Monday, 12 May 2014
CHIBOK SCHOOLGIRLS:POLICE GET ORDERS TO BREAK PROTESTS
[Culled Fron Daily Trust] The
police
have
received
“orders
from
above”
not
to
allow
any
more
of
the
#BringBackOurGirls
protests,
a
senior
officer
told
activists who gathered to continue their rallies
demanding the rescue of the Chibok schoolgirls
in Abuja yesterday.
The protesters have been holding their rallies
starting 3pm at the Unity Fountain in Maitama
for two weeks now, but yesterday a large number
of armed policemen sealed the park earlier in the
day, apparently to stop the protest.
When some leaders of the protest arrived, they
were confronted by the police who told them not
to congregate in the park.
An officer in mufti, who appeared to be in charge
of the police detachment, said he was the
commander, and ordered junior officers to
disperse the crowd.
He said he had orders “from above” to ensure
that no protest took place at the park.
One of the protest leaders, Bashir Yusuf Ibrahim,
went up to the commander and pleaded with him
to allow the protest to go on.
A Daily Trust reporter was within hearing
distance when the officer said he had orders not
to allow the protesters gather at the Unity
Fountain.
Meanwhile, as protesters continued to gather,
former education minister Oby Ezekwesili
confronted the police and defiantly told them she
had the right to peaceful assembly and would not
be intimated.
A Daily Trust reporter at the scene observed that
despite orders given to policemen to disperse the
gathering protesters, the cops appeared rather
cautious to confront the mostly women
protesters.
By this time, several protesters had gained entry.
So the policemen formed a cordon around the
park to stop more people from entering.
But the women still pushed their way in and
joined their colleagues in the middle of the park.
The protesters defiantly chanted solidarity songs
and condemned the police for attempting to
disrupt the protest.
Speaking to Daily Trust, one of the protest
organisers, Hadiza Bala Usman, said, “I feel it’s
not acceptable and Nigeria police has no business
disallowing us from having a peaceful
arrangement. We have been coming here, we are
going to continue doing this.”
Speaking to journalists, Mrs Ezekwesili also said,
“One thing I know they should not be doing is
dispersing peaceful citizens in their peaceful
gathering; this is a democracy how can the
government act like this?
“I never thought that I will live to see the day that
a democratic government will try to violate my
constitutional right for peaceful gathering in
protest of the fact that we have not seen girls that
were abducted out of our territory for so many
weeks now.
“When we got here they were evacuating us, we
simply resisted and said we were not going
anywhere. I simply said to them I certainly am
not going anywhere, if I have to have this meeting
alone, in clear determination to assert my right
as a citizen of Nigeria I will do it.”
She added: “I was beaten on the street of Lagos
under the military. I will not take it in a
democracy. We have the right to stand here and
demand bring back our girls, we will continue to
demand bring back our girls until the
government act according to their
responsibility.”
Former House of Representatives member Dino
Malaye also spoke to Daily Trust, saying: “We
feel very insulted as Nigerians. This is a peaceful
assembly, but the police came here with machine
guns, with hot water tankers and all sorts of
ammunitions to stop us from assembling.
“They have no power to stop us, they cannot stop
us and we will not be stopped. The battle to bring
back the girls is a battle of no retreat no
surrender. No amount of intimidation and
harassment will stop us from this assembly.”
Daily Trust attempted but did not succeed to get
comments from the Police force headquarters
spokesman CSP Frank Mba and spokeswoman of
the FCT police command DSP Altine Daniel on
why they tried to break the protest and who gave
the “orders from above.”
Text messages and telephone calls to the two
officials were not returned up till the time of
going to press last night.
The bid to stop the Abuja protest yesterday came
a day after the police blocked the
#BringBackOurGirls protesters in Abuja.
The protests are being held to demand more
action by the authorities to get back the over 200
female students of the Government Girls
Secondary School Chibok, Borno State, who
were taken by Boko Haram gunmen on April 14.
More coordinated protests are scheduled to hold
in major cities nationwide today. It is not clear if
the police would allow them to go on.
Labels:
INSECURITY
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