Protests's Posts
Nairaland Forum › Protests's Profile › Protests's Posts
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 ... 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 (of 19 pages)
Hire SARS to "remove" him.
|
Keep moving.
|
Keep moving.
|
I was busy. No, I am busy, yet I wasted time on your thread. OP, be warned.
|
#CowLivesMatter
|
Protect them from the killers of the girl child eg ...
|
This here is what is called instigation.
|
We are busy with some crooks for now. Later.
|
Comic allowed.
|
And who cares about his uncoordinated blabber?
|
No counter to that. I concur. I hope you keep enjoying a 'smooth' and 'happy' view of these ones in future. ThreeEyedRaven:
|
The guy has police blood in him!
|
Fighting corruption without fighting police corruption is madness.
|
A new survey released by the Socio-Economic Rights and Accountability Project (SERAP) yesterday exposed high levels of sleaze in public institutions nationwide in the last five years with the police emerging the most corrupt. According to the document, entitled, “Nigeria: Corruption Perception Survey”, of the five major public establishments surveyed, the power sector came second. Others indicted of the bug by the 70 per cent of Nigerians sampled are the judiciary, education and health ministries. Unveiled in Lagos by the group’s deputy director, Kolawole Oluwadare, the report noted: “A bribe is paid in 54 per cent of interactions with the police. In fact, there is a 63 per cent probability that an average Nigerian would be asked to pay a bribe each time he or she interacted with the police. That is almost two out of three.” The chairman of the event, Professor Akin Oyebode, submitted: “Nigeria is looked upon as a giant of Africa. Yet Nigeria could not conduct free, fair and credible elections. It is a smear on the image of the country. If we do away with selective enforcement and condonation of corruption, we will build and live in a better society. “Corruption is a refined form of stealing. The politicians are stealing our common patrimony. Development of the people is almost inversely proportional to the level of corruption.” The report read in part: “Corruption remains a significant impediment to law enforcement, access to justice and basic public services such as affordable healthcare, education, and electricity supply. Several Nigerians have to pay a bribe to access police, judiciary, power, education and health services. Corruption is still a key concern in the country with 70 per cent of Nigerians describing the level of corruption as high and in the same measure in the last five years.” The national survey carried out between September and December 2018, covered the police, judiciary, power, education and health sectors to assess the state of corruption in law enforcement and public service provision. The document advised the Federal Government to establish an independent commission of inquiry to conduct a transparent, comprehensive and impartial investigation into systemic graft in the affected institutions. https://guardian.ng/news/police-most-corrupt-institution-in-nigeria-survey-reveals/ |
Will it stop this?
|
It's in them
|
Oh?
|
#SARSMUSTEND #SARSMUSTENDNOW
|
Oh sorry, my friend.
|
That your argument is as empty as the first post in this thread. |
They have disbanded SARS / FSARS or whatever! RIP Jimoh!!!!! |
@tolaluffspurple #EndSARS #EndSarsNow In one hour, this has been retweeted 1,100 times.
|
#EndSARS Abuja regrouping after hot/cold water shower, and tear gas by the Nigeria Police Force Forward ever 1:00pm. |
Duru9:I am sure they understand civil rights movements, especially coming from South Africa. Over here in Nigeria, the government even though they called themselves "Progressives" are dinosaur-aged and know nothing about civil rights. Welcome to 2020. |
While other brands were wide-eyed #GeorgeFloyd and busy snoring #EndSARS SPAR Nigeria tweeted: "Freedom cannot be bestowed, it must be achieved" Raised fist #EndSARS #EndPoliceBrutality #EndPoliceBrutalityinNigeria #SPARNigeria Thank you for that counsel @SparNigeria.
|
My Opinion. These facts are not even table of contents, talkless of the full book. The government is confused and think that they can come again after reforming SARS yearly since 2015 to reform them again in 2020. Nigerian Youths have said they won't be tired or give in. Allegations of government attempting to bribe youths have been thrown too. And the funniest of all is a #ProSARS campaign. Unfortunately the money budgeted for #ProSARS will likely finish before the next call for #EndSARS trends. #EndSARS has at least 10 trending tags already and the competing trends #EndNorthernBanditry (died under 12 hours), and the #ProSARS (which will likely die under 12-24hours) can't stand the energy that is in the land at this time. #EndSARS, #ReformSARS, or #ProSARS? It is a choice between light and darkness, truth and lies, wickedness and peace. It is a choice between education and illiteracy. It is a choice between backwardness and progress. It is a choice between bondage and freedom. I spend a minute in honour of Jimoh Isiaka, shot on October 10, 2020 while standing watching his compatriots who went about in a democratic, non-violent protest. Tears in my eyes, but your soul lives on. We move. |
In June 2020, Amnesty International released a report.
|
Do police in Nigeria torture people? Well, Nigeria has a law signed by Mr. Buhari at the end of 2017 which was likely as a result of the "reform". It was 25 years in jail for torturing suspects. So tell me, has anyone been jailed for torturing suspects? So tell, if a law is as watery as rain, what will another "reform" achieve?
|
Well, the Nigerian Human Rights Commission (NHRC) if I get the full name correctly belongs to the Nigerian Government I think? Here are few documented facts from that side, and another from a rights organisation.
|
And the trouble of SARS continued. The problematic unit which was formed and within a decade had undergone numerous "reforms" did not heal. There were panels, quite a number, but the panels and the reports yielded nothing.
|
Fact: The reports about the atrocities of SARS made them decide on psychiatric examinations of SARS policemen. That was in another reform, and they renamed them fSARS.
|