Nigerians stage fresh protests over police brutality
Thousands of Nigerians took to the streets in a
string of cities once again Tuesday for fresh protests against police
brutality, bringing roads to a standstill in economic hub Lagos.
Demonstrations organised on social media erupted
earlier this month calling for the abolition of a notorious police unit accused
of unlawful arrests, torture and extra-judicial killings.
The government gave in to the demand on Sunday,
announcing that the federal Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS) was being
disbanded in a rare concession to people power in Africa's most populous
nation.
President Muhammadu Buhari insisted that move was
the first step in "extensive police reforms".
But many have greeted the announcements with
scepticism after previous vows to improve Nigeria's notorious police went
unfulfilled, and protesters are in the streets to keep up the pressure.
The demonstrations have largely been peaceful, but
violence has flared in the face of heavy-handed police tactics.
Authorities said a police officer and civilian were
killed during protests in Lagos on Monday, bringing the overall nationwide
death toll to at least five since last week.
Some of Nigeria's most celebrated stars have thrown
their weight -- and considerable followings -- behind the protests.
Afropop duo P-Square and rapper Falz were leading
the movement on Tuesday in Lekki, a neighbourhood of Lagos, where several
thousand people blocked a major highway.
Protesters have called for an independent body to
investigate police abuse, according to a list of demands widely spread on
social media.
But the demonstrations are also channelling anger
among the youth over unemployment, economic mismanagement, poverty and
corruption in the oil-rich nation.
"They need to rebuild everything. They need to
protect us not kill us. But it's not only about SARS anymore," David
Adedeji, a 26-year-old international relations student, told AFP.
"Government needs to start providing for the
youth. We need roads, health facility, power."
Protesters also hit the streets in the capital
Abuja, in Oyo and Ondo states, and Port Harcourt, capital of the oil-producing
region.
Nigeria's police chief on Tuesday sat down with
civil society activists at a meeting convened by the presidency and agreed to
demands including stopping the use of force against protesters.
Analyst Confidence MacHarry from Lagos-based
research consultancy SBM Intelligence said ire at abuses runs through all
sections of Nigerian society.
"Police brutality is a common theme that
resonates between the elites and the common man," she said.
Now that grievance is being fuelled by an economic
downturn caused by the coronavirus pandemic and the fall in oil prices.
"Unemployment has jumped significantly, so the
economic situation is a trigger," MacHarry said.
"Economic discontent feeds into this resentment
against rising police brutality."



