Saturday, May 18, 2024
HomePoliticsBuhari To Announce New Plans to Appease Nigerian Protesters

Buhari To Announce New Plans to Appease Nigerian Protesters

Buharii

President Muhammadu Buhari will announce new measures on Thursday to address the grievances of youths who’ve staged mass protests against police brutality that have cast Africa’s most populous nation into turmoil.

Buhari will deliver a televised address at 7 p.m. local time, following an earlier briefing with security chiefs, his office said in an emailed statement. The president has so far largely remained silent through the crisis, mainly using aides and statements to deliver his response to demands for reforms, despite the demonstrators’ insistence that he address them directly.

The protests, which erupted on Oct. 5 and have spread to about half of Nigeria’s 36 states, pose the most serious challenge yet to Buhari’s authority and have dealt another blow to an economy that was already reeling from the coronavirus. While human rights group Amnesty International tallies show at least 56 people have been killed in protest-related violence, the government hasn’t announced a death toll.

Burhari is expected to “come up with certain solutions that will be agreeable to the entire federation” Babagana Monguno, the national security adviser, told reporters on Thursday in Abuja, the capital.

The protests have disrupted commerce in Lagos, Nigeria’s commercial hub, and prompted the state government to impose a 24-hour curfew. Violence peaked on Oct. 20 when about 38 people died, including 12 who were killed after security forces opened fire on protesters who’d gathered at two sites in Lagos, in defiance of the lockdown, Amnesty said, citing witnesses.

While the Nigerian army’s Twitter page labeled reports that troops had fired on protesters as “fake news,” Lago governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu said he’s ordered a probe into the conduct of the military, which falls under the federal government’s control. He’s confirmed that two persons died of their injuries.

The streets of Lagos and Abuja, the capital, were largely devoid of protesters on Thursday, and demonstrations in the oil-producing Rivers and Delta states that erupted on Wednesday also appeared to have died down. At least 10 states have imposed curfews.

 

SourceBuhari
- Advertisment -spot_img
- Advertisment -spot_img

Most Popular

Recent Comments