News
69 Lives Lost To #EndSARS Protests, Buhari Admits
President Muhammadu Buhari has admitted that, at least, 69 people were killed in the protests against police brutality that have rocked the country.
The deaths were mainly civilians but include police officers and soldiers.
The president announced the toll in an emergency meeting with former Nigerian leaders aimed at finding ways to end the unrest, his spokesman, Femi Adesina, told the BBC, last Saturday.
A group that has been key in organising the demonstrations, the Feminist Coalition, at the weekend, urged aggrieved youths to stop the protests, and stay at home.
The Feminist Coalition also advised people to comply with any curfews put in place in their states.
The protests have drastically subsided but an uneasy calm remains in several cities.
Officials said the curfew introduced in Lagos State would be eased.
The protests in Nigeria began on October 7, with mostly young people demanding the scrapping of a notorious police unit, the Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS).
The unit was dissolved days later, but the protests continued, demanding broader reforms in the way Nigeria was governed.
They escalated after a shooting in the nation’s biggest city, Lagos, last Tuesday, which rights group, Amnesty International, says security forces killed, at least, 12 people.
Nigerian Army has denied any involvement in the shootings.
At Friday’s meeting, Buhari, 77, said his administration was committed to meeting the demands of the protesters.
But he said his government would not fold its arms and allow criminals who had hijacked the protests to continue to perpetrate “hooliganism”.
The president told the meeting that 51 civilians, 11 police officers and seven soldiers had been killed in the unrest, his spokesperson said.
It was not immediately clear whether these figures included the protesters allegedly killed by security forces in Lagos, last Tuesday.
The president previously made a short televised address in which he urged protesters to stop demonstrating and instead engage with the government “in finding solutions”.
He faced criticism for not mentioning the Lagos shootings.
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