Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Looters raid food warehouse

Videos on social media showed thousands of people in Jos carrying away sacks of cereals and rice and bags of pasta

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JOS, Nigeria (AFP) — Several thousand people ransacked and looted a government food warehouse in central Nigeria on Saturday in the latest in two weeks of unrest sweeping over Africa’s most populous country.

After pillaging hit Lagos and Ede in the country’s southwest, crowds of people raided a huge warehouse in Jos that was storing supplies destined for distributi­on during lockdowns imposed to control the virus pandemic.

Videos on social media showed thousands of people in Jos carrying away sacks of cereals and rice and bags of pasta. Looters stripped away parts of the roof of the building.

“So during the lockdown they were just hiding the food. I wonder about the kind of government we have,” said Mafeg Pam, who lives in Jos. “Many people have died from hunger.”

Another Jos resident, Mohammed Ibrahim, said: “They hid this food since the lockdown. By now they should have shared it.”

Relative calm prevailed Saturday in Lagos however, where a strict curfew imposed on Tuesday in Africa’s biggest city was eased as a week of violence also subsided.

Peaceful demonstrat­ions against police brutality erupted in Nigeria on 8 October and quickly spiralled into one of the biggest challenges to the ruling elite in decades.

Police stations had been burnt, supermarke­ts looted and vehicles destroyed as violence spread across the economic hub of 20 million, with officials accusing “hoodlums” of taking advantage of the mayhem.

Amnesty Internatio­nal has said at least 12 protesters were gunned down by the army and police in Lagos on Tuesday, and a total of 56 people have died since the demonstrat­ions began.

Nigeria’s President Muhammadu Buhari has called for an end to the protests and warned demonstrat­ors not to “undermine national security.”

He has not directly addressed the shooting of protesters in Lagos and sought to shrug off internatio­nal outrage over the use of excessive force by his security agencies.

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