Nigeria's army, security agency warn against Kenya-style protests
Nigeria's armed forces and DSS security agency on Thursday warned against Kenya-style violence in protests planned for next week over soaring costs of living, saying the military would stop any attempts to create 'anarchy'.
Protesters make signs with their arms in front of Kenya police officers during a demonstration against tax hikes as Members of the Parliament debate the Finance Bill 2024 in downtown Nairobi, on 18 June 2024. Kenyan police fired tear gas and arrested dozens of demonstrators on 18 June 2024 as hundreds of people gathered near the Parliament building to protest tax hikes. Picture: LUIS TATO / AFP
ABUJA - Nigeria's armed forces and DSS security agency on Thursday warned against Kenya-style violence in protests planned for next week over soaring costs of living, saying the military would stop any attempts to create "anarchy".
While Kenya has been rocked by deadly protests that forced the government to repeal new taxes, Nigeria has seen little unrest over economic reforms that have already forced a 40 percent spike in food inflation.
#EndBadGovernanceinNigeria has been trending on X alongside #RevolutionNow, with calls for Nigerians to take to the streets from 1 August for demonstrations. But it is unclear who is behind the protest demands.
It is also unclear whether the online protest calls will inspire people to turn up at a time when many Nigerians are just trying to get by, wary of losing work and cautious over past crackdowns.
Nigerians are struggling with the worst cost-of-living crisis in years after President Bola Ahmed Tinubu ended a costly fuel subsidy and liberalised the naira currency in reforms needed to revive the economy of Africa's most populous nation.
The protest calls have been met by a torrent of warnings from officials, security forces and governors urging youth to stay away. Some have even accused the organisers of treason and trying to destabilise the country.
"While citizens have the right to peaceful protest, they do not have the right to mobilise for anarchy and unleash terror," defence spokesman Major General Edward Buba told reporters.
"It is easy to see that the contemporary context of the planned protest is to shadow the happenings in Kenya, which I must say is violent," he added.
ARMY 'WILL NOT STAND BY'
The armed forces had detected some "elements bent on hijacking" the planned protests with the aim of making it violent, he said.
"The level of violence being envisaged can only be described as a state of anarchy. The armed forces on its part will not stand by and allow anarchy to befall our nation."
The Department of State Services or DSS, which handles domestic threats, also warned against violence, saying "sinister" elements wanted to abuse the protests and had political motives.
"The plotters desire to use the intended violent outcome to smear the federal and sub-national governments; make them unpopular and pit them against the masses," it said in a rare statement.
Tinubu, who has repeatedly called for patience for the reforms to work, on Wednesday urged protesters to hold off to allow the government to respond to "all their pleas", Information Minister Mohammed Idris said.
He too suggested that some groups were mobilising protests to unleash violence and replicate recent Kenyan protests.
"We must ensure that these protests do not snowball into violence or disorder," he said.
Tinubu met on Thursday with traditional rulers seeking their help in persuading communities to stay out of the protests.
"We traditional rulers are not engaged in people, especially the youth, coming out to start looting, to start breaking down law and order," the Ooni of Ife Oba Adeyeye Enitan Ogunwusi said after the meeting.
The president agreed last week to more than double the monthly minimum wage for federal workers to 70,000 naira ($43). He has also started deliveries of truckloads of rice to each state in an attempt to help ease the cost-of-living pressures.
The last major protest movement in Nigeria, the #EndSARS rallies in October 2020, began over abuses by the SARS anti-robbery police squad, but grew into the largest anti-government demonstrations in Nigeria's modern history.
They succeeded in getting the police unit disbanded but the protests ended in bloodshed.
Eyewitnesses and rights organisations accused security forces of opening fire on peaceful protesters at the Lekki toll gate in the country's commercial hub Lagos on the evening of October 20, 2020.
Amnesty International said the army killed at least 10 people at the toll gate, but the security forces rejected responsibility, saying troops used blank rounds to disperse people breaking a curfew.