobilise critical organs and agencies such as National Orientation Agency and formal educational institutions focus on ethical re-orientation, inculcation of family values into the school curriculum.

    They recommended a focus on etiquette, local reasoning, critical thinking, solution-seeking, empathy, self-respect, civic duty and human rights.

    Similarly, they recommended that the Federal Government should actively seek and support the process of justice for all by ensuring that any of those apprehended and identified to be involved in the perpetration of this carnage be speedily brought to justice and fairly tried.

    Fashola added: “We also urged the Federal Government to implement the maintenance of facility management policy approved by FEC in 2019 for Federal Ministries, Department and Agencies and to encourage states to do the same.

    “We do this because we see this as a usual vehicle to help absorb and create immediate employment of skilled, semi-skilled and unskilled Labour, in order to address huge unemployment and poverty-related part of the problem.

    “This is important because people have skills but we need to provide the economic environment in which those skills can become income-earning and self-rewarding.

    “We urged the government to also restore confidence in the police and their morale among the officers of men and women and to improve their welfare while tracking the ongoing reforms being undertaken in the police force.

    “We also urged the Federal Government to consider through the federal ministry of health issues of substance abuse amongst the populace and propose solutions because this potentially affects mental health.

    “We made this recommendation mindful of the global opium and substance abuse crisis and the impact on our country as well. We think this is a matter that requires some attention and focus.”

    The works minister said in the course of their intervention, they met with governors, saying: “After meeting with the governors, the position of the governors was that Lagos being the epicentre, a commercial and strategic city-state in the south-west and the country is where we should all go. That was what informed our visit to Lagos.

    “So, I just briefed council about the reports that were presented to us by the Lagos state government when we visited.

    “The summary is that about 15 police stations were lost, commercial undertakings especially the ones in Lekki and many other parts in Surulere were damaged, some schools were also damaged, private properties were also damaged and public buildings like the City Hall, the Lagos High Court, Lagos Forensic Laboratory and DNA Center, the Nigeria Ports Authority were also damaged. The palace of the Oba of Lagos and many others.

    “So, we presented the documentary evidence presented to us by the Government of Lagos State which was shown to the Council.

    “Then we visited a few palaces – the Lagos High Court led by the governor of Lagos, Babajide Sanwo-Olu, we visited NPA, Forensic Lab and the Lekki Toll Plaza as well and as you all know, we found some items which we handed over to the state government at the site. These were the highlights of the report that we presented.

    “The minister of youth and sports also visited the Lagos Island Hospital to empathize with seven persons who were reported to have sustained various degree of injuries in the ward and emergency unit. He also visited media houses to commiserate with them in the destruction of property.”

    President Muhammadu Buhari had dispatched ministers to their various states to interface with youth in the wake of the #EndSARS protests that led to the death of peaceful protesters at the Lekki Toll Plaza.

    The shooting incident at the plaza was followed by nationwide looting and arson.

  • Lekki shootings: Soldiers fired blank ammunition, it isn’t meant for killing – Ex-Army spokesman, Usman

    Lekki shootings: Soldiers fired blank ammunition, it isn’t meant for killing – Ex-Army spokesman, Usman

    Former Director Army Public Relations, Brigadier General Sani Usman on Thursday claimed that Military personnel who shot protesters at Lekki toll gate used ‘blank ammunition.

    Usman in an interview with Arise News said the blank ammunition used to disperse protesters has little or no effect on its target.

    Recall that the Army had earlier denied that its officers were present at the scene of the shooting.

    But on Wednesday, the 81 Division of the Nigerian Army (NA) revealed that the Lagos State Government invited the military to intervene during the End SARS protests.

    Speaking on Thursday Usman said, “If you look at the canisters, they were blank ammo and blank ammo don’t even kill. At a close range, maybe 100metres – maybe it will have some pigmentation on your skin.

    “Remember the military are armed and by the nature of their training, they are trained to kill and I think the military in its wisdom instead of using live ammunition decided to use blank armour which is meant for training.

  • #EndSARS: DisCo denies responsibility for Lekki tollgate outage

    #EndSARS: DisCo denies responsibility for Lekki tollgate outage

    The Eko Electricity Distribution Company has said it did not stop power supply in the Admiralty Toll Plaza on Lekki -Epe Expressway, Lagos, on October 20. 2020.

    Recall that on October 20, Lekki tollgate was cut off from supply when some army officers shot at peaceful protesters.

    In a statement by its General Manager, Corporate Communications, Godwin Idemudia, EKEDC said Lagos State had contracted the supply of electricity to the plaza to an Independent Power Plant.

    He said, “We will like to respectfully and categorically state that EKEDC does not handle power supply to the Lekki tollgate; they independently generate their own power supply through IPPs. The rest of the Lekki area supplied by EKEDC had power supply from us throughout the night save for any areas where there were technical faults.

    “We are extremely saddened by the turn of events and we stand with all well-meaning Nigerians who want a better future for our dear nation. EKEDC Management will continue to provide best possible electricity supply, customer service and fault resolution,” he said.

  • Lekki shooting: I felt like I was dying Omoni Oboli

    Lekki shooting: I felt like I was dying Omoni Oboli

    Actress, Omoni Oboli has recounted her battle with trauma after the shooting at unarmed #EndSARS protesters by soldiers in Lagos state.

    The shooting at the protesters, which occurred at the Lekki toll gate axis of the state on October 20, has continued to attract criticisms from Nigerians

     

    In an extensive Instagram post on Tuesday, the award-winning actress recounted how the occurrence left her worried for days.

    The ‘Oloture ‘ actress said the shooting made her ill psychologically.

     

    In her word:”Healing does not mean the pain stops existing. It means the pain doesn’t control your life anymore,” she wrote, quoting a line from ‘The Stars Are Ageless’, her book.

     

    “It’s been one week and I’ve been through it all. I’ve been emotionally, psychologically, physically, so violently ill to the point that I’ve puked out bile.

     

    “I’ve barely slept in this one week and I’m sure many have felt it or are feeling this way but it’s time for healing.

     

    “I’ve had to make a conscious decision to start the healing process because staying in this state just triggers more panic and anxiety attacks (I literally felt like I was dying many times).”

     

    She enjoined others battling similar situation to embark on a healing process by reaching out to people for help.

     

    “So I’m starting my healing process and I advice you all to because we are useless to humanity in this state. What we all experienced is very insane and most of us will suffer from Post-traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD),” she added.

     

    Oboli also urged those who lost their loved ones as well properties amid the turbulence trailing the protests to brace up.

     

    “To all who lost property and livelihood to looters. God sees. He will restore 7 fold! Just watch and see him give you double for your trouble!” she added.

     

     

  • Lekki Shootings: CCTV captured Nigerian soldiers firing at unarmed protestors, Sanwo-Olu tells CNN [VIDEO]

    Lekki Shootings: CCTV captured Nigerian soldiers firing at unarmed protestors, Sanwo-Olu tells CNN [VIDEO]

    Lagos State Governor, Babajide Sanwo-Olu, has revealed that footage obtained from the CCTV cameras installed at the Lekki toll gate showed that indeed Nigerian soldiers were at the scene of the shooting of unarmed protesters.

    Sanwo-Olu revealed this when he appeared on CNN’s “Connect the World with Becky Anderson programme” on Monday.

    “From the footage that we could see, it seems to be…there would be men in military uniform, who should be Nigerian Army or something,” Sanwo-Olu said.

    But when pressed further by Anderson, the governor said, “Yes, they were there. That’s what the footage shows.”

    Asked further if he was committed to a full investigation into the shooting incident and if the soldiers involved would be held accountable, Governor Sanwo-Olu responded affirmatively but said only President Muhammadu Buhari could ensure the soldiers were punished in his capacity as the Commander-in-Chief.

    The governor, who described the incident as “extremely unimaginable”, assured that the Lagos State Government would make the CCTV footage of the shooting incident available to the state’s judicial panel of inquiry investigating the matter.

    He said: “We will be committed to a full investigation of what happened and people would be held accountable. They certainly would be held accountable. We would do everything possible to ensure that they are held accountable.

    “People have claimed that their friends and family members have been killed. So, this Judicial Panel of Enquiry is meant to bring all of these stories to accountability; where we can make restitution, where families can prove and identify officers that were responsible for this.

    “I am not the Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces; I am Governor of a State. The report would be out and we would channel the report to all the relevant authorities in the state to ensure that every one that is found culpable is accountable for the act.”

    On if he and President Buhari were compelled to speak on the protesters because of international pressures, Sanwo-Olu said: “There are no international pressures whatsoever. These are genuine protesters that we all believe and we all have knowledge about. I was the first governor among governors with due respect to all my other colleagues who came out to meet with them, who started from the front. I carried the EndSARS flags with them. I met with them twice and we all had the rally together and worked together.”

    Sanwo-Olu further assured that the two-week-long #EndSARS protests would bring about positive change in the country.

    “I genuinely believe there would be a change for two reasons. One, what has happened, especially in Lagos is extremely unimaginable. Number two is that it was a clarion call for all of us in government, especially understanding and realizing what the youths truly want us to be doing. So, it hit all of us like a thunderbolt and it was just a wake-up call,” he said.

  • Two weeks to eternity – Chidi Amuta

    Two weeks to eternity – Chidi Amuta

    Chidi Amuta

    In many ways, the last two weeks may end up as a defining moment for the Nigeria of tomorrow. Anger against a rogue police outfit (SARS) has sparked a spontaneous nationwide youth spring with unfamiliar unanimity and a clear message.

    Pent up anger and desperation has in turn overwhelmed the apparatus of law and order with waves of arson, looting and vandalism that swept through major urban centres. The wrong of police brutality felt by the youth has reignited a dying sense of community and common outrage across the nation.

    On its part, government has been caught somewhat shocked and nearly clueless. It has stumbled on with knee jerk solutions, familiar blandness and an embarrassing lack of creative thinking. It has hurriedly undertaken to scrap the offending SARS, reform our defective police force while investigating widespread charges of police brutality and rights abuses. It has outsourced the job of investigating police rights abuses to the states who now have to determine culpability of individual police officers before recommending prosecution, possible compensation and reparations.

    But a skeptical youth force has been reluctant to trust the government whose past record of tardiness inspires little hope. In defiance of the stern posturings of federal and state governments, the protests continued for some days while the descent into lawlessness assumed a life of its own. Curfews and stern measures across the states promises to restore law and order, leaving the public, the injured and the bereaved to count their losses.

    Yet something encouraging has also come across. In all the turbulence and upheaval, not a single voice has risen to reject or repudiate the idea of the Nigerian nation. All the anger has been against the lapses in the way the affairs of the nation have been mismanaged over the years. What is significant is that the youth who constitute over 75% of the populace have finally expressed their stake in the future of the country, a clear indication that we are at the brink of an altered face of the social and political conversation about Nigeria.

    Let us therefore delineate the boundaries of the emerging confrontations. The peaceful protests of youth united against police brutality and other forms of official impunity needs to be quickly isolated and kept safe. It is a historic milestone in our quest for a democratic republic of free citizens. This process of peaceful protest must be sustained and separated from the anarchy and uncontrolled criminality that has unfolded around the protests.

    On the contrary, something unites the mindless brutality of the soldiers who killed some innocent protesters at Lekki Toll Gate on Tuesday, October 20th and the irate bands of criminals and hoodlums that rampaged and looted around the country. Both strands belong in a common pool of despicable savagery and vandalism that hovers at the fringes of our noble core as a people. We must reject this descent into anarchy and violence by both the errant arm of the public and the lawless armed agents of the state.

    Yet, the entire complex of contradictory events demand more than the usual superficial reflexes, lazy explanations and cosmetic solutions of our governments. We are actually at the brink of the next phase of Nigerian history. The citizenry have woken up to the expression of their rights through open peaceful protests. The nature and scope of this latest event is like nothing we have seen in the past. It is a moment that we need to seize, treasure, learn from and deploy for a better future.

    Behind the lines of protest and grievance, we can hear the loud groans of a nation in dire straights of misrule and a people in the desperate throes of poverty and distress. The strongest and most able cannot find work. The hungry cannot find food while utter hopelessness dogs the lives of the majority. The wait for direction and comforting action from successive governments has been long and fruitless. When finally the army of youth braved the storm to protest the brutality of the police, it was a wake up call that united all the pent up energies in the land. The unkempt genie is out of the bottle.

    In the immediate circumstances, the protests came through the vehicle of the popular cultural revolution that has recently swept through the country and united our youth with their fellows in the rest of the world. Our new popular culture of music, movies and comedy has created a new crop of wealthy and influential youth powered by the social media. The magnetic urgency of this youth culture is the fuel that has fed the quick spread of the anti-SARS uprising. The revenue and publicity dividend of Nigeria’s new cultural evolution has also come with the price of global solidarity with the pains of our youth. A youth swarm that gathers spontaneously to watch and listen to Davido, Whizkid, Burna Boy, Flavor and Tiwa Savage is bound to answer when these their icons point at the injustices of their day. The revelers of today are the ready angry youth protesters of injustice at the political level tomorrow.

    Consequently, the atmosphere of the recent protests themselves bore the markings of the new age of fun and seriousness. The protest venues featured dance, song, music and a carnivalesque atmosphere, The various protest grounds became ground zero for youth to drown their frustration and anger in solidarity for a common cause. Some danced. Others sang. There was free food and drinks.

    An unwritten code of civility reigned at the protest venues and ensured that initially there was little criminality. Pickpockets and petty thieves were promptly apprehended and handed over to the police. Protest organisers arranged common food banks and fed all and sundry in orderly queues including the police. It was a very touching spectacle for the most part. The world heard Nigeria as youth and lovers of freedom from every land joined and identified with Nigerians. We became the world, thereby exposing the foibles of our authorities to the floodlights of global scrutiny.

    These peaceful earlier days of the protests were quickly overtaken by a wave of negativity. Suddenly, the evil ingenuity of vested interest and privileged mischief crept in. Rented thugs were trucked in to invade the protests bearing clubs, machetes, charms and amulets. Violence was introduced into something that started out as a peaceful protest. A window was opened for criminal gangs, hoodlums and looters to overrun the protest and dominate public spaces.

    Remarkably, the original protests were led by fairly affluent and comfortable artists, pop stars and children of the rich. The inbuilt contradictions of the class character of a society such as ours came to the forefront. With the richer youth obviously outnumbered by the poor and unemployed ones from the slums and shanty towns, the atmosphere of peace and order was overwhelmed by the roughness of rowdy hoodlums and small time criminals. Hidden grievances have come to the surface. Primordial animosities and petty envies fuelled by ethnicity have come to the surface in the pattern of looting arson and attacks in some cities. A devious political elite intent on discrediting the youth and their peaceful protest to justify a crackdown went to work.

    Social and commercial activities were interrupted while the activities of government and businesses came to a screeching halt. State after state imposed one curfew or the other. Fear and trepidation gripped the entire nation. The widespread desperate cries for justice and return to order and peace underlined one thing: Nigerians love their country but desperately yearn for it become a happier place. That is one prominent takeaway of the protests.

    In the wake of the criminal hijack of the protests, the longing for the restoration of order and peace in the land gradually became a unifying cry and hunger. Underneath it all, critical issues of history and nation being have come to the surface. Under this pressure, government descended with strong arms. A small contingent of army personnel invaded the Lekki Toll Gate protest venue and fired at protesters with live bullets. Some lives have been lost and injuries sustained by many. The world heard the staccato of gunfire interrupt the passionate renditions of the national anthem. The world also saw, in bleeding colour, the blood stained banners, our national flag, being waved by injured youth whose only crime is that they want a better Nigeria.

    At this juncture, we need to interrupt this narrative and interrogate the larger issues that have arisen. First is the responsibility of the state in a time of sudden crisis and the threat of anarchy. The imperative is to balance the protection of democratic freedoms against the need for the preservation of law and order. It is a delicate balance that demands the deployment of high statesmanship.

    The degeneration of the protests by the invasion of thugs and criminals is an elementary test in crisis management for the state. The object of state authority is to keep law and order by separating bad people from the majority of good people who deserve to be protected. The motley crowd gathered at Lekki Toll Gate on Tuesday, October 20th was a mixture of mostly genuine protesters and maybe a handful of miscreants. But the army personnel drafted to the venue probably did not bother to separate the bad people from the majority of innocents. Instead, they opened fire on the crowd with live ammunition thereby meting out the penalty of death on both the innocent and the lawless criminals. In this regard, the state failed. The most elementary law of war is for every soldier to distinguish friend from foe. It is a bad soldier that fails to make this elementary distinction.

    As the nation regains social order and takes stock of a fortnight of diverse awakenings, the telling contradictions tucked into the womb of this protest should persist in our minds. At the bottom of the conflict in the protest is a perception divide between our youth and the political and state establishment. We have an establishment manned by a political elite and a bureaucracy mired in antiquity. On the other hand, our youth have become part of the global village of Google knowledge, on- the- go communication and instant messaging. This is the world of cutting age knowledge in nearly every field of human endeavor. Because this youth bulge constitutes over 75% of our demographics, they are the bulk of our civil society whose aggregate knowledge and world view is at the cutting edge of the information technology revolution that now rules the world. The conflict between this sophisticated civil society and a moribund establishment is at the heart of the conflicts that will dog our lives for the foreseeable future. The response of the political elite as captured by President Buhari’s national broadcast last Thursday evening is the desperate cry of a threatened political establishment. The youth have inadvertently frightened an insecure political elite at a time when it is led by an anti-intellectual conservative.

    Three things should now happen if we want peace and orderly progress: First, the critical mass of the new civil society should aspire to become managers of the public space. Second, the existing establishment should retool and upgrade itself to measure up to the new age IT wave. Third, the establishment could use a strategy of massive inclusion to save itself by involving the youth and women in the public space at a level nearly commensurate with their share of our demographics, a strategy that will amount to ‘class suicide’.

    Ultimately, however, the youth spring will have to transform itself into a political force. It will need to quickly deploy the deft organizational acumen that powered the ENDSARS protest into a political machinery. It promises to be a frightening movement that will consign the present ancient parties into the dustbin of history. Only then will the anxious wait of the youth and the rest of us become a beacon of hope for the future we seek. The events of the last two weeks could define our future and the remaking of Nigeria for the good of all. It has happened elsewhere. The rise of Emmanuel Macron to the French presidency is a current example. Why not here as well?

  • #ENDSARS: Buhari shuns Lekki shootings, warns Nigerians not to mistake disbandment of SARS for weakness

    #ENDSARS: Buhari shuns Lekki shootings, warns Nigerians not to mistake disbandment of SARS for weakness

    President Muhammadu Buhari has said some Nigerians mistook as weakness, the swift response of his regime to disband the Special Anti-Robbery Squad of the Nigeria Police Force.

    Buhari who failed to address Tuesday night shooting in Lekki revealed steps he is taking on #EndSARS demands.

    He made the revelations known in a live broadcast on Thursday evening.

    The Inspector-General of Police, Mohammed Adamu, had scrapped the special police unit in the wake of the #EndSARS protests.

    Adamu had announced the Special Weapons and Tactics team as replacement for the disbanded team.

    Addressing Nigerians on Thursday, the President said, “As a democratic government, we listened to, and carefully evaluated the five-point demands of the protesters. And, having accepted them, we immediately scrapped SARS, and put measures in place to address the other demands of our youth.

    “On approving the termination of SARS, I already made it clear that it was in line with our commitment to the implementation of extensive Police reforms.

    “Sadly, the promptness with which we have acted seemed to have been misconstrued as a sign of weakness and twisted by some for their selfish unpatriotic interests.

    “The result of this is clear to all observers: human lives have been lost; acts of sexual violence have been reported; two major correctional facilities were attacked and convicts freed; public and private properties completely destroyed or vandalised; the sanctity of the Palace of a Peace Maker, the Oba of Lagos has been violated. So-called protesters have invaded an International Airport and in the process disrupted the travel plans of fellow Nigerians and our visitors.”

  • [Video] Lekki shootings visuals photoshopped, no one died – Defence spokesman, Eneche

    [Video] Lekki shootings visuals photoshopped, no one died – Defence spokesman, Eneche

    The Defence Headquarters (DHQ), Thursday, spoke on the shooting at the Lekki tollgate in Lagos State that was initially thought to have left some #EndSARS protesters dead and others wounded.

    The Coordinator Defence Media Operations, Major General John Enenche has stated that the videos showing military men shooting at protesters were all photoshopped.

    Speaking on the incident, Eneche dismissed the videos, saying they aren’t real, adding that they are all photoshopped videos.

    “I even got analysts. People that have analysed the various videos that were cropped and photoshopped put together. If not that I’m not permitted, I could have forwarded it to your Instagram”, he said.

    He added that all the reports of deaths as circulated in the media were all unsubstantiated allegations.

    Watch the video below:

  • Lekki shootings: I called Buhari twice, but he wasn’t available for talks – Sanwo-Olu

    Lekki shootings: I called Buhari twice, but he wasn’t available for talks – Sanwo-Olu

    Lagos State Governor, Babajide Sanwo-Olu on Thursday revealed that he has been unable to reach President Muhammadu Buhari to discuss the shooting of peaceful protesters at the Lekki toll gate on Tuesday evening.

    Sanwo-Olu who made the revelation during a live interview session on Arise TV on also cleared the air on controversies surrounding the removal of cameras and why ad board light was turned off.

    Asked why the cameras were removed, Sanwo-Olu answered, “The cameras removed were not security cameras, it is a laser camera for cars; it picks tags for cars and plate numbers; it is not a security camera; it is an infrared camera; security camera are still available and that is what we are using for our own investigation.

    “They did the removal because of curfew; As regards the light LCC put off the light because of the curfew order issued by Lagos State Government. I have never spoken to the owner of the company ( Tinubu’s son), I am very certain their decision was purely a corporate decision.”

    The governor who is sounds distressed also assured that footages from the CCTV cameras in Lekii will be made availabe for public viewership.

    I called Buhari Twice bt couldn’t reach him directly:

    “I made calls to the President twice yesterday, I firstly told he wasn’t in office and the second time I called, he was said to be at the FEC meeting; I haven’t spoke to him directly but I have reached the Chief of Staff to the President.

    Powers beyond Sanwo-Olu’s control?

    “I will be very careful on what I’ll say on here. There are reports I have that shows that there is more to this #EndSars protest e. There are visuals, audios that we have seen that we need to investigate deeper to get dimension and ascertain what to make out of it; I can’t do a guess work here. Regarding my speech, I was trying to explain that the hierarchy of the military are not in my command; Iam not pretending to act as if I have the power to activate or control the military…”

    He also made mentioned that seccessionist could be behind the carnage in Lagos.

    It wil be recalled that there is a statement by IPOB’s spokesman, Emma Powerful that has a link to the vadalisations that occured in Lagos after the Lekki shooting.

    The staement partly reads: “IPOB is calling on all the revolutionists to organize themselves together and bring down every property belonging to former Gov Ahmed Tinubu.

    “He can’t aid and abate the killing of peaceful protesters in Lekki and expect to enjoy his stolen wealth in peace.

     

  • Lekki tollgate shooting: Nigeria back to Abacha days – Wole Soyinka

    Lekki tollgate shooting: Nigeria back to Abacha days – Wole Soyinka

    Nobel laureate, Wole Soyinka has compared President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration to General Sani Abacha days.

    Soyinka, who said this while criticizing the shooting of unarmed End SARS demonstrators at Lekki toll gate on Tuesday, alleged that the army has replaced the notorious SARS unit.

    A statement he signed and released on Wednesday said according to his enquiry, the Governor Sanwo-Olu of Lagos state did not invite the Army, neither did he complain of a ‘breakdown in law and order’.

    He accused the federal government of acting in a dictatorial manner and has inflicted a near incurable wound on the community psyche.

    “It is absolutely essential to let this government know that the Army has now replaced SARS in the demonic album of the protesters.

    “COVID-19 has battered the Nigerian economy – such as it is – for over eight months. Of course, it is not easy to bring down COVID under a hail of bullets – human lives are easier target, and there are even trophies to flaunt as evidence of victory – such as the blood-soaked Nigerian flag that one of the victims was waving at the time of his murder.

    “All inherent beauty of instant bonding and solidarity evaporated. At the block just before the Lagos Secretariat, the protesters proved the most recalcitrant. In the end, they exacted from me just the one offering to the rites of passage – I could sense it coming — I had to come down from the car and addressed them. I did.

    “Little did they know what was churning in my mind: This is not real. This is Back to Abacha – in grotesque replay.

    Soyinka further explained that the 24-hr Curfews imposed by state government are not solutions to the issue

    ” Substitute community self-policing based on Local Councils, to curb hooligan infiltration and extortionist and destructive opportunism.”

    The literary luminary also called on the Army to apologize to not only the nation but to the global community because the facts are undeniable that they opened fire on unarmed civilians.