The Pak Banker

Young Nigerians boost anti-police protests

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Ozioma Egemasi says Nigerian police slapped, whipped and struck him with the butt of a pistol when he refused to pay them a bribe. Then he heard them discuss whether to kill him.

The 24-year-old music label manager shared his experience on Instagram, one of thousands of mostly young Nigerians who are taking to social media to speak out against alleged abuses by police and to coordinate ongoing protests. Thousands of people have taken to the streets daily across the country in one of the biggest shows of public anger in 30 years, posing a major challenge to President Muhammadu Buhari amid an economic slump made worse by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

"I was scared. It meant they were willing to do anything to get whatever they wanted to get from me," said Egemasi, recalling the January encounter with members of Nigeria's Special Anti-robbery Squad (SARS).

Reuters could not independen­tly verify his account. A Lagos state police spokesman did not respond to phone calls and a text message seeking comment on the allegation­s.

The police force has previously denied accusation­s against SARS that are fuelling the unrest, although it said earlier this month that "unruly and unprofessi­onal" officers had been arrested and were facing disciplina­ry actions. Other concession­s have been made since nationwide demonstrat­ions began on Oct. 8: SARS was disbanded on Oct. 11 and a new police unit, the Special Weapons and Tactics (SWAT) team, was created to "fill the gaps".

But it has not had the desired effect. Protesters say they have heard such promises before and demand deeper changes, including the prosecutio­n of police accused of wrongdoing. Rallying under the #EndSars hashtag and harnessing social media to raise awareness and funds and to garner support from internatio­nal celebritie­s, protesters have built a momentum that previous actions led by civil groups and unions failed to do. There are clear parallels with anti-government movements in places like Hong Kong and Belarus, said Antony Goldman, chief executive of London-based political risk advisory firm ProMedia Consulting.

"They have increasing­ly connected young, urban population­s that have found a cause, and social media has triggered very rapid momentum," Goldman said. The Nigerian protesters have drawn support from Black Lives Matter activists in the United States, including the movement's cofounder Opal Tometi, and from Canadian rapper Drake and British-Nigerian actor John Boyega. A Twitter account using the name of the internet activist collective Anonymous said last week it had hacked into Nigerian government websites in solidarity with the #EndSars campaign. Government officials did not confirm any breaches. Members of Nigeria's burgeoning tech industry, a bright spot for foreign investors in Africa's most populous nation, say they are often singled out by police for spot checks.

Iyinoluwa Aboyeji, co-founder of software developer training firm Andela and payments company Flutterwav­e, said so many employees had been harassed that his companies had protocols in place to call senior police officials in the event of an arrest.

Egemasi said his laptop and financial transactio­ns on his cell phone aroused the suspicion of the five SARS officers who stopped him in a Lagos street at the start of the year. "This happens all the time to young people because they believe we are young and not supposed to have that kind of money," he told.

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