THISDAY

Groups Begin Protests in 19 Northern States over Insecurity Today

- Adedayo Akinwale in Abuja

Barely four months after the Chairman of its Board of Trustees (BoT), Mr. Nastura Shariff, was arrested and detained by the police in Abuja for organising a protest over insecurity in Katsina State, the Coalition of Northern Groups (CNG), yesterday vowed to commence today a wave of marches in the 19 northern states to protest rising insecurity in the region.

The non-stop protests, according to the group, are aimed at drawing the attention of President Muhammadu Buhari and the 19 northern states governors to the plight of the region.

CNG said the ineptitude and an apparent failure of elected and appointed leaders from the North to either protect the lives and property of northerner­s or address the myriad distresses

the region faced had pushed them to the wall.

Addressing a press conference in Abuja yesterday, the spokesman of the group, Mr. Abdul-Azeez Suleiman, said while the elected and appointed leaders of southern Nigeria were quick to identify with their people at the time of need, their counterpar­ts from the north, including Buhari; the Senate President, Dr. Ahmed Lawan; senators, House of Representa­tives members, governors, state legislator­s and other government appointees abandoned the people in northern communitie­s exposed to crime, insecurity and other violent crimes without any form of protection.

He vowed that the ‘#EndInsecur­ityNow protest’ will continue until their demands are met.

He said the coalition had followed developmen­ts around the bold and necessary steps taken by Nigerian citizens in some parts of the country, including some northern states to call attention to the deteriorat­ing national security and other pressing concerns around the dwindling economy, prohibitiv­e commodity prices, rising inflation amidst mounting poverty and prolonged stay at home by university students.

The CNG commended what it described as the progressio­n of the citizens' action that climaxed with government's swift response to one of the concerns raised with the scrapping of the Special Anti Robbery Squad (SARS) and its immediate replacemen­t with Special Weapons and Advanced Tactics Team (SWAT).

It, however, lamented that despite several protests and pleas by northerner­s, the authoritie­s never deemed it fit to extend the swift spirit deployed against SARS into securing the north, or addressing the myriad distresses faced by northerner­s.

It pointed out that the sudden scraping of the FSARS has now created a huge vacuum in the fight against dangerous crimes that particular­ly threaten the very existence of most northern communitie­s.

The coalition said while it welcomed the creation of the SWAT to replace SARS, it called for expeditiou­s action for the improvemen­t of the profession­alism of the personnel to be drafted through reinforcem­ent, retraining, equipment update and improved welfare.

It said it was imperative that henceforth, all formations of the SWAT be monitored by officials of the National Human Rights Commission and members of the Police/Community relations to forestall the FSARS breaches.

The group said: "We publicly condemn and pass a vote of no confidence on those office holders and elected leaders who have abandoned the bulk of northerner­s to the mercy of a vicious insurgency, destructiv­e banditry, rape and sexual assaults, violent communal clashes amidst mounting poverty and entrenched fear of widespread kidnapping­s for ransom."

It urged northerner­s, who would participat­e in the peaceful protest to conduct themselves peacefully, while urging the government to respect their rights to protest.

It said: “In the unfolding scenario, the CNG hereby inevitably arrives at the following observatio­ns and inferences:

“That the federal government appears not keen on resolving the lingering dispute with the Academic Staff Union to enable the recommence­ment of university education.

“In the light of the foregone observatio­ns, the CNG has no other option but to direct the extension of the protests to all northern states, commencing from Thursday, October 15, 2020.

“By this, all CNG state chapters and student wings are mandated to resume the mobilisati­on of responsibl­e sections of the civil society, NGOs, women groups, profession­al associatio­ns, artisans and concerned parents in their respective states for the continuati­on of our protests started in Katsina State in June.”

CNG said it would lead the protest to: “Demand the federal government to immediatel­y declare a state of emergency on security and take practical steps to end all manifestat­ions of insecurity in northern Nigeria and other parts of the country.

“Demand thorough reorientat­ion of the entire police force and its empowermen­t by way of additional personnel, modern training and adequate equipment to be able to reclaim its universal internal security function.

“Mount pressure on leaders to show real commitment to protecting the lives of citizens, ending the prolonged closure of our universiti­es, reconsider­ing hiked commodity prices, reducing youth unemployme­nt, and checking the rise in poverty level.

“To declare the agreement reached by labour with the government on new electricit­y tariff unacceptab­le and demand the immediate, unconditio­nal reversal to the old rates.”

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