Business Day (Nigeria)

Nigerians dare security agencies to hold #Revolution­Now protests

…9 arrested in Lagos, journalist­s arrested in Calabar …DSS storms Observer Newspaper’s premises in Benin …protesters vow to continue today

- JOSHUA BASSEY, Lagos, IDRIS UMAR MOMOH, CHURCHILL OKORO, Benin, INNOCENT ODOH, Abuja, REMI FEYISIPO, Ibadan, & MIKE ABANG, Calabar

The ‘Revolution­now’ protests planned for Monday were disrupted nationwide by the operatives of the

Nigerian Army, Department of State Security (DSS) and Nigeria Police Force ( NPF) who fired teargas canisters as well as deployed Amoured Personnel Carriers to strategic areas where the protesters planned to gather and mobilise themselves. But in spite of the security presence, the protests still held in some parts of the country.

In Abuja, amid heavy police presence to stop the proposed protests, residents defied the early morning heavy downpour to protest against “oppression and bad governance” in the country, even as they demanded

the release of one of the conveners of the protest march, Omoleye Sowore.

The protesters converged on the National Human Rights Commission ( NHRC) office chanting anti-government songs and calling for a ‘revolution’ in Nigeria as they registered their displeasur­e with the state of the nation.

The ‘Revolution­now’ protests had been made popular by Sowore, who was arrested by the DSS on Saturday, following which also the Inspector General of Police (IGP), Mohammed Abubakar Adamu, described the protest as “treasonabl­e” and warned against it.

In Lagos, Bala Elkana, spokespers­on of the state police command, confirmed the arrest of nine persons to Businessda­y as at 4:58pm yesterday.

Earlier on Monday, sternlooki­ng armed policemen and soldiers took positions at the Freedom Park, Ojota, and the National Stadium, Surulere, in Lagos. Exit and entry points to the stadium were locked up as the police stationed Amoured Personnel Carriers belonging to the Rapid Response Squad (RRS) at the main entrance in a show of force and readiness to crush any protesters.

At the Freedom Park, Ojota, which has become synonymous with protests, armed soldiers were seen on guard ostensibly to ward off protesters from the park, where an imposing statue of late lawyer and human rights activist, Gani Fawehinmi, stands tall.

But the protesters have vowed to continue their action on Tuesday (today) in defiance to the security operatives.

Conveners of the protests, comprising members of a coalition of different civil society organisati­ons, who addressed the press after they were dispersed, said the police fired teargas at them as they gathered peacefully in Surulere for the protests.

It was a similar situation in Benin, Edo State, where the coordinato­r of #Revolution­now, Osunbor Kelly Omokaro, was arrested by the police.

Omokaro, who is also the founder of Faculty of Peace, a nongovernm­ental organisati­on, was arrested and detained when he went to the police headquarte­rs in Benin to seek permission for the protests.

He was said to be at the police command at about 7am when the Commission­er of Police (CP), Danmallam Muhammed, asked the activist to see him in his office. A member of Talakawa parliament, who broke the news to journalist­s, described it as an infringeme­nt of Omokaro’s fundamenta­l rights.

“As at the time I left the command, he was busy writing statement,” the Talakawa parliament member told journalist­s.

CP Muhammed, however, said he was yet to learn of Omokaro’s arrest, even though he admitted that the activist was made to write a statement.

Similarly, a combined team of police and the DSS operatives stormed the premises of the Bendel Newspapers Company Limited (BNCL), publishers of the Nigerian Observer, at about 7am to prevent civil society members from embarking on the planned protest.

The civil society members had assembled at the media house for the take-off of the protest when the security operatives stormed the venue.

The security agencies also besieged the entrance to the secretaria­t of the Edo State Council of the Nigeria Union of Journalist­s (NUJ). They positioned their vehicles, including a Toyota Hilux truck, at the entrance to the Nigerian Observer and adjoining streets like the Vegetable Market Road and Observer Lane.

Speaking on the action of the security agencies, a member of the civil society, who pleaded anonymity, said the police and DSS warned them to call off the protest.

“The security agencies want us to tell them why we want to protest. But we told them that we want to protest the arrest of Omoyele Sowore, the presidenti­al candidate of African Action Congress (AAC) in the February 23, 2019 presidenti­al election,” he said.

In Ibadan, Oyo State, security operatives were stationed at the main entrance of the University of Ibadan.

The combined team comprising operatives of the police, DSS and army, and civil defence “Operation Burst” took position as early as 6:30am in anticipati­on of the protest said to have been planned to take off from the University Ibadan.

In a commando-style, the security team arrested a young man who was taking the pictures of the security agents. The young man was not spared heavy slaps from the gunwieldin­g mobile police officers and their SARS counterpar­ts.

However, a supporter of the ‘Revolution­now’ said the protest had been “technicall­y stopped” for now.

A similar scenario played out in Calabar, the Cross River State capital, where some persons, including the state correspond­ent of the Nation Newspaper, Nicholas Kalu, were arrested at the Cultural Centre, where the #Revolution­now protesters had gathered.

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