Army shot live rounds at protesters in Lagos 'massacre' -leaked judicial
report
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[November 16, 2021]
By Libby George
LAGOS (Reuters) -The Nigerian Army fired
live rounds at peaceful protesters at a toll gate in Lagos in October
2020, according to a leaked report into the incident seen by Reuters and
verified by three sources close to the panel that drafted it.
The report described the incident as a "massacre", said most of the army
officers deployed to the Lekki Toll Gate were "not fit and proper to
serve" and recommended prosecuting certain policemen for their actions.
"At the Lekki Toll Gate, officers of the Nigerian Army shot, injured and
killed unarmed helpless and defenceless protesters, without provocation
or justification, while they were waving the Nigerian flag and singing
the national anthem and the manner of assault and killing could in
context be described as a massacre," the report said.
Spokesmen for the military, police and Lagos state government did not
immediately respond to requests for comment. Both the military and
police had previously denied firing live rounds.
The shootings ended weeks of nationwide protests against police
brutality and sparked the worst civil unrest in Nigeria since the return
to civilian rule in 1999.
In the aftermath, rights groups accused security forces of a cover-up
and depicted a pattern of intimidation of those who took part in the
protests, including threats, detentions and asset freezes.
'CRUEL AND INHUMAN'
The report also said that there was an attempt to cover up and conceal
the incident, including by police officers who picked up bullets and
state agencies who cleaned the scene, and summoned army officers who did
not appear before the panel.
It further said that the army, invited in by Lagos state, did not follow
its own rules of engagement. It said soldiers turned back ambulances
from the gate in a "cruel and inhuman" act that contributed to protester
deaths and casualties.
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Workers clean up the Lekki toll gate, a site where soldiers had
opened fire on protesters late on Tuesday, as Nigeria's Lagos state
eases a round-the-clock curfew imposed in response to protests
against alleged police brutality, after days of unrest, in Lagos,
Nigeria October 24, 2020. REUTERS/Afolabi Sotunde
It identified 48 "casualties", including 11 killed,
four missing and presumed dead and multiple who suffered gunshot
wounds. It added that nearly 100 other unidentified corpses in Lagos
state could also be linked to the incident.
The judicial panel tasked with investigating the incident, as well
as abuses from the now-abolished Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS)
police division, released the report to the Lagos state government
on Monday, but it was not immediately made public.
Two panel members contacted by Reuters did not respond to requests
for comment on the report. The Lagos state government said on Monday
that it would release a "white paper" on the report within two
weeks.
The panel made a total of 32 recommendations, including for police
reforms, a memorial to the protesters, a compensation fund and the
establishment of a standing tribunal on human rights.
"The panel believes that with the implementation of the
recommendations, the Lekki Toll Gate incident of 20th October 2020
will never happen again...and there will be healing in the great
state of Lagos," it said.
(Reporting by Libby George, additional reporting by Fikayo Owoeye in
Lagos and Camillus Eboh in Abuja; Editing by Catherine Evans and
Alex Richardson)
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