Tonight Nigerian security forces stormed the most prominent site of the #EndSARS protests in Lagos, firing live rounds & killing several people as the government sought to end two weeks of marches against police brutality. Here's our report - and a thread: wsj.com/articles/niger…
Three eyewitnesses who were gathered at the Lekki toll gate, a protest hub situated on one of Lagos’ busiest intersections, said that shortly after 7pm soldiers arrived in pickup trucks and fired tear gas then bullets into the crowd.
It was not immediately clear how many people had been killed, but each of the witnesses said they saw several bodies on the road. Videos from the scene showed graphic scenes of screaming protesters surrounding bloodied corpses, visible through a haze of yellow tear gas smoke.
"The nigerian government sent the army to come and kill us," said Akinbosola Adeyemi, a talkshow host who ran one kilometer to safety. "A lot of people were hit. You are not meant to shoot live firearms against us."
Nigeria’s army referred questions about the killings to the civil police, who couldn’t didn’t respond to calls for comment. Nigeria’s national government also couldn’t be reached.
The decision to deploy deadly force to quell the youth-driven #EndSARS protests moves Nigeria’s politics into an uncertain new phase. The intervention comes just hours after the Lagos govt declared a curfew saying protests had “degenerated into a monster.”
The Lekki toll gate has been a key rallying point for national demonstrations, with food stalls, canvas tents and protesters singing songs behind a large plasma screen carrying the slogan Soro Soke, or “speak louder.”
Now the gate has also become a symbol of demonstrators’ lives lost. The big question is whether it becomes a site that makes a mark on history — like Tahrir square — or one that fades, like Bahrain’s Pearl roundabout?
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A year ago today, Evan was thrown into a Russian jail.
Putin had taken our colleague hostage, but as a newsroom we made a determination: to investigate the opaque structures and individuals responsible, who now hold his fate in their hands.
This is some of what we found:
We took readers inside Lefortovo prison, the FSB jail where Evan is held, mapping its cells, interrogation rooms and the basement where Stalin’s henchmen once blasted music to drown the screams of detainees
On his 100th day in jail, we revealed the secret FSB spy unit that tracks Americans in Russia and led the arrest of Evan and other U.S. nationals. The DKRO is so little known that its wikipedia page was created the day after the piece ran.
On the day Putin claimed ZNPP had become Russian property, Ihor was abducted, hooded, blindfolded and locked in a basement prison. Days later, gunmen told him to read a confession for a state TV show: “What you say now will determine your fate”...
Abubakar Shekau, the fundamentalist warlord who turned Boko Haram from an obscure sect into a jihadist army that killed 1000s across 4 nations is dead, according to officials, mediators & calls intercepted by a spy agency seen by @drewhinshaw & I.
Shekau's death-if confirmed-removes one the world’s most brutal, effective and little-understood terrorist leaders: a contemporary of Bin Laden, Baghdadi and Zarqawi, who outlived them all.
The insurgency's cackling face for 12 yrs, his death has big consequences for the region.
Globally, he was best known for the 2014 kidnapping of the 276 schoolgirls that sparked the global #BringBackOurGirls campaign.
His death has been erroneously reported several times before and there has been no official confirmation from Nigeria’s govt, Boko Haram Islamic State.
On today's @WSJ front page, our in-depth look at COVID's next challenge: the "great divergence" in growth paths of the world's rich and poor economies.
The dynamic has far-reaching consequences for the global economy and geopolitics. (THREAD)
First the landscape: The U.S economy is growing like the “roaring 20s”; China grew 18.3% in Q1; U.K. expanding faster than at any time since WWII.
In the developing world, largely unvaccinated & unable to afford sustained stimulus measures, economies are falling further behind.
The middle class in developing countries, a key engine of
development, is contracting rapidly, but has barely been dented in the U.S. & China, says @pewresearch. While the U.S. has already rebounded back to growth, lower income countries will take years to return to 2019 levels
In 2017, @drewhinshaw & I entered a Nigerian cabinet minister’s office to ask why Boko Haram was ascendent. “Because we gave them millions of euros for the Chibok girls!” he said with a nervous chuckle
It was a slip of a tongue that set us on a journey
Since then we've tried to understand why it took three years to free the schoolgirls briefly championed by millions: @Pontifex, @KimKardashian, @TheRock all tweeted #BringBackOurGirls. Maybe you did, too?...
Twitter quickly moved on... But the real story had only just begun.
Those few days of tweets lit a fuse that burned for years, the forces of Silicon Valley reshaping a Nigerian war. Drones,FBI agents,mercenaries & glory hunters flew in to liberate a class of teenagers who'd become a prize in the 'war on terror'
It's almost impossible to believe, but 6 years after the kidnap of 276 schoolgirls ignited the #BringBackOurGirls campaign, Nigeria is again reeling from a mass school abduction by Boko Haram, this time of what appears to be more than 300 boys. A thread: wsj.com/articles/boko-…
The students were seized from an all-boys boarding school in Katsina, northwest Nigeria and marched deep into a nearby forest. Details of the attack, in a remote region with patchy cell phone reception, remain murky, including the true tally of the missing.
Local officials say 333 of the school’s 800 students are missing and assumed captive. If confirmed, that would make it one of the largest mass kidnappings of schoolchildren in history—and bigger than the abduction in Chibok.