Tag: protest

  • Diaspora sponsors of protests on watchlist, accounts blocked

    Diaspora sponsors of protests on watchlist, accounts blocked

    Sponsors of the protests across the country are on the watch lists of the Nigeria Immigration Service   (NIS), the Department of State Services(DSS), and the police. 

    NIS vowed that the sponsors who are foreign-based Nigerians would be arrested if they ventured to enter the country,  the Police and DSS revealed that the bank accounts of most of them had been blocked.

    Comptroller-General Nigeria Immigration Service (CG NIS), Kemi   Nandap and  Inspector-General of Police Kayode Egbetokun made these known at a joint news conference of service chiefs and heads of security agencies at the Defence Headquarters, Abuja yesterday.

    Chief of Defence Staff, Gen. Christopher Musa convened the meeting a day after President Bola Ahmed Tinubu met with the security chiefs over the violence that broke out during the protests.

    Gen.  Musa also told reporters that the military and other security agencies were only after persons behind the call for undemocratic change of government.

    Nandap also said that NIS, supported by the military,  had stepped up surveillance of the nation’s borders to prevent foreign intervention.

    She said: “We have diaspora sponsors, they are on our watch list. They are watch-listed and any attempt they make to come into the country, we’ll be notified and they will be picked up and handed to the appropriate authority.

    Read Also: Protests: No police, military officer fired live ammunition – IGP

    ‘’What we’ve done is to deploy a lot of our officers to the borders to make sure that our borders are well protected.

    “In terms of profiling people coming in and going out of the country, we have stepped that up to make sure that people are properly screened before they can come into the country. And those that are of interest, of course, will not be allowed in.

    “Right now, both the airports, the land borders, and our sea borders are well manned and protected. And we do this also in collaboration with the military and other security agencies.

    IGP Egbetokun, who neither provided the number nor names of the uncovered sponsors of the protests,  said even though  “many of them reside abroad,” their bank accounts in Nigeria had been blocked.

    DSS boss Bichi, who was represented by the agency’s spokesman Dr. Peter Afunnaya,  also confirmed that the sponsors would not have access to their accounts in the country.

    Adding that the sponsors are also under the agency’s radar, Bichi said the help of the Nigerian Financial Intelligence Unit had been sought to identify more of those funding the protest.

    Security agencies only after Nigeria’s enemies, says CDS

    CDS Musa said the military and other security agencies were trailing some protesters calling for regime change. 

    “We are only after those that are against the states, not those that are innocent,’’ the Defence boss said as he thanked  Nigerians for their understanding.

    He said: “I want to appreciate Nigerians for their understanding, for their commitment to upholding the law and order.

    “We have had issues in the past few days, but you can see that people have seen reason for us not to continue with the destruction, to stop the looting, to stop giving opportunities for others to subvert our nation and to destroy our nation.

    “They have also seen reasons to join hands together with the security forces to make Nigeria better.

    “We want to assure them we on this side that we are fully committed to Nigeria, we love the country, we are mindful of the fact that we have been equipped and so we are duty bound to protect the country.

    “I want to make that very clear and we will continue to work together as a team to support Mr President in achieving his mandate of peace and tranquility in our dear country Nigeria.”

    The defence chief called for calm, mediation, discussion, and dialogue toward national unity and cohesion as one great country.

    He restated that the military was not interested in anybody being killed,   injured, and prosecuted except those who crossed the line.

    Chief of Army Staff (COAS), Lt.-Gen. Taoreed Lagbaja said the operational commitment of the Army was to deploy resources to combat the violence trailing protests. 

    Lagbaja said the attention of the Army had not been diverted from its main operational commitment of combating terrorism and banditry.

    He said: “I checked the number of patrols that troops conduct, the number of ambushes that are undertaken on a daily basis, the number of violent insurgents that have been eliminated, incapacitated, and other indices, and it has not dropped by whatever measure.

    “Also we have continued to expand the frontier of peace and security in Borno state. The IDPs(Internally Displaced Persons) are being returned to Kukawa and some other places as I speak to you, which are indices of return to peace and stability.

    “So the troops are not relenting in their operational commitment in the field on our contingency plan if the situation degenerates.

    “I want to also assure you that our estimates looking into the future suggest that the situation will not degenerate but we need the cooperation of every stakeholder to achieve that.”

    Chief of Naval Staff (CNS)  Vice Admiral  Emmanuel Ogalla said that the Navy had continued to work with other security agencies to ensure safety and security in the maritime domain.

    Ogalla reiterated the commitment of the Navy to sustain its operations in the Niger Delta to ensure that the nation meets its oil production capacity

    He said the operations had led to an increase in oil output and boosted the revenue generation from oil that would help the nation to meet the needs of the citizens.

    Chief of the Air Staff (CAS)  Air Marshal Hasan Abubakar said the Nigerian Air Force remained committed to ensuring successful operations in all operational engagements of the armed forces.

    He said the military was mindful of its commitment to defending the territorial integrity of the nation.

  • Cost of living protests fizzle out in more states, Abuja

    Cost of living protests fizzle out in more states, Abuja

    • Katsina, Kano relax curfew by 12 hours

    • Mobile court remands 632 rioters

    Normalcy returned to more states yesterday as the protests against the rising cost of living dissipated.

    With protesters in Akwa Ibom, Osun and Edo states backing down, virtually all 17 states in the South, except Rivers, have abandoned the protest.

    Abuja, the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), also had a breather yesterday. Life returned to normal in most parts.

    Lagos, the nation’s commercial city, returned to its boisterous self after protesters abandoned the Gani Fawhinmi Freedom Park, following President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s broadcast on Saturday.

    In states such as Oyo, Ogun and Delta, the protest was not noticeable yesterday.

    Ondo, Ekiti, the Southeast states of Anambra, Abia, Enugu, Ebonyi and Imo remained peaceful.

    Niger and Nasarawa have remained calm since the weekend.

    Benue youths never joined the protest and were commended by Governor Hycienth Alia.

    The 24-hour curfew imposed on Katsina and Kano states was relaxed following a gradual return to peace.

    FCT

    In Abuja, the presence of security operatives at the protest location – the Moshood Abiola National Stadium and other public places – was still noticeable yesterday even after the demonstrators had been dispersed.

    A drive around the city showed that people went about their normal businesses, unlike the previous days.

    The Freedom Park in Ojota, Lagos was deserted yesterday and business boomed across the sprawling former nation’s capital.

    Read Also: Protests: No police, military officer fired live ammunition – IGP

    Edo

    Commercial and government activities picked up in Benin, the state capital.

    The state secretariat opened for the first time in the past six days while shop owners displayed their goods with enthusiasm.

    Security agencies cleared roadblocks on Monday in strategic areas of the city, thus giving motorists and other residents the confidence to move without fear. 

    However, many banks did not open. Some customers were seen stranded at the entrances.

    A coalition of Civil Society Organisations (CSOs) that occupied King Square on the popular Ring Road also withdrew from the protest.

    Osun

    Protesters in Osogbo suspended the demonstration to present a letter to Governor Ademola Adeleke.

    Deputy Governor Kola Adewusi received the letter on behalf of Adeleke at the Government Secretariat in Abere.

    Adewusi, who promised that their letter would be delivered to President Tinubu, urged the protesters to embrace dialogue to achieve their demands.

    The deputy governor also hailed their orderly conduct since the protest started and promised to work with them toward ensuring that the state remained peaceful.

    He said: “We will not relent in our efforts, as a government, in ensuring that the state continues to enjoy the dividends of democracy.

    “The government has been paying salaries and backlogs, gratuity, wage awards, and other allowances; this is commendable. We are working for the best interest of the state.

    “The government will continue to prioritise the welfare of its people. Once the supply of palliatives from the Federal Government is completed, disbursement will begin.

    “I also admonish you to embrace dialogue and constructive engagement towards achieving your demands.” 

    After submitting the letter, the protesters, under the Coalition for Concerned Nigeria Citizens, addressed reporters at the Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ) Secretariat.

    Adetunji Ajala, who spoke for the coalition, declared the demonstration suspended indefinitely because of the  Osun Osogbo Festival whose grand finale is slated for Friday.

    Ajala said: “Since the inception of this peaceful protest, we have made our demands clear, seeking immediate action from our leaders to address pressing issues affecting the citizens of our beloved state and country.

    “We acknowledge the recent address by President Tinubu, but we are disappointed that his speech failed to address any of our specific demands.

    ‘’Despite this setback, we successfully presented our demands to Governor Adeleke, through the deputy governor.” 

    Akwa Ibom

    The protest grounds in the state capital were also empty.

    Governor Umo Eno praised the youth for distancing themselves from the protest and choosing peace.

    To reciprocate their gesture, Eno said his administration would launch a social welfare programme to provide monthly support to about 5,000 youths.

    The governor said: “We celebrate all of our youths wherever they are. They did not protest, not because the police stopped them, but because God spoke to them.

    “I am extremely grateful to our youths for understanding that we can dialogue and get all that we want and that we can work together as a people.”

  • Suspend protests, Gov. Mutfwang urges Plateau youths

    Suspend protests, Gov. Mutfwang urges Plateau youths

    Gov. Caleb Mutfwang of Plateau has urged youths in Plateau to suspend the #Endbadgovernance Protest.

    Mutfwang, who made the call in a state broadcast,  advised the youths to embrace dialogue.

    ”I assure you I have heard you clearly, and we are in this together.  I therefore, appeal to you to stay further protests so we can dialogue with your leaders to add value to our thinking and plans for poverty alleviation since we do not possess a monopoly of wisdom.

    ”As soon as the protests are over, we shall meet with the leaders of the youth groups across the state for further dialogue.

    ”My dear brothers and sisters, the more we continue with the protests, the more likelihood of being hijacked by sponsored criminals and hoodlums like we began to notice from Sunday evening.

    ”Intelligence report at our disposal reveals that the lawful protests have been infiltrated by criminals who were waiting for an opportunity to loot shops, attack and rob innocent citizens of their hard-earned belongings,” he said.

    Read Also: Protests: APC condemns attack on Zamfara party secretariat

    The governor, who advanced reasons for imposing a 24-hour curfew, said that hoodlums had hijacked the protests and began to loot public and private assets.

    ”We saw the display of foreign flags by some of these criminally minded intruders, so as a responsible government, we had to take proactive steps to prevent further acts of criminality.

    ”Thus, the 24-hour curfew we imposed on Jos-Bukuru metropolis from midnight Sunday.

    ”The resistance by hoodlums in some parts of the Jos north area from Monday morning till late afternoon proves that our action of imposing the curfew is justified.

    ”Credible sources have revealed that because of the peace that Plateau is enjoying, merchants of violence invited hoodlums from neighbouring states to disrupt the peace in Jos,”he said.

    Mutfwang also called on the citizens to be patient, insisting that his administration had put modalities in place toward addressing the current challenges in the state.

    He said that his government had so far supported farmers with fertiliser and other farming inputs, trained 370 youths on modern farming, supported women with funds, among other critical interventions, aimed at alleviating the suffering of the masses.

    (NAN)

  • Monarchs, religious leaders, others hailed

    Monarchs, religious leaders, others hailed

    Baale of Dopemu land in Agege Local Government of Lagos State, Chief Shuaib Afogunlowo, has hailed monarchs, religious leaders and leaders of thought for intervening in the planned protest in some states.

    He said this while speaking to reporters in his palace, after assessing the situation in the state.

    Afogunlowo praised the efforts of monarchs, ‘baales’, council chairmen, religious leaders and other stakeholders, who used their influence to appeal to youths, thus dousing tension in Lagos.

    Read Also: Fed Govt cautions Nigerians travelling to UK over risk of violence

    The ‘Baale’ thanked Oba of Lagos, Oba Rilwan Akiolu, kings, traditional rulers, religious leaders and others for preventing breakdown of law and order.

    He urged federal and state governments to embark on programmes that would alleviate the sufferings of Nigerians, following the removal of fuel subsidy.

  • The north after the protests

    The north after the protests

    • By Tunde Olusunle

    Usman Yusuf, professor in the medical sciences is working hard at being a voice of opposition. He cut a controversial image during the administration of former President Muhammadu Buhari during which he headed the National Health Insurance Scheme, (NHIS). He was fingered for a bouquet of infractions under his watch and was serially upbraided by the minister who superintended over his brief, the health minister, Professor Isaac Adewole. Yusuf was subsequently eased out of office after which he became a notable critic. He thereafter severally chastised Buhari for his below par performance and the massive looting of state resources under his watch. This was even as the former president postured as being incorruptible.

    The social media recently availed us the video clip of one of Usman Yusuf’s fire-spitting interviews. His thesis on this occasion is to the effect that northern leaders and their followers are complicit in the security quandary of their part of the country. Away from the Buhari misadventure, Yusuf believes that the north has neither deployed nor synergised its agglomeration of resources to impact on the security and economic situation up north. While the area may not have a sitting president, a position in which Buhari failed to impact his region, Yusuf maintains that the north is not short of capacity in the incumbent governance pyramid. Professor Yusuf references the fact that the: Vice President, Kashim Shettima, (Borno); Speaker, House of Representatives, Tajudeen Abbas, (Kaduna) and the National Security Adviser, (NSA), Nuhu Ribadu from (Adamawa), are all from the north.

    The two Ministers of Defence, Mohammed Badaru Abubakar, (Jigawa) and Bello Matawalle, (Zamfara), are both from neighbouring states in the northwest. Instructively, this is the first time in contemporary Nigerian political history that two sitting Ministers of Defence, are from the same geopolitical zone. The two ministers manning the Ministry of Police Affairs, Ibrahim Geidam, (Yobe) and Imaan Suleiman-Ibrahim, (Nasarawa) are also from the north. Chief of Defence Staff, (CDS), Christopher Gwabin Musa, (Kaduna); the Director-General, State Security Services, (SSS), Yusuf Magaji Bichi, (Kano) and his counterpart at the National Intelligence Agency, (NIA), Ahmed Rufai Abubakar, (Katsina), are similarly from the north. Let’s hope that this mammoth concentration of the leaderships of virtually all critical intelligence and security formations and services in the country, does not stir murmurs and grumbling from sections of the land. Reading this reality, many parts of the country will feel genuinely underrepresented in these critical sectors.

    The 10-day nationwide protest against hunger and bad governance kicked off on Thursday August 1.. Governors and leaders in many states engaged with their constituents and talked them out of participation in the programme. Groups and associations in many states also opted out of the exercise preferring to hold government to account on its promises. In many cities and towns, processions snowballed into uncontrollable chaos, unmanaged violence, destruction and looting. This was witnessed in predominantly northern locations. Hoodlums, vagrants and almajiris infiltrated the ranks of otherwise altruistic protesters, visiting lawlessness and utter brigandage on multibillion naira public and privately owned facilities and infrastructure.

    Read Also: Protest: Keep faith with Tinubu – Mba, Umahi urge southeast

    Shopping complexes, government establishments, warehouses were among investments intentionally and viciously vandalised by the rampaging mob. The propensity of low-lifers to the holistic ruination of everything in sight was evidenced in Kano. Protester-vandals mustered implements like diggers and hammers and chiselled concrete pallets laid across drainages for use by automobiles. The scenes as recorded real-time by television stations, reminds of the same mindlessness with which metal slippers on railway tracks are stolen and sold. It brings back to the teary mind the metal components of our bridges and roads, and even our traffic lights and street lights are harvested and sold by scrap metal merchants. You want to weep for Nigeria.

    The Nigerian police and its sister agencies attempted the containment of the bedlam in places, even as the mob outstripped their numbers in instances. There have been casualties across the land with the media reporting the felling of at least a dozen mobsters tallied from frontlines of engagement. Borno and Niger states accounted for a sizeable percentage of the casualties, while several more sustained gashes and grazes in various degrees. Kayode Egbetokun, Inspector-General of Police, (IGP), reported the loss of one of his men on the first day of the brawl. Christopher Musa the CDS commended the professionalism of the police in managing the uprising, while assuring of the readiness of the military to intervene in the event that the police was overwhelmed.

    Governors in some states, notably Borno, Kano, Kaduna, Kebbi, Nasarawa, Jigawa, have had to declare curfews to minimise the wholesale disorder. Not one state in the nation’s south has declared a sit-at-home for its constituents not because there were no protests, but because the exercise was maturely and peacefully prosecuted. Governor Chukwuma Soludo of Anambra State was launching a “back to land” agricultural programme to boost agricultural production, while the protest was supposed to be in its third day, elsewhere. Yet, the morning after in many northern capitals and cities, carcasses of multibillion naira structures wilfully incinerated by numskulls; ashes from bonfires made of rubber tyres; wilted tree branches, dot the face of the earth. Smithereens of glass; stones and pebbles; canisters of expended pepper spray; empty plastic bottles, drained sachets of water, carpet the lonesome streets.

    Again a reversal of the clock of development as rebuilding and rehabilitation of damaged resources begin from scratch, particularly up north. Professor Usman Yusuf invites the northern leadership and political class to begin a process of genuine soul-searching if it aims to crawl out of the multifaceted morass in which it has practically plunged itself. Statistics from the National Bureau for Statistics, (NBS) and similar bodies local and international, have never been wavered in quoting lower developmental indices across board for the north, relative to the south of the country. In the specific sectors of education, healthcare, industrialisation, employment, the global north is way behind the south. Protesters in Kano looted every moveable item in the National Library of Nigeria outpost in the city. Yet they didn’t pick one single book! The more forward-looking states in the north which give southern entities a run for their figures would be Kogi, Kwara and Benue.

    Beyond the all-too-well-known convergences under various names and monikers, the northern region will require more than a one-day meeting in Kaduna the political headquarters of the north to surgically dilate and dissect the issues afflicting the region. It needs to have a global workshop spanning a few days to jaw-jaw. States in the various geopolitical zones must also meet to ensure the uniform implementation of set objectives. There should be quarterly reviews of programmes and initiatives. Errant governors famous for being on permanent excursions in Abuja the federal capital loafing about like school boys must sit down in their states to do the jobs for which they were voted into office. The north requires genuine regeneration and holistic makeover, made imperative by the recent mass protest brouhaha.

    •Olusunle, PhD, is a Fellow of the Association of Nigerian Authors.

  • Lagos celebrates normalcy four days after protest

    Lagos celebrates normalcy four days after protest

    Lagos Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu has chaired the State Executive Council (SEC) meeting on Monday as full government activities resumed following a four-day hunger protest across Nigeria.

    Commissioner for Information and Strategy Gbenga Omotoso, who addressed reporters after the SEC meeting, thanked Lagosians ‘for not allowing anarchy and embracing peace’.   

    Omotoso confirmed that Lagos is peaceful and government operations have fully resumed. 

    He said: “Lagos is peaceful and will continue to be because that is what Lagosians want. The governor has resumed the business of state, and workers are back at their desks. Members of the public are returning to engage with government services.”

    Read Also: FULL LIST: Varsities who have received NELFUND’s N20,000 monthly stipends

    Omotoso, who also emphasised Lagos’s role as Nigeria’s commercial hub, thanked the protesters for their contribution to the city’s stability. “Lagosians have chosen peace and rejected chaos”, he noted.

    He also hinted that since the government issued three contact numbers for dialogue, thousands of calls have been received from individuals and groups seeking to engage with the government.

    Omotoso therefore urged the people to go about their businesses without fear.

    Checks on major markets across the state and the state secretariat shows that residents are back to their places of work and business. The roads have also become congested contrary to the day one and two of the protest when the roads were deserted.

  • BREAKING: ‘We did not coordinate Nigeria protest’ – Russia

    BREAKING: ‘We did not coordinate Nigeria protest’ – Russia

    The Russian Embassy in Nigeria has issued a statement denying any involvement in the recent protests in northern Nigeria.

    The protests, part of the #EndBadGovernance movement, saw some demonstrators carrying Russian flags and chanting slogans in support of President Putin, while others held placards with various messages.

    This raised concerns about potential external interference in Nigeria’s domestic affairs.

    However, the Russian Embassy clarified on Monday that the protesters’ actions do not reflect any official policy or viewpoint of the Russian government.

    The embassy emphasised Russia’s commitment to non-interference in the internal affairs of other nations, including Nigeria, and reassured that it respects the sovereignty of the country.

    The statement said: “The Embassy has noted the reports in Nigerian media and the circulation of videos and images in digital media depicting protesters in northern states of the country carrying Russian flags and chanting slogans to Russian President Vladimir Putin.

    Read Also: Protest: Keep faith with Tinubu – Mba, Umahi urge southeast

    “The government of the Russian Federation as well as any Russian officials are not involved in these activities and do not coordinate them in any way.

    “As always, we emphasize that Russia does not interfere in the domestic affairs of foreign states, including Nigeria. These intentions of some protesters to wave Russian flags are personal choices of individuals, and they do not reflect any official position or policy of the Russian Government in the issue.

    “We respect Nigerian democracy and believe that peaceful demonstrations in conformity with the Nigerian law are a manifestation of democracy. However, should these events lead to any disruptions or acts of violence we strictly condemn them.”

  • Protest: Kano to probe killings, confirms arrest of 632 suspected vandals

    Protest: Kano to probe killings, confirms arrest of 632 suspected vandals

    Kano state government on Monday, August 5, disclosed its plan to set up a commission of inquiry to investigate those behind the “senseless killings” and looting of public buildings in the state during the Thursday nationwide #EndBadGovernance protest.

    “The probe panel will ascertain the root causes of the killings and destruction,” Governor Abba Yusuf’s spokesman, Sanusi Bature, said.

    Kano residents and the state government are counting huge losses, including loss of lives and property to the supposed peaceful protest on Thursday.

    Also, many were reportedly killed while others sustained gun injuries in a post-demonstration clash between hoodlums and armed security personnel in the state on Saturday.

    Bature said: “The committee’s main objective is to determine the root causes of the violence that led to the killings and destruction, and identify those behind the acts.”

    No fewer than 632 suspects have been arrested in Kano for vandalising public buildings across states, the state government confirmed on Monday.

    Read Also: Business resumes at Lagos Trade Fair market amid protests

    The spokesman, Bature, said the suspects, who were arrested during the protests, have been arraigned before various courts in the ancient city.

    Bature emphasised the state government’s commitment to maintaining peace and order, warning that those found guilty of vandalism would be prosecuted.

    He disclosed the state government’s plan to also “provide a massive training programme for youths in various trades to promote self-dependency.”

  • Protest Day 5: Low turnout in Ojota after President Tinubu’s appeal

    Protest Day 5: Low turnout in Ojota after President Tinubu’s appeal

    The protest in Ojota, on Monday, August 5, entered their fifth day with a noticeably reduced turnout.

    The development followed President Bola Tinubu’s national address, urging citizens to end their protests and engage in dialogue with the government.

    Last week, Ojota’s streets were filled with protesters voicing grievances against economic hardship in the country.

    The protests had garnered national attention, with participants calling for meaningful reforms.

    However, on Monday, the number of protesters significantly decreased, with only a handful continuing the demonstration.

    The decline in attendance comes after President Tinubu’s televised address on Sunday morning.

    The president’s appeal seems to have impacted some individuals, as several previously active protesters were conspicuously absent today.

    Read Also: Sowore’s call for protest in Ondo suffers setback

    Those who continued to gather in Ojota remained steadfast in their determination, undeterred by the reduced numbers.

    Despite the lower turnout, the remaining protesters were unwavering in their commitment to their demands.

     “We will not be silenced by speeches, and “We need action, not just words. We will keep coming out until we see real change.” said Adewale Adeyemi, a protester.

    Security presence in the area remained high, with police officers deployed to maintain order. Police have so far managed to avoid clashes, focusing on de-escalation and ensuring the safety of all participants.

  • Hunger protest takes new dimension as protesters regroup in Kaduna, wave Russian flag

    Hunger protest takes new dimension as protesters regroup in Kaduna, wave Russian flag

    After two days of normalcy, the hunger protest on Monday, August 5, took a new dimension in Kaduna, as the protesters regrouped, marching on the major streets and waving the Russian flag.

    After the vandalization of some government agencies and private property on the first day of the protest, which forced the security operatives to disperse the protesters, normalcy returned to Kaduna, as there was no protest on Friday, Saturday, and Sunday.

    However, on Monday, the fifth day of the nationwide protest, the protesters, mainly youths and underage children, were seen regrouping around the city center, waving the Russian flag.

    The protesters were not seen with any placards stating their demands, except with leaves and flags.

    The protesters were chanting ‘bama so’ meaning we don’t want.

    Read Also: Protests: Cautious optimism as normalcy returns to Kano, Katsina

    One of the protesters said they had to come out again because President Bola Ahmed Tinubu in his Sunday morning address, did not announce the return of fuel subsidy.

    The protester who refused to mention his name also said, that they were carrying the Russian flag because they wanted the Russian government to rescue them from the Nigerian Government.

    The security operatives dispersed them, as the protesters attempted to occupy the popular NEPA Roundabout and block the Ahmadu Bello Way.

    The latest development has however caused panic within the town, as people who had hitherto opened for businesses were forced to close down.