Nigerian Police Retract Apparent Ban On Protests Over Girls' Kidnapping

Started by HuffingtonPost, Jun 03, 2014, 07:31 PM

HuffingtonPost



By Camillus Eboh                

ABUJA, June 3 (Reuters) - Nigerian police said on Tuesday  that protesters were free to march in the capital Abuja, after  an uproar over comments by the police commissioner in which he  appeared to ban demonstrations over more than 200 schoolgirls  kidnapped by rebels.                

Joseph Mbu made a statement on Monday in which he appeared  to forbid protests on grounds that they could be hijacked by  "dangerous elements" who could threaten state security.   Protesters said they would challenge the ban in  court on Tuesday, and they filed a complaint at noon (1100 GMT).                

But a statement from Police Spokesman Frank Mba on Tuesday  said the commissioner had only meant to advise against  gatherings because of intelligence that there was "infiltration  and hijack of otherwise innocuous and peaceful protests by some  criminal elements having links with insurgents".                

"The Force has not issued any order banning peaceful  assemblies/protests anywhere in Nigeria," Mba said.                

"However, ... citizens are strongly advised to reconsider  their positions on the issues of rallies and protests in FCT  until the existing threats are appropriately neutralized," he  said, referring to the Federal Capital Territory around Abuja.                

The girls were snatched from the northeastern village of  Chibok, near the Cameroon border, on April 14.                

Much of the anger among protesters, and a #BringBackOurGirls  Twitter campaign that helped fuel it, has been directed towards  the government for failing to protect the girls. A Reuters  investigation showed that there were a number of missteps along  the way, including failure to respond to a distress call hours  in advance.                

President Goodluck Jonathan's supporters say the protesters'  anger should be directed at Boko Haram, and that constant  criticism of the military is misplaced and demoralizing.                

The girls' plight has shone the international spotlight on a  violent 5-year-old battle for an Islamic state by insurgents who  have killed thousands since 2009. At least 530 civilians have  been killed by the militants since the day of the abduction.                

U.S. troops are in neighboring Chad on a mission to find  them. Britain and France have also offered help.                

Nigerian authorities argue they face an unenviable dilemma:  if they try to free the girls, they risk some getting killed, or  if they offer money or a prisoner swap, this would only leave  the rebels stronger, endangering more lives in the long run.                

A reluctance to pursue either strategy has created a  stalemate, officials say.     (Reporting by Abraham Terngu; Writing and additional reporting  by Tim Cocks in Lagos; Editing by Louise Ireland)
Source: huffingtonpost.com