Buhari Reacts To The CNN And BBC Coverage Of #EndSARS Protest

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Nigeria’s President, Muhammadu Buhari has come to say that Nigeria is a country that is very difficult to govern. The septuagenarian lamented that no matter how hard he tries, some people would still find faults in his government. Adding that as a leader, he has to accept the challenges of leadership and learn to live by them. The president made this known while fielding questions from reporters after receiving some of his aides and close friends who visited him at the presidential villa in Abuja in commemoration of his 77th birthday. “I think I come to accept the realities of leadership in Nigeria, you can only try, it is a terrific country, no matter what you do, there are people on daily basis that look for your faults and go to the press, so you have to learn to live by that,” he said.

Buhari Reacts To The CNN And BBC Coverage Of #EndSARS Protest.

The President, Muhammadu Buhari has reacted to the coverage of #EndSARS protests by foreign media, including the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) and America’s Cable News Network (CNN).

He expressed this at a meeting with state governors at the presidential villa in Abuja on Tuesday.

Nigerian youth in October held the #EndSARS protest in major cities, demanding the dissolution of the Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS) of the police and end to police brutality.

The SARS, which was later dissolved days into the protest, was notorious for extra-judicial killings, harassment and excessive use of force.

The protest gained global traction with prominent people across the globe lending their voices to the campaign.

The largely peaceful protest was later hijacked by hoodlums who unleashed acts such as looting and arson.

However, on October 20, two weeks after the protest began, Nigerian soldiers shot unarmed protesters at Lekki Toll Gate Plaza in Lagos state.

This generated a furor forcing the army and the Lagos State government to initially deny shooting.

A Premium Times investigation showed that some persons died and many sustained injuries in the incident.

A special report by CNN said soldiers shot at protesters, killing many. The investigation uncovered the bullets used as a 2015 brand from Serbia. This refuted the claims from the army denying the use of live ammunition.

But the Nigerian government left the CNN report as fallacious and irresponsible.

However, in his first public comment on the coverage of the protests, the president said the foreign media coverage was not balanced.

He precisely accused CNN and BBC of omitting the killing of police officers and attacks on police stations and prisons.

 “I was disgusted by the coverage, which did not give attention to the policemen that were killed, the stations that were burnt, and prisons that were opened. (They said we are all at fault. We don’t have the sympathy of anyone. We are on our own),” he was quoted as saying by his spokesman, Garba Shehu.

President Buhari further warned that the government would no longer allow violent demonstrations in Nigeria, adding: “democracy does not mean confusion or lack of accountability.”

On the destruction of private and public property, Mr Buhari said no responsible government would allow such to happen again.

 “We do not stop anyone from demonstrating, but you don’t set up roadblocks and smash windscreens. Which government will allow that?’’