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Nigeria Protests Rage On As Calls For Accountability Grow-CNN +video by jason123: 3:19pm On Jan 12, 2012 |
Lagos, Nigeria (CNN) -- Protests that started over a scrapped fuel subsidy expanded into an outcry against the government's shortcomings as throngs of Nigerians of all classes took to the streets again Thursday. Businesses including shops, banks and gas stations remained closed. Downtown Lagos, usually jam-packed on a regular day, was a ghost town as tires burned in the middle of empty streets. In some areas, angry youth manned major highways. "People of all walks are coming out to protest," said Olumide Adeleye, a Lagos entrepreneur. "There are young people and old people. People parking their Mercedes-Benzs and Land Rovers. People walking bare foot." The government removed fuel subsidies January 1, doubling gas prices that in turn led to high transportation costs and soaring prices of food and other goods. The government also faces another crisis -- a wave of religious attacks which has led some to fear that the current anger over fuel prices may set off sectarian violence. As prices at the pump skyrocketed overnight, Nigerians rallied, accusing their leaders of corruption and squandering oil revenues as a majority of citizens battle grinding poverty. In solidarity with the protesters, a union representing the oil industry threatened to halt production, which would affect global oil prices. "Now that the federal government has decided to be callous minded, we hereby direct all production platforms to be on red alert in preparation for total production shutdown," the union PENGASSAN said in a statement. Nigeria is the world's eighth-largest oil exporter. "Our leaders don't do most of the things a responsible government should do," Adeleye said. "Frankly, we would pay for that high oil price if the roads were better, if our infrastructure was better. But we can't trust the government , removing the fuel subsidy is just one of the many ways they have failed us." Two Nigerian trade unions have accused President Goodluck Jonathan of using "armed thugs" to attack protesters, which the government denied Thursday. "If these claims are properly investigated, you will find out that failed and bitter politicians have not only hijacked this protest, but have diverted it from a protest against deregulation policy," said Reuben Abati, the government spokesman. He said negotiations between the labor unions and the government are under way. The protests -- dubbed "Occupy Nigeria" -- have galvanized the continent's most populous nation. Citizens have harnessed social media to plan rallies and warn demonstrators of dangers at particular protests sites. Others posted private cell phone numbers of government officials and urged fellow Nigerians to call and demand the return of the fuel subsidy. "In a country with hundreds of distinct ethnic groups and little sense of national identity, citizens rarely rally around a common cause," said Gordon Bottomley, an associate at Ergo, a global intelligence and advisory firm. "The sudden inability to procure fuel for basic needs such as transportation, however, has inspired Nigerians of all stripes to take to the streets en masse." Most of the demands so far are centered around calls for government accountability and reinstatement of the fuel subsidy, though a few have gone as far as calling for the president's ouster. "Protesters are not seeking to overthrow the government of President Goodluck Jonathan, not yet anyway," Bottomley said. Many Nigerians view the subsidy as the only benefit of living in an oil-producing country that has little infrastructure, poor roads, high unemployment and intermittent electric power. The government has said the removal will help free up funds to improve the infrastructure. But there is a widespread lack of trust in the government to provide the infrastructure -- Nigeria is regularly voted among the most corrupt countries in the world. "Though we know that in the long run, removal of (the) subsidy will help the economy, for now it is a high-profile lifestyle that is unbearable for most Nigerians, and soon the poorer ones will die out," protester Diane Awunah said. Much of the country was shut down as the national strike entered its fourth day Thursday. Some stayed home to join the local protests while others feared the violence may escalate. "People are getting tired, people are getting frustrated because the government has been adamant," Adeleye said. "In the past few days, people were dancing and keeping their spirits up. It was fun , but people are now getting tired and the level of anger is going up. I just pray that it does not get violent." He said the frustration is shifting the direction of the protests, which started off with a call for peace. "People are now advocating violence. The government has to tread carefully. More than 80% of the people don't support subsidy removal," the entrepreneur said. Clashes have left at least 16 people dead and 205 injured, the Nigerian Red Cross said earlier this week. Continued anti-Christian violence in the north and a long-simmering separatist movement are among the issues also increasing tensions on the street. More than 30 Christians died in recent violence in Adamawa, prompting a 24-hour curfew in that northwestern Nigerian state to guard against Christian reprisals, a government chaplain said Saturday. Boko Haram, a shadowy militant Islamic group that is said to favor strict Sharia law, is frequently blamed for the sectarian violence. The group claimed responsibility for a series of attacks on churches on Christmas Day and issued an ultimatum earlier this month for the country's minority Christians to leave the mainly Muslim north within days. Rumors have also swirled that Muslims in the largely Christian and animist south may become the targets of attacks. The rising tide of violence led Jonathan to declare a partial state of emergency in four northern states two weeks ago. Corruption, poverty and a lack of government services have helped Boko Haram gain support, especially among young Muslims out of work. So has a perception that the Muslim north has been marginalized by a political establishment drawn largely from the south, the president among them. http://edition.cnn.com/2012/01/12/world/africa/nigeria-strike/index.html?hpt=iaf_c1 |
Re: Nigeria Protests Rage On As Calls For Accountability Grow-CNN +video by jason123: 3:25pm On Jan 12, 2012 |
Video coming soon . . . |
Re: Nigeria Protests Rage On As Calls For Accountability Grow-CNN +video by jason123: 3:27pm On Jan 12, 2012 |
Sorry guys, couldn't post the video but check the CNN website for it. . . . http://edition.cnn.com/2012/01/12/world/africa/nigeria-strike/index.html?hpt=iaf_c1 |
Re: Nigeria Protests Rage On As Calls For Accountability Grow-CNN +video by unipol(m): 4:25pm On Jan 12, 2012 |
libyia here we come. |
Re: Nigeria Protests Rage On As Calls For Accountability Grow-CNN +video by reporter1: 10:57pm On Jan 12, 2012 |
Goodluck must find a way to arrest this situation. Things are spiraling out of control. The video is very revealing to the hopeless situation of young people in Nigeria. Imagine someone daring the NG police to shoot him - NG police that needs no invitation to kill! People are actually willing to die for this cause! |
Re: Nigeria Protests Rage On As Calls For Accountability Grow-CNN +video by DanKan0: 11:02pm On Jan 12, 2012 |
[size=16pt]No Economic policy, no matter how good it looks on paper, will work in a nation where individuals can pocket billions and get away with it. The only thing the deregulation is going to achieve is double digit inflation (effectively devaluing the currency and making the nation poorer) and more looting.[/size] As for the sale of PHCN, and all the others BPE sold in OBJ's regime, these guys build up these corporations with your money, sabotage these corporations continually, and then turn around and tell you that the only way it can work is if it is privatized. At the end of the day, the same cabal purchases them for peanuts with your stolen billions and yet Nigerians celebrate because of the years of engineered frustration PHCN and the likes have subjected Nigerians to. It's pure and simple propaganda; a classical case of problem-reaction solution. Try googling the phrase "Hegelian Dialectic". It'll better explain how the global elite use these left-right, Christian-Muslim, regional and ethnic divisions to manipulate humanity into helping them achieve predetermined ends. It didn't start today, and unless we educate ourselves and break out of that dialectic, we will forever be slaves to the ruling elite. Nice comment from there |
Re: Nigeria Protests Rage On As Calls For Accountability Grow-CNN +video by kulutempa: 11:05pm On Jan 12, 2012 |
reporter?: Saw that video too. Really scary but necessary. When people lose the fear of death, they set themselves free to shape their destiny. That is what has been missing in Nigeria, where the ruling elite have always relied on brutality and violence to control the public. Not anymore. Leadership in Nigeria has got to stop being an invitation to steal public funds. |
Re: Nigeria Protests Rage On As Calls For Accountability Grow-CNN +video by DanKan0: 11:06pm On Jan 12, 2012 |
reporter?: I said it the longer it continues the angrier people will get. Cant keep up bottling the anger. Between now and 2015 things will chnage permanetly. Maybe GEJ was right when he said[b] 'Fresh Air'[/b] |
Re: Nigeria Protests Rage On As Calls For Accountability Grow-CNN +video by Horus(m): 11:33pm On Jan 12, 2012 |
Re: Nigeria Protests Rage On As Calls For Accountability Grow-CNN +video by Gbawe: 11:43pm On Jan 12, 2012 |
reporter?: You think what Nigerians are going through is a joke? Many are already 'dead' !!!! they would be happy for someone to just end their misery!!! It is now that bad for our people and we don't need paid hacks confusing issues on behalf of their paymasters. Have we all forgotten that Yar Adua, shortly after becoming President, confessed that Nigerians "are living in hell"? We now have grossly corrupt leaders, over-indulged for far too long, asking the people to make more sacrifice while the massive wealth that comes in every day for them continues !!! Unacceptable and something will give !!! |
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