The Socialist 28 October 2020
1107

Don't let Tories starve our kids
Tory 'Starve a Kid to Save a Quid' scheme
Boots launches £120, 12-minute Covid test
Backing Hugo Pierre for Unison general secretary
Royal Mail: No more behind closed doors talks
Fight Leeds Labour council's massive cuts
NHS England's £1bn winter shortfall: we need union action, not platitudes!
BAME Covid deaths due to capitalist inequality, confirms government
Mayor and government compete to attack London transport: fight for no cuts!
Grenfell watch: landlord's £800,000 saving
Food and a capitalist Brexit: No trust in Tory Deals!
"We need a leadership that comes from the movement"
Bolivia elections: Crushing defeat for the right as MAS secures landslide victory
Online youth rally says: We won't pay with our futures
Birmingham: 'Refund our fees' protests
Solidarity with the movement in Nigeria
Evicted students can fight back and win
Waltham Forest Save Our Square:
Bristol jobs protest: We want 100% pay
One rule for them, and another for us
Books that inspired me: Germinal
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"We need a leadership that comes from the movement"
Socialist Party organiser Tessa Warrington discussed the anti-SARS protests with a Nigerian student at De Montfort University, Leicester, who is co-organiser of the #EndSARS solidarity protest.
- Why is this protest happening?
We are here in solidarity with our brothers and sisters at home in Nigeria. People came out onto the streets yesterday (21 October) after brutal state killings of peaceful protestors.
SARS is an extremely corrupt armed wing of the police. It targets young people - anyone with tattoos or an iPhone, who looks like they may have money. They march them to ATMs and demand they withdraw cash for them, sometimes in excess of 200,000 Naira (£400). They caught my brother and demanded my family pay 100,000 Naira. We negotiated less, but it was still not money we had to spare. I am afraid for my family right now.
SARS lock people up just because they can. They kill indiscriminately and throw away the bodies to hide the evidence. It is a reign of terror.
- What has been the response of the Nigerian government?
The Lagos government suddenly introduced a 4pm curfew to try to stop the protests. There are little to no traffic management in Nigeria so it was impossible for workers to make the journey home by this time. If anything, it encouraged the protests, as it was seen as dismissal of the movement and a threat of more repression.
Then yesterday (21 October), the military, unprovoked, opened fire on protesters in Lagos doing nothing more than singing our national anthem and waving our flag!
There was also shooting into crowds of protesters at the Lekki Tollgate the previous day. The military shut off the lights to intimidate and scare people. On October 23 Buhari himself said 51 civilians had been killed nationally. At least 78 are now dead and the number is rising. Sanwo-Olu, governor of Lagos state, tried to deny that the Lekki killings had happened, but the attacks were being live-streamed on Instagram!
The reality is that the government is hand in hand with SARS. It is clear that they take a cut of the extorted money; they cannot deny it. That is why SARS feel they can act with impunity. I have heard experiences from Nigerians back home of SARS officials saying 'I will kill you and nothing will happen'.
Not one member of the government has spoken out against these actions. This experience has completely disillusioned Nigerians with the corruption of our black leaders. They have treated us the same as any white oppressor would.
- So what are the demands of the #EndSARS movement? Where does it go from here?
The demands of our movement began with the bare minimum - not to be killed! Now the anger is huge and the protests will not stop. This will undoubtedly lead to more state violence, but we want to show the world what is happening in Nigeria.
We need an end to SARS and Swat. We need total reform of the police from below. But we also want government officials, like President Buhari and Sanwo-Olu, who have been complicit in this state terror to resign. They are only concerned with money, with enriching themselves. We need a leadership that comes from the movement, from the youth and community and who know what our lives are like and stand with us.
In this issue
What we think
Coronavirus News
Don't let Tories starve our kids
Tory 'Starve a Kid to Save a Quid' scheme
Boots launches £120, 12-minute Covid test
Workplace News
Backing Hugo Pierre for Unison general secretary
Royal Mail: No more behind closed doors talks
Fight Leeds Labour council's massive cuts
News
NHS England's £1bn winter shortfall: we need union action, not platitudes!
BAME Covid deaths due to capitalist inequality, confirms government
Mayor and government compete to attack London transport: fight for no cuts!
Grenfell watch: landlord's £800,000 saving
Food Standards
Food and a capitalist Brexit: No trust in Tory Deals!
International News
"We need a leadership that comes from the movement"
Bolivia elections: Crushing defeat for the right as MAS secures landslide victory
Campaigns
Online youth rally says: We won't pay with our futures
Birmingham: 'Refund our fees' protests
Solidarity with the movement in Nigeria
Evicted students can fight back and win
Waltham Forest Save Our Square:
Bristol jobs protest: We want 100% pay
Readers' Opinion
One rule for them, and another for us
Books that inspired me: Germinal
Home | The Socialist 28 October 2020 | Join the Socialist Party
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International Workers' Day - struggle, solidarity, socialism
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