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#EndSARS: Hoodlums hijack Benin protest, free prisoners, Obaseki imposes curfew

REPORTS from Benin City, Edo State capital have indicated that some suspected hoodlums hijacked the ongoing #ENDSARS protest in the city, attacked the Maximum Prison yard along Sapele road, and freed some inmates.

Videos from the incident which surfaced on the social media Monday morning showed how the inmates were escaping through the prison yard’s fence.

Crusoe Osagie, Special Adviser on Media to Godwin Obaseki, Governor of Edo State, confirmed to newsmen that the hoodlums engaged in guns battle with security operatives at the prison.

“The hoodlums are currently exchanging fire with the security personnel at the Maximum security prison in Oko, Benin City,” Osagie said.

Three police stations were reported to have been burnt by the hoodlums.

Some of the police stations affected include the Ugbekun and Idogbo Police stations in Ikpoba Okha Local Government Area of the state.

Meanwhile, Governor Obaseki in a statement by Osarodion Ogie, Secretary to the State Government, has imposed a 24-hour curfew beginning from 4 pm Monday in the state following the incident.

“The Edo State Government hereby imposes a 24-hour curfew across the state till further notice. The curfew is to take effect from 4pm, today, October 19, 2020,” Ogie said.

“This decision has become necessary because of the very disturbing incidents of vandalism and attacks on private individuals and institutions by hoodlums in the guise of #EndSARS protesters.”

“While the government of Edo State respects the rights of its citizens to undertake legitimate protests, it cannot sit idly when hoodlums have taken laws into their hands to cause mayhem on innocent citizens and the state.” 

By the directive, Ogie said schools and businesses were to shut down activities accordingly adding that those who cannot move safely were to stay put between now and 4pm till calmness was restored.

“Parents are advised to rein in their children, youths and wards, to forestall further breakdown of law and order,” he added.

“The responsibility of government is to protect lives and property and maintain law and order, therefore, anyone found outside in violation of the curfew would be dealt with according to the law.”

Since it started, the #ENDSARS protest which has lasted over a week has gained international recognition.

Jack Dorsey, founder, and CEO of Twitter tweeted on Wednesday in support of the #EndSARS movement and also shared a link soliciting financial donations for the protest

Mohammed Adamu, the Inspector General of Police (IGP) had in response to the continuous protest to end police excesses and brutality in the country announced the disbandment of the dreaded police unit.

Also, President Muhammadu Buhari had  issued a directive, calling for a reform of the Police Force.

However, the protests have continued, with the protesters demanding immediate actions from the government and issuing a five-point demand which includes the release of all persons arrested and justice for victims of police brutality.

Other demands are “setting up an independent body to oversee the investigation and prosecution of all reports of police misconduct (within 10 days), psychological evaluation of all disbanded SARS officers before they can be redeployed, and increase in police salary so that they can be adequately compensated for protecting lives and property of citizens.”

 

My brutal encounter with the police

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By Gimba KAKANDA


“YOU are lucky it’s not yet night,” said M. B. Shehu, a dark-skinned mobile police officer.

He was scar-faced and lanky. A one-star Assistant Superintendent of Police, he was probably younger than me but that meant nothing. My companion and I got what he meant because, earlier, the savages he supervised had assaulted us and boasted that they would’ve killed and erased every trace of our existence if they had caught us in the dark.

“I don’t even care,” he said about the possibility of our murder. “I will waste you right here and nothing will happen.” He spoke confidently, as if he had the mastery of “disappearing” citizens, which, in a deadly irony, instigated the #EndSARS protests I had just attended in Abuja.

A few minutes earlier, surrounded by a number of savages Nigeria had granted the permission to bear guns, I wasn’t too sure of seeing the next minute. They hit us with sticks, as though anticipating “self-defence” to justify the use of a more lethal weapon.

Our nightmare had begun on the way to Louis Edet House, the Nigerian Police Force headquarters. Our #EndSARS procession was intercepted by projectiles of teargas canisters and truck-mounted water cannons, with battle-ready brutes marching to confront us. They looked like villainous extras in a Rambo movie. Even the protesters who rushed to lie flat in resistance had had to move when they realised the trucks had the same sense of humanity as their owners. Not even the journalists covering the protests were spared.

About an hour later, I called a police officer friend at the Complaint Response Unit in Louis Edet and informed him that cars belonging to journalists and some protesters were parked at Ralph Shodeinde Street in the city’s Central Business District, and he offered to speak to the rank-and-file who had blocked all roads leading to Louis Edet.

The officers at the first check-point obeyed the instructions of their superior on the phone and let us through. When we got to our cars, we found them vandalized. My car was dented and three of my tyres slashed. We were then ambushed by the police officers responsible.

The officers were deaf to our explanation that we were authorized by their colleagues a check-point away. I called my friend again and passed the phone to the officers. They collected my phone and smashed it. They struck it repeatedly until it was scattered, with their superior still on the line.

Sani Inuwa, one of my companions, fled in the car that brought us there as the brutes cornered Ibrahim Usman (aka Morocco) and me. “So na una make them ban SARS?” they said. They began to hit us from all angles. I attempted to show an ID card to prove an affiliation to the media, hoping that would stop them. But it only drew their ire. “Na una we dey look for sef,” one said. At that point, I knew I was in trouble. We were in a barricaded area with no civilian witness, and as I blocked the multiple hits with my arms, I lost the endurance to keep up.

Suddenly, they stopped. One of their colleagues was approaching us and had issued an instruction. He wasn’t in a uniform. They agreed to send us to the Louis Edet House for torture, and then hand us over to the Special Anti-Robbery Squad, the same unit that had been announced as disbanded, threatening that we must feel the aggression of that brutal sect before they finally close shop.

When we met ASP Shehu on our way to their torture chamber, he said, “Why didn’t you go to the SARS office to protest?” As Morocco attempted to say it’s because Louis Edet House is the highest authority of the police, they descended on him, slapping, kicking, and hitting again and again.

I had learned long ago that provoking these brutes in an isolated area is Russian roulette. So, throughout the encounter, I refused to be offensive, refused to take their bait, refused to fight back, and even refused to resist arrest. I was lucky that Inuwa, at least, had fled and must have informed our colleagues and other people that we were with the Police.

When we got into the Louis Edet premises, there was an instant disapproval of our dehumanizing treatment from a lone voice. He was also a mobile police officer and bore the tag “Ibe King N.” He asked us to be brought to an office instead of the proposed torture chamber. The junior officers had not only broken my phone, they had also broken one of Morocco’s phones and his Apple wristwatch. Luckily, Morocco had hidden a second phone.

The plain-clothed officer, who was probably from the intelligence unit of the police, confiscated Morocco’s WiFi device, saying it’s a recording device. We were searched and made to submit all we had on King’s desk. They made me remove my prescription glasses, which, in their stone-age thinking, was worn for fashion. I complied.

King, a two-star ASP, left the room and spoke to the officers who arrested us. He returned and asked us to sit on the bench. He was the first to allow us to introduce ourselves—to listen to us at all. He was alarmed that we had been profiled and presented as criminals. He gave us our wares.

“I would’ve let you go right now,” he said. “But these guys outside are still going to manhandle you.”

Meanwhile, Aisha Yesufu, Maureen Kabrik, and Florence Ozor, fellow protesters who had been alerted by Sani, called Dr. Oby Ezekwesili, the former Minister of Education and a long-standing soul of Nigeria. She was ill but came to Louis Edet for our sake. Strangely, King’s decision to release us wasn’t a consensus because Auntie Oby was told we were not in police custody and not in the building. She protested and insisted the police must produce her “two sons”. They knew her well enough to know she wasn’t bluffing.

King left the room again to find out the reason for the altercation outside and then returned to ask us to come with him. His colleagues, who had lied that we weren’t in their custody, were visibly disappointed that he brought us out and handed us over to our rescuers.

Our crime, unfortunately, was choosing to abide by the law in demonstrating disappointment in the system that arms this breed of animals and expects civilised engagements with the public. We were powerless. We are powerless because we didn’t pick up arms against the state. These government-sponsored thugs who dehumanized us are strangely incapable of doing the same to the citizens who’ve chosen arms and function as invincible in armed robbery, banditry, kidnapping and terrorism.

The formula applied in our brutalization has radicalized various generations of Nigerians and has contributed to the making of the Boko Haram. But this encounter has also renewed my faith in Nigeria. Our “death warrant” was signed by ASP Shehu, whose full name is Mala Baba Shehu, a fellow Muslim and northerner who, as I’ve found out, is from Borno state—the same state as Morocco. But the warrant was voided by a Christian and Southerner—ASP King.

But that is insufficient. Privileges and connections can only go so far in situations like this: Because even if I had the Inspector-General of the Police on the phone with me that day, it would have meant nothing, absolutely nothing to those savages endorsed by the Nigerian state.

Originally published by Daily  Trust

In less than an hour, #EndSARS protesters raise over N1 million for lady with no limb

NIGERIAN #EndSARS protestors have in less than an hour donated over N1 million for a young lady identified as Jane Obiene, who marched out with one limb, to demand an end to police brutality in the country.

Good fortune found Obiene when she stepped out bearing crutches as she joined hundreds of Nigerians in Abuja, to protest against the brutality that has characterized the operations of officers of the disbanded Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS).

A photo of Obiene marching was shared on Twitter by Jonathan Odoba, a Twitter user who described her as his hero.

“My hero for today was this lady. She walked all through the protest #Endsars,” his tweet which has now gained over 18,000 likes and 16,000 retweets read.

Within hours, another Twitter user identified as Aproko Doctor reshared the image and called on people to donate to buy Obiene a prosthetic leg.

“This is Jane. She’s been unemployed since 2013 partly because of her disability, she came out in the #EndSARS protests and we need to help. Please click the link below to donate to this, if you can’t donate, please RT, someone might see it on your TL,” Aproko Doctor wrote.

As of the time of this report, 132 people had donated over N1 million to the funding goal of N1.5 million.

Obiene is not the only one who has benefitted from the goodwill of young Nigerians since the #EndSARS protests kicked off last week.

Nigerians who believe in the movement and seek reformation of the Nigerian Police Force have donated to not only sustain the protests but also to provide medical and legal aid as well as food and drinks for protestors.

 

 

Two #ENDSARS protesters killed in Osun

NOT less than two #ENDSARS protesters were reportedly killed in Osogbo, Osun State capital after security operatives in the convoy of Gboyega Oyetola, the Governor of the state allegedly shot at them.

According to videos and pictures sighted by The ICIR, an #ENDSARS protester was seen lying on the floor while the governor’s convoy speedily left the protest scene on Saturday.

Other protesters speaking in the video were heard alleging that the victim was shot by a police officer after the angry youths besieged the Governor’s convoy for failing to address them.

“Governor convoy just killed someone now at Oke-Ayepe, they just gave him a straight bullet,” someone was heard saying in the video showing a lifeless body on the floor without a shirt but a yellow coloured track trouser.

 

The protesting youths it was gathered were enraged by the failure of the governor to stop to address them during the protest.

The #ENDSARS protesters, reportedly pelted his convoy with stones and sachet of water while the convoy drove away.

Ismail Omipidan, Cheif Press Secretary to Governor Oyetola denied that the victims were shot by security operatives on the Governor’s convoy.

According to him,  they fell off a motorcycle during the protest.

Omipidan said the governor had addressed the protestants at about 2 pm while he spent more than an hour and a half before the protest turned violent.

According to him, he had spoken with the ‘face of the protest’ in the state, one Ayo Ologun who had assured him of the governor’s safety.

“Ayo Ologun had assured me of my principal’s safety before the protest turned violent and we tried to manoeuvre,” Omipidan said.

He added that the protest was hijacked by Olawale Bakare, an associate of Omoyele Sowore, the publisher of Sahara Reporters.

“The two people that feel from the bike were on hard drugs, the governor had promised to pay their hospital bills while he was making his speech, even when they stopped our vehicle, we just tried to manoeuvre because we didn’t want any casualty,” Omipidan added.

In defence of the governor, Ajibola Basiru, the Senator representing Osun Central said the incident was an attack on the governor’s convoy adding that it was beyond the #ENDSARS protest.

“I condemn the dastardly attack on the Governor of Osun, Mr Adegboyega Oyetola as he was addressing the #EndSARS protest in Osogbo,” Bashiru said.

“The kind of weapons used and the ease of access to the weapons point to what is beyond #EndSARS protests.”

“The cowardly act must be investigated thoroughly and culprits brought to book. I am happy that Mr. Governor is in high spirit and fine when I spoke to him a moment ago on his telephone line.”

Only 30,000 out of 92,591 candidates who sat for National Common entrance exam will be admitted -NECO

A TOTAL of 92,591 candidates across the country on Saturday sat for the National Common Entrance Examination conducted by the National Examination Council (NECO) but only30,000 candidates would be admitted due to carrying capacity of the schools.

Sonny Echono, the Permanent Secretary of the Ministry of Education disclosed in Abuja this while monitoring the conduct of the examination which held in over 600 centres across the nation.

The entrance examination would enable the candidates to gain admission into the 104 Federal Government Colleges also known as Unity Schools.

“We used to hover around 25,000 but we have the new additions, we are talking about almost one in three of those who are applying that will get space because we are talking of about 92,000 and 30,000 carrying capacity. The ratio is about one in three for this year,” Echono said.

He added that there has been an increase in the number of candidates sitting for the National Common Entrance examination.

According to him, the increase in the number of applicants was due to the ‘modest investment’ by President Muhammadu Buhari led administration in providing infrastructure and ensuring that proper teaching and learning take place in the schools.

He explained that in spite of COVID-19 pandemic that hampered most activities, more than 92,000 candidates registered for the examination as against the 75,000 candidates that sat for the examination in 2019, adding that parents have now picked interest in the Unity Colleges because of the improvement in infrastructure as well as the quality of teaching and learning going in the schools in the last few years.

“Also very significant to mention is that for the past few years, I took the pain to follow up to a state, about the least state that is interested in the examination and that is Zamfara State,” Echono said.

“But I’m very pleased to announce and it is a pleasure because it demonstrates what political will means; Zamfara that used to be 47 that is 36 states plus FCT, the absolute last, in the last few years, this year Zamfara has moved up to number 14.”

“More significantly, Zamfara has the highest number of applicants compared with any of the Northern states with a total of 1,740 candidates that registered for the examination. Last year, only about 74 candidates registered for the examination,” he added.

However, Echono urged parents of the candidates not to be disturbed as the government was working to expand the facilities and the number of colleges, disclosing that this year only about six new Technical Colleges were created so as to be able to absorb more candidates.

He added that the Ministry of Education has approval for over a three-year period to establish 16 Federal Technical Colleges, noting that the first six have been established while the remaining ones would be established five per year.

Adamu Adamu, the Minister of Education also monitored the conduct of the examination alongside Professor Godwill Obioma, Registrar and Chief Executive Officer of NECO.

Some of the schools monitored include the Government Secondary School, Wuse Zone 3, Government Day Secondary School, Maitama, and Model Secondary School, Maitama, Abuja.

Adamu said he was particularly impressed by the adherence to COVID-19 protocols and guidelines across the 639 examination centres.

He noted that both candidates and invigilators wore face masks, observed physical distancing with candidates sitting about two metres from one another, noting the provision of washing hand water at strategic points with soap and hand sanitizers.

According to the Minister, the examination results would be released as quickly as possible to enable the successful candidates to prepare for resumption early next year.

Godswill Obioma, the NECO Registrar said the examination body has improved on its logistics by deploying 284 supervisors and invigilators across the centres.

ENDSARS: FG ignores call to reconstitute Governing Council for NHRC, sets up investigative panel

THE National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) has set up an investigative panel into police brutality in Nigeria.

This is despite calls by Nigerians to the Federal Government to constitute a Governing Council for the Commission.

Tony Ojukwu, the Executive Secretary of the Commission made this known in Abuja through a statement issued on Friday.

The Committee is headed by Suleiman Galadima, a retired Justice of the Supreme  Court.

Ojukwu said the Committee would hear petitions, complaints, and memoranda from Nigerians across the 36 states of the federation and the FCT, and thereafter make recommendations to the Federal Government on how best to reform the disbanded SARS and other units of the Police.

He added that the responsibility of the panel shall include investigating all complaints of human rights violations against SARS and other units of the Police force, making appropriate recommendations as per the damages and compensations to be paid to the victims of Police brutality.

Ojukwu stated that all petitions, complaints, and memoranda must reach the Commission, which is the Secretariat of the Panel on or before October 31, 2020.

However, Folarin Falana, a Nigerian musician also known as Falz had in an open letter called on President Muhammadu Buhari to reconstitute the Governing Council of the Commission.

According to Falz, the Executive Secretary of the Commission should not exist without the constitution of a Governing Council.

The Nigerian Musician stated that the NHRC has been functioning without a governing council since 2015.

Falz said in line with Section 7(3) of the National Human Rights Commission Act, the Executive Secretary of the Commission does not have the power to act without a Governing Council.

He also stated that due to the provision of the Act that vests the power to investigate cases of human rights abuses on the NHRC, the Commission needs not to constitute another Committee to investigate misconduct by operatives of the defunct SARS.

World Food Day: Groups warn on dangers of trans fats consumption in Nigeria

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THE Network for Health Equity and Development (NHED) and Corporate Accountability and Public Participation Africa (CAPPA) on Friday charged the Federal Government to prioritise safe and nutritious food for vulnerable Nigerians who are hit by the coronavirus pandemic.

“Beyond coronary heart diseases, trans fats have been linked to increases in the risk of diabetes, obesity, cancers, dementia and death,” said Jerome Mafeni, Project Adviser for Trans Fatty Acids Elimination of NHED.

Mafemi spoke at a press briefing held in Abuja to mark World Food Day 2020, with the theme titled “Grow, Nourish, Sustain. Together”.

He explained that Nigerians should be concerned about the growing incidences of coronary heart diseases and other ailments to ensure food makers restrict and replace trans fats.

According to him, the role of dietary fats and oils in human nutrition is one of the most complex and controversial areas of investigations in nutrition science.

He noted that global health bodies recognise the growing epidemic of chronic diseases in developing countries related to dietary changes.

Estimates by the World Health Organization (WHO) show that over 250, 000 persons die yearly resulting from complications associated with the consumption of foods high in trans fats.

Transfats, also known as trans-fatty acids, naturally occur in small, safe quantities in some meat and dairy products.

It is also industrially produced by partially hydrogenating vegetable oils, and it is these artificial trans fats that are added to our cooking oils as well as packaged, processed and baked goods in much larger, unsafe quantities.

Akinbode Oluwafemi, Executive Director of CAPPA who was represented at the event by Philip Jakpor, CAPPA’s Director of Programmes, said Nigeria should borrow a leaf from the WHO agenda to persuade governments to eliminate trans-fat from its food supplies.

Oluwafemi Explained that across the world, critical attention is being paid to what people eat and that the public health of a nation largely depends on what its citizens consume.

According to him, Nigeria, with a huge and vulnerable population must not take the back seat in the global war against trans fats, which he insisted, is now a bomb waiting to explode.

He emphasised the need for increased awareness on the dangers of consuming foods high in trans fats and urged the Nigerian government to compel the oils and fats and the fast-food industry to comply with global best practice in relation to trans fats in the processing of their products.

NHED and CAPPA urged the Governing Council of the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) to speedily approve the guidelines and regulations on the use of fats and oils, as well as pre-packaged foods, water, and ice labelling which has strong provisions on trans fats.

UNFPA commissions expanded fistula care centre in Sokoto 

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THE United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), has commissioned the rehabilitated Goronyo General Hospital operating theatre and patient ward in Sokoto.

A similar project was also inaugurated in March 2020 at the Maryam Abacha Women and Children Hospital in Sokoto metropolis along with the provision of essential medical equipment and kits as well as the training of healthcare workers on the management of obstetric fistula.

The project which is part of UNFPA’s commitment to implement a three-year project on “Addressing Gaps in Gender-Based Violence and Harmful Traditional Practices in Nigeria”, is receiving its funding from Global Affairs Canada.

The goals of the project are to reduce the prevalence of Gender-Based Violence (GBV) such as early child, forced marriage, obstetric fistula, and female genital mutilation.

It will also create an enabling environment and provide treatment and care for affected women and girls in Bauchi, Oyo, and Sokoto states.

Through this project, UNFPA supports the fistula program in Sokoto State with the aim of restoring the dignity of women and girls living with obstetric fistula and preventing fistula.

Sokoto State has one of the worst reproductive health indices in Nigeria with an estimated maternal mortality of more than 2000/100,000 live births.

More than two-thirds (71 per cent) of pregnant women in the state never attended antenatal care; 91 per cent of the women delivered at home and less than 10 per cent had skilled birth attendance, exposing them to the risk of maternal death as well as complications including fistula.

Oluwayi Adelugba, the UNFPA representative at the commissioning ceremony, appreciated the contribution of Sokoto State Government and for the continued collaboration towards ending preventable maternal deaths, ending the unmet need for family planning, and ending gender-based violence and all harmful practices, including child marriage and female genital mutilation.

She reiterated UNFPA’s commitment to ensuring that every pregnancy is wanted, every childbirth is safe, and every young person’s potential is fulfilled.

While thanking Global Affairs Canada for providing funding support for the project, she said UNFPA is committed to the Federal Government of Nigeria’s vision of becoming a country free of Obstetric Fistula by 2030.

CBN denies reports its website was hacked

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THE Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), has denied its website was breached Friday evening.

There were media reports  Friday evening that the website of the apex bank has been hacked in solidarity with the ongoing #EndSARS protesters in Nigeria by a popular international cyber hacking group known as Anonymous.

The group, which is identified as a decentralised international hacktivists is known for its various cyber attacks against several governments, institutions, agencies and corporations, claimed it has hacked several Twitter accounts owned by Nigerian government agencies including the National Broadcasting Commission (NBC).

NBC also confirmed the development in a disclaimer in the early hours of Friday morning.

But, Osita Nwanisobi, an Assistant Director at the CBN in a statement on Friday evening, said the website was secure.

He urged Nigerians and all its stakeholders to disregard the news, adding that the bank’s website was adequately protected.

“Contrary to claims in the social media alleging that the website of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) (www.cbn.gov.ng) has been breached by malicious persons, we wish to state categorically that our website is secure,” he said.

“We wish to assure the Nigerian public and indeed all our other stakeholders that the CBN website is adequately protected and that there is no cause for alarm.”

The bank advised members of the online community to desist from peddling false news aimed at undermining the integrity of the Central Bank of Nigeria, saying it is “our collective asset.”

The ICIR reported on Thursday, how the official website of the Nigeria Police Force has been infiltrated after the group hacked into its database on Thursday.

Since it started, the #ENDSARS protest which has lasted almost a week has gained international recognition.

Jack Dorsey, founder, and CEO of Twitter tweeted on Wednesday in support of the #EndSARS movement and also shared a link soliciting financial donations for the protest

Meanwhile, Mohammed Adamu, the Inspector General of Police (IGP) had on Sunday, in response to the continuous protest to end police excesses and brutality in the country had announced the disbandment of the dreaded police unit.

Also, President Muhammadu Buhari had  issued a directive, calling for a reform of the Police Force.

However, the protests have continued, with the protesters demanding immediate actions from the government and issuing a five-point demand which includes the release of all persons arrested and justice for victims of police brutality.

Other demands are “setting up an independent body to oversee the investigation and prosecution of all reports of police misconduct (within 10 days), psychological evaluation of all disbanded SARS officers before they can be redeployed, and increase in police salary so that they can be adequately compensated for protecting lives and property of citizens.”

FACT-CHECK: Pictures of 2017 violence in Ibadan used to depict clash between SARS officers and protesters in Enugu

ON October 6, a Twitter user @OurPortHarcourt posted pictures of a fire-ravaged police station, claiming that the station was attacked by gunmen in Enugu.

She also wrote that the coordinated attack led to the death of six operatives of the (now disbanded) Federal Special Anti-Robbery Squad (FSARS) while many were injured. It also stated that, apart from setting the station on fire, prisoners were also freed.

As of 11:40 a.m. of October 15, the post attributed to Icons News has gathered 1,562 retweets and 2,715 likes. 

The author tweeted: “BREAKING NEWS: Gunmen Clash With SARS Officers At Their Police Station In Enugu State, 6 SARS Operatives Killed, Many Injured, Prisoners Set Free And Their Station Set Ablaze. More Details Coming Soon…

📸▪: Icons News”

 

How true are the pictures?

Findings

 The ICIR checked the picture via Google Reverse Image Search to see if there were similar images on the internet. Note that the four pictures were taken in the same environment.

Google reverse image, which provided results in 0.87 seconds shows that the images first surfaced online two years ago when a face-off ensued between men of the Oyo State Police command and butchers in Ibadan.

The incident, which happened at the abattoir section of the Bodija international market in the state capital, occurred as butchers in the market refused to relocate to a new market in Amosun village, Akinyele local government area of the state.

The clash led to the death of four people who were gunned down by the police for allegedly trying to burn the police station attached to the market.

While reacting to the killings, the irate butchers burnt vehicles parked within the station premises while also destroying other valuables.

In a bid to ensure proper sanitary and healthy practices among butchers in Ibadan, the state government had asked butchers in the state capital to relocate to a centralised abattoir at Amosun Village. This was on account of the unsanitary circumstances of major abattoirs in Bodija, Aleshinloye, Gege which led the State government to unlicensed all slabs in Ibadan for two years.

The Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS) was one of the 14 units under the Force Criminal Investigation and Intelligence Department of the Nigerian Police Force before it was disbanded following protests by Nigerians over the unit’s notoriety and gross violation of human rights.

The unit was established to detain, investigate prosecute people involved in crimes like armed robbery, kidnapping and other crimes

Over the years, SARS has been accused of gross human rights violations while discharging its duties, leading to a call for its disbandment. 

Verdict: FALSE

Checks by The ICIR have shown that the photograph is not related to the #ENDSARS protest because it was taken two years during the face-off between Ibadan butchers and the police.

The report was produced during the 2020 Dubawa Fellowship attended by the reporter.