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"The country's leadership should not view the incessant attacks as mere temporary misfortune with which the citizenry must learn to live; they are precursors to events that could destabilize the entire country," their statement read. The government has so fair failed to calm public anger over the spiraling gasoline costs. The government has promised that the $8 billion in estimated savings a year from the end of the fuel subsidies would go toward badly needed road and public projects. One protester in Lagos held his protest sign upside down. "Our life is already turned upside down," he told a reporter. "It is not how it's supposed to be." Demonstrators burned a patrol car and a private car parked next to it in the northern city of Kano, filling the sky with billows of smoke as thousands protested below. Some in Nigeria's second-largest city are asking for the government to restore the subsidy. Others want Jonathan to resign. "He cannot rule this country," a placard read. Some protesters also marched to the seat of the state of government in Kano where security officers used tear gas and fired into the air to disperse the crowd.
[Associated
Press;
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