1. Now that the Lagos State @followlasg Judicial Panel of Inquiry has affirmed that peaceful Nigerian citizens protesting police brutality were massacred at #Lekkitollgate in Lagos a year ago, the individuals in the @HQNigerianArmy and @PoliceNG who gave the unlawful
orders for the extrajudicial killings — as well as those who pulled the trigger — must pay for their crimes with prosecution and punishment.

2. As I said when the news of the killings broke to the world, these are violations of international humanitarian law in addition to
national laws. This was mass murder, and attempted mass murder, pure and simple. The perpetrators must not go free, and adequate restitution— which is also within the mandate of the judicial panel — must be made to all the protesters who were murdered in cold blood, injured, or
assaulted.

3. As a United Nations official in the mid-1990s, I trained Cambodian and Croatian security institutions in human rights standards to prevent the kind of extrajudicial killings and police brutality that occurred at Lekki and which the #EndSARS protests confronted.
4. Nigeria has turned into a country marked by an increasing rise of official lawlessness, arbitrariness and repression of its citizens by agencies of @NigeriaGov This does not behove a country that claims to be a democracy.
5. Root and branch reform of the @HQNigerianArmy and @PoliceNG on respect for the human rights of Nigerian civilians remains urgently needed. It must not only be declared as done or as a rhetorical objective. It must be seen to have happened going forward.
6. President @MBuhari should take responsibility as the Commander-in-Chief of the Nigerian Armed Forces for the #LekkiMassacre . He must ensure and enforce accountability for this heinous crime by troops under his ultimate command.
7. At the very least, in addition to judicial accountability for the victims, he and his Government owe the families of the victims and Nigerians in general a formal and unreserved apology for this tragic occurrence.
8. I offer my heartfelt condolences once again to the families of the deceased victims of the #LekkiMassacre . October 20, 2020 was a day that will live in infamy in the history of Nigeria. May the blood of our youth shed by those whose duty it was to protect their lives not have
been spilled in vain. May this kind of tragedy never happen again in our land.

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More from @MoghaluKingsley

12 Nov
Until we take back our power in our struggling democracy, instead of surrendering it to the money and “structures” of political oligarchs, we will keep complaining about bad governance. We’re the voters, therefore na we be the “structure”, therefore na we suppose decide!
Good political organization matters. Any serious candidate must work on that.But that’s a different thing from us as people suspending what must be our serious judgment about who is the better CANDIDATE for an office, and then voting for corrupt, incompetent life time politicians
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My 7-point agenda for Naija youth from 2023 is a game-changer that will enable our young men and women colonize the future and recover the lost years of the locust. It’s the path to the prosperity of millions!
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The Future of Nigeria’s Youth: The Promise of a Kingsley Moghalu Presidency

Press and Public Statement by Professor Kingsley Moghalu OON, Presidential Aspirant and Member of the African Democratic Congress @ADCNig

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A year ago, Nigerian youth organized themselves in the peaceful #EndSARS protests to demand freedom from police brutality. Quite sadly, the bravery of the young compatriots was met by even more brutality. Like millions of fellow citizens, and indeed our youth, I especially
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Today I began my engagement as an Academic Visitor @UniofOxford for the Michelmas Term (October 2021-December 2021). As the Oxford Martin Visiting Fellow at Oxford's @oxmartinschool, I will give a public lecture on a topic of political economy, lead a seminar, interact and share
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