Tag: Protest

  • Photo: Anthony Joshua injures knee, joins #BlackLivesMatter protest on crutches

    Photo: Anthony Joshua injures knee, joins #BlackLivesMatter protest on crutches

    Anthony Joshua was captured hobbling on crutches as he joined the Black Lives Matter movement.

    Wearing a black hoodie with the movement’s name on the front, the WBA, WBO, and IBF world champion joined hundreds of others on the peaceful protest on Saturday afternoon.

    The protest held in his hometown of Watford.

    At one stage, the heavyweight champion, who walked with crutches and wore a leg brace as he recovers from a training injury, addressed those gathered over a microphone.

    Speaking on his injury Joshua’s spokesperson confirmed to Sportsmail that the injury is not serious.

    He said: ‘Anthony felt a slight twinge in his knee whilst training. The brace Is a precautionary measure on the advise of physios. It will be further checked by his doctors but there is no immediate concern.’

  • Photos: Protests rock Lagos, Abuja over rising rape cases, sexual assault against women, girls

    Photos: Protests rock Lagos, Abuja over rising rape cases, sexual assault against women, girls

    Group of protesters on Friday stormed the Nigeria Police Force Headquarters in Abuja, and police command in Lagos to protest the rising spate of rape, sexual violence, assault against women, incest in the country.

    Unanimously, they demanded that there should be declaration of state-of-emergency on gender-based violence in the country.

    The protesters who demanded justice for the rape and killing of Miss Vera Uwaila Omozuwa, Miss Bello Barakat and other victims in the country, called on the police and other security agencies to devise effective strategies to checkmate the rising cases of sexual assault in Nigeria.

    The protest which was organised by TechHerNG, Girl Child Africa, Connected Development, EiE Nigeria, Stand To End Rape, SilverChipFox, Yiaga Africa, Dorothy Njemanze Foundation, and Education as a Vaccine, urged authorities in Nigeria to force systemic action against Sexual and Gender-based Violence (SGBV) in Nigeria.

    In statement released by the organisers, it explained a that a memo will be forwarded to the Nigerian Governors’ Forum and the Federal Executive Council calling for an effective and sustained institutional response to SGBV in Nigeria.

    Some of their key demands listed in the statement were: “Domestication of the Violence Against Persons Prohibition (VAPP) Act and Child Rights Act in all states of the federation; Establishment of Sexual Assault Referral Centers (SARC) in every state, backed with a coordinated, sustainably-funded support system;

    “Criminalisation and prompt state-led prosecution of SGBV cases within, regardless of requests or interference by the victim’s family or interested parties; Implementation of functional Family Support Units and Force Gender Units at the state level that are well equipped to address SGBV cases; The imposition of public disciplinary measures against officials of the NPF and state prosecutors that mishandle cases of SGBV.

  • JUST IN: Motorcyclists protest alleged killing of colleague by police in Lagos

    Motorcycle riders popularly called okada are presently protesting the death of their colleague alleged to have been shot dead by a policeman on Thursday night.

    According to reports, the irate motorcyclists are said to be vandalising properties in Ojo while cops are shooting and firing teargas to scare them.

    Reports also said the protest is becoming violent and soldiers at Ojo Barracks located just opposite the crisis location are said not to have taking any action to repel them.

    Details shortly…

  • I don’t feel safe in USA – Onuoha

    I don’t feel safe in USA – Onuoha

    Former Manchester City defender Nedum Onuoha says he does not feel “100% safe” in the USA.

    Onuoha plays for Utah-based Real Salt Lake in Major League Soccer after spending six years at QPR.

    “I am always very wary of how I behave and how it could be viewed by people who have power,” Onuoha, 33, told BBC Radio 5 Live.

    “For me personally, overall I don’t like to say it but I have a fear and distrust towards police.”

  • #Blacklivesmatter: Hundreds of protesters storm US Embassy in Abuja over killing of George Floyd

    #Blacklivesmatter: Hundreds of protesters storm US Embassy in Abuja over killing of George Floyd

    Hundreds of protesters yesterday, besieged the United States of America embassy located in the Central Business District of Abuja to express their displesure over the recent and barbaric killings of George Floyd and several others black persons in the US.

    The protesters under the aegis of the Centre for Africa Liberation and Socio-Economic Rights, CALSER said the gathering is not only for the display of physical rage as a result of the indiscriminate killing of black people in the United States of America by agents of the state but a display of emotional and mental rage.

    The group said it we would no longer watch how its brothers and sisters to be subjected to all manners of ill-treatment by law enforcement officers in the United States of America.

    Led by its convener, Princess Ajibola, CALSER said the death of George Floyd is an act of barbarism that is being spearheaded by the white supremacists in the United States of America because Black Lives doesn’t matter to them.

    “But we say Black Lives indeed matters”the group said

    Princess Ajibola said, “The Centre for Africa Liberation and Socio-Economic Rights have in numerous forums stated that it is indeed time for the blacks and Africans to take their destinies into their hands if we must survive the fangs of the whites whose desire is to see to the extinction of the entire black race in the world.

    “This is over 50 years down the line when the Late Martin Luther King spoke about the emancipation of blacks in the United States of America. Yet, the very issues he canvassed are still present in the United States of America.

    “We are not unmindful that some of us have come here out of great trials and tribulation. Some of us have come fresh from narrow jail cells. Some of you have come from where our quest for freedom left us battered by the storms of persecution and staggered by the winds of police brutality. You have been the veterans of creative suffering.

    “These words of Martin Luther King reverberate till date in the United States of America and other western climes. And the question is, should we suffer untold hardship and persecution just because of the colour of our skin?

    Should our children, brothers, sisters, fathers and mothers continue to be killed because we are blacks? We are gathered here to register our displeasure with the happenings in the United States of America where Black lives do not matter”she added

    The group wants the Ambassador of the United States of America in Nigeria to convey its message to President Donald Trump.

    “Our message is simple. Black Lives Matter and racial discrimination must stop in the interest of peace, unity and progress. If this does not stop Africans must take their destinies into their hands and fight for their rights because according to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, we are all born free. We all have our thoughts and ideas, and we should all be treated the same way.

    “The rights in the UDHR belong to everyone, no matter who we are, where we’re from, or whatever we believe. We all have the right to life and to live in freedom and safety. No one should be held as a slave, and no one has the right to treat anyone else as their slave.

    “No one has the right to inflict torture or to subject anyone else to cruel or inhuman treatment. Nobody has the right to enter our home, open our mail, or intrude on our families without good reason. We also have the right to be protected if someone tries to damage our reputation unfairly.

    Everyone has the freedom to think or believe what they want, including the right to religious belief. We have the right to change our beliefs or religion at any time, and the right to publicly or privately practise our chosen religion, alone or with others.

  • Racial killings in US: Protest spreads to Nigeria…Lagosians defy rain, march in solidarity with blacks

    Racial killings in US: Protest spreads to Nigeria…Lagosians defy rain, march in solidarity with blacks

    With the gruesome murder of an African-American by a ‘white’ cop still causing widespread outrage across the world, some Nigerians in Lagos, on Monday, staged a walk in condemnation of the dastardly act.

    The Black Lives Matter Movement in Nigeria (BLMMN), stormed the streets of Nigeria’s commercial capital despite the heavy downpour, in total condemnation of the indiscriminate killing of coloured people in the United States of America.

    George Floyd died on May 25th after Derek Chauvin, then an officer with the Minneapolis Police Department, pressed his knee into his neck for nearly nine minutes.

    On May 29th Mr Chauvin was arrested and charged with third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter.

    However, African-Americans and other sympathizers worldwide are demanding an end to the killings which is gradually becoming a regular occurrence in the US.

    Speaking on behalf of the group, convener, Josephine Okpara said an end must be put to “white supremacy and build local power to intervene in violence inflicted on black communities by the state and vigilantes”.

    Madam Okpara expressed disgust at the manner blacks are being dehumanised, describing it as “ uncharitable and a gross disservice to our intellectual sense of existence in the world”.

    According to her, the killing of Floyd is another grim example of how black lives have been disregarded by the state and their affiliates.

    The Black Lives Matter Movement in Nigeria, therefore, expressed total solidarity with the global community in condemnation of the indiscriminate killing of black people.

    Okpara said that their thoughts and prayers are with the families of those that have lost their lives by the shenanigans of the US government who have failed address this menace that has indeed put black people all over the United States of America at risk.

    On behalf of the group, she, however, urged President Donald Trump and everyone in government to take up the challenge of making “ Black Lives Matter now and forever in the US”.

  • Unrest grips dozens of U.S. cities as Police, protesters clash

    Unrest grips dozens of U.S. cities as Police, protesters clash

    Dozens of cities in the United States were seeing fiery clashes between the Police and protesters continue as the killing of George Floyd sparked massive unrest throughout the country.

    In Minneapolis, where the African-American man died in police custody earlier this week, thousands of national guard soldiers were patrolling the streets on Saturday night and quickly cracked down on violent protests.

    Meanwhile, violent outrage spread from the mid-western city to the entire country as people looted trendy stores in Los Angeles and set fire to a courthouse in Nashville, Tennessee.

    In New York, video showed a police cruiser apparently ploughing through protesters, who started to surround the vehicle and attack it.

    “It’s clear that a different element has come into play here who are trying to hurt police officers and trying to damage their vehicles,’’ Mayor Bill de Blasio said in a press conference in regards to the incident.

    It is “absolutely impossible situation’’ and the police officer needed to escape, de Blasio said.

    Three people were also charged in the city with “using and attempting to use’’ molotov cocktails to “damage New York City Police Department (NYPD) vehicles,’’ the U.S. Attorney’s Office of New York’s Eastern District of New York, said.

    Curfews were across the U.S. on Saturday night, affecting millions of people including in Los Angeles, Miami, Chicago and other major cities, as authorities attempted to squash the growing chaos.

    In Minnesota, Gov. Tim Walz had warned that Minneapolis residents should expect more violence on Saturday night, the fifth night straight that the city saw unrest.

    Walz called on locals to stay home so authorities can remove what he contends are outside agitators, looking to sow “terror and destruction’’.

    “These are not our neighbours,’’ Walz said during a press conference.

    “Minnesotans you must stay in place tonight.’’

    Minneapolis Mayor, Jacob Frey, also claimed that the violent protests were being caused by people who “are not Minneapolis residents’’.

    The outpouring of rage across the U.S. has forced yet another reckoning about police treatment of African-Americans in the country, as authorities struggle to provide an outlet for the anger while attempting to quell unrest.

    President Donald Trump has taken a highly partisan tone calling for a tougher crackdown on protesters and accusing them of being “radical-left criminals”.

    He said Antifa – a loose network of people that often promote militant anarchism – are behind the unrest that was sparked by Floyd’s death.

    “My administration will stop mob violence and will stop it cold,’’ Trump said, adding that the federal government is coordinating with local authorities across the nation, as the response becomes increasingly militarised.

    After a night of unrest on Friday, largely peaceful protests took over streets in major cities throughout the country during daytime hours of Saturday, including in New Jersey’s Newark and Pennsylvania’s Philadelphia, among others.

    Protesters held signs saying “Black Lives Matter” and chanted “I can’t breathe”, among Floyd’s last words.

    As the day progressed, many of the demonstrations morphed into clashes, filled with burning dumpsters, tear gas and rubber bullets.

    “I’m asking all of Los Angeles to take a deep breath and to step back, for a moment,’’ Mayor Eric Garcetti said, who called in 500 National Guard soldiers to assist his city.

    Minnesota’s Walz ordered a full mobilisation of National Guard soldiers on Saturday, the first time in the state’s history.

    “It will be a dangerous situation on the streets tonight,’’ he added.

    The governors of Utah and Texas also activated the National Guard to help control the escalating situation.

    “We were confronted with tens of thousands of rioters,’’ said John Harrington, Head of Minnesota’s Public Safety.

    “Literally, there are 5,000 of them surrounding a building, trashing the building.’’

    Minnesota authorities also consulted with the U.S. Secretary of Defence, Mark Esper, to seek further “national-level” resources.

    Joe Biden, the former vice president and presumptive nominee of the Democratic Party to run against Trump in November elections, condemned the violence in an opinion piece published by Medium in the early hours of Sunday.

    “The act of protesting should never be allowed to overshadow the reason we protest.

    “It should not drive people away from the just cause that protest is meant to advance,’’ Biden wrote.

    The volatile protests came nearly immediately after video surfaced on Tuesday of a white police officer kneeling on Floyd’s neck for minutes as he pleads “I can’t breathe”.

    The 46-year-old eventually lost consciousness and his limp body was loaded onto an ambulance stretcher.

    Floyd was pronounced dead shortly after the incident.

    Police say they suspected Floyd of attempting to pass a forged 20-dollar bill at a local store.

    The officer, who kneeled on Floyd, Derek Chauvin, was charged with murder on Friday.

    However, his relatively quick indictment did not subdue anger, which African-American activists say has been brewing due to generations of police brutality.

    Meanwhile, lawyers for Floyd’s family said that they want an independent autopsy after the county coroner raised doubts about suffocation as the cause of death.

  • Photo: UNIMED doctors protest non-payment of salaries, threaten strike

    Photo: UNIMED doctors protest non-payment of salaries, threaten strike

    Association of Resident Doctors (ARD) at the University of Medical Sciences (UNIMED) Teaching Hospital Ondo, on Friday staged a peaceful protest over non-payment of five-month salaries

    The doctors threatened to embark on indefinite strike action if their salaries are not paid within one week.

    They said some arrears in 2019 were yet to be paid.

    The resident doctors in January protested non- payment of six months salaries after which they embarked on an indefinite strike action.

    Acting President of ARD, UNIMED branch, Dr. Shittu Abiola, said they suspended the strike action despite victimisation and arrears left unpaid.

    Abiola said they resume duties in the interest of the patients and promise that the arrears would be paid as soon as possible.

    He said it was pathetic and unfortunate that the arrears have not been paid but that they were only paid one month salary.

    According to him: “The sorry situation has plunged us and our families into severe hardship and humiliation.

    “In order to avert a repeat of what happened in January, we hav had wide consultations in form of letters and meetings to and with bothboir management and government representatives to hear our peculair situation and do the needful but to no avail.

    “As determined committed and resolute as we have been in the fight against COVID-19 pandemic as frontline healthcare workers in the state in accordance with the state government’s plan to not only cut the chain of transmission but ensure that everyone in the state has access to quality healthcare.

    “We will unfortunately not be able to continue to provide this much needed service beyond May 15th for the obvious reason that we would have totally run out of every means to continue to do so.

    “We care about our patients and the Ondo people but no one seems to care about us or our families. We will be willing to return to work when our demands such as full payment of all we are owed including our January salary shortfall.”

    Chief Medical Director of UNIMED, Dr. Oluwole Ige, said talks were on with protesting doctors to avert the strike action.

  • Trouble in Northern Nigeria (Video): Protesters dare Covid-19, storm Gombe Isolation Center, demand release of patients

    Trouble in Northern Nigeria (Video): Protesters dare Covid-19, storm Gombe Isolation Center, demand release of patients

    Protest against Covid-19 in Gombe – Despite the increasing numbers of Covid-19 cases in Nigeria, the poor awareness at the grassroots has continued to mar the battle against the deadly virus in the country.

    In Gombe State, a video has captured the stark display of a dangerous trend in northern Nigeria where people are yet to believe in the existence of Coronavirus.

    As seen in a footage obtained by TheNewsGuru (TNG), hundreds of protesters invaded the Gombe State Infectious Disease Hospital in Kwando and were poised to set Covid-19 patients free while describing the response by the state government to the coronavirus pandemic as a process to siphon state’s funds.

    According to the voices of the protesters in the video (Most spoke in Hausa language), TNG after interpreting, learnt that the protesters were demanding for the release of some persons in the Isolation Centre – labeling the whole activities by the government on Covid-19 as another scheme to embezzle state’s funds.

    One of the protesters stated that about 52 persons, majorly travelers were kept in the Isolation Centre without food and care but the state government alleged that it spent over N10m naira on each patient.

    Watch video:

  • Tragedy: Police kill two in Anambra for protesting against lockdown order

    The Police in Anambra have confirmed killing of two boys at Nkpor near Onitsha during a protest by irate youth over arrest of some of their members for flouting the lockdown.

    The incident that recorded two casualties including a 20 year-old man occurred at New Tyre Market, Nkpor near Onitsha on Wednesday.

    The killing of the yet to be identified boys by the police resulted in a protest by some irate youths, who burnt tyres on the road.

    The Police Public Relations Officer in the state, Mr Haruna Mohammed, who confirmed the incident, attributed the killings to an unprovoked attack on police patrol team by some miscreants.

    “It was caused by an unprovoked attack on police patrol team with substance suspected to be acid by some miscreants.

    “Yes, they snatched the rifle of the police man after pouring acid on him, which prompted the other policemen to use force and retrieve the AK 47 rifle.

    “Meanwhile, efforts are ongoing to restore sanity in the area,” he said.

    Mohammed added that the state Commissioner of Police, Mr John Abang had ordered a discreet investigation into the incident.

    An eyewitness however, told NAN that the incident occurred at Ezego Str., Nkpor near Onitsha around 1:00p.m on Wednesday.

    The source said some officials of the Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS), who were relaxing at a shop near the scene of incident, accosted the boys for flouting the lockdown.

    “The boys were actually playing ball across the road and decided to buy sachet water when the police officers saw them and wanted to arrest them.

    “But they firmly resisted the arrest, which provoked the shooting by the police officers,” the source said.

    NAN gathered that the shooting got youths around the area angry and they mobilised against the police officers, burning vehicle tyres in protest.

    “One of the boys, who was shot at the stomach did not die immediately but was rushed to the hospital. He did not survive,” another source hinted.