The ban on the Bring Back Our Girls protests was removed today, but not until Nigerians went to war over the matter
Nigerian seem to have found an effective weapon in the social media, especially Twitter.
They
effectively galvanized the Nigerian government into action with the
#BringBackOurGirls campaign which became a worldwide action drive.
The protest was however dramatically banned and unbanned within the space of 24 hours by the police.
On
Monday, Federal Capital Territory Police Commissioner Mbu Joseph Mbu,
announced a total ban #BringBackOurGirls protest at a news conference,
alleging plans by Boko Haram agents to bomb the protesters.
““Information
reaching us is that too soon, dangerous elements will join groups under
the guise of protest and detonate explosives aimed at embarrassing the
government.”
“Protests on the Chibok girls are hereby banned with immediate effect,” he told a stunned audience
Angered, Nigerians took to the social media to protest what they called an infringement of their fundamental human rights.
In
the social media war that followed, CP Mbu was vilified and called many
unprintable names, with only a very few people speaking in support of
the ban.
Like many, popular social media activist, @omojuwa posted a strongly worded tweet to show his displeasure.
"CP Mbu is the sort that'd plant a bomb at the protest ground just to say "I told you so!"," Omojuwa wrote.
One angry Nigerian, Nelson Ekujumi, posted a series of angry-tweets after the ban.
"The
powers to make laws for the federal capital territory Abuja rest with
the legislature, the National assembly and not Mr. Mbu Joseph Mbu
"Mr.
Mbu Joseph Mbu cannot deny the Nigerian people the right to assemble in
any part of the country which is a constitutional right," @nekujumi
posted.
Realwan Okpanachi was quick to note Mbu's involvement in the political drama that nearly tore Rivers state apart recently.
"Mbu
again. When is this Police officer going to learn?. Somebody please
tell him that wat we hav is more of democracy than military regime,"
@realwan said.
Another Nigerian twitterzen, Victor (Owo @owo747(, mocked the CP in his tweet:
"Mbu
reads the minds of terrorists by stopping a peaceful protest,his mind
reading didn't stop Nyanya x2. What a great Einstein you are."
For people like Yourmight (@yomie_h), the Abuja police boss was being used by the Presidency.
"CP
Mbu is showing us again that he's a tools in the hand of presidency to
destabilize our hard earn democracy," @yomie_h wrote.
The pressure mounted must have reached the right quarters as the ban has been lifted this afternoon.
The
Inspector General of Police, IGP Mohamed Abubakar, announced the
reversal the ban, through the Force spokesman, CSP Frank Mba, at a press
conference in Abuja.
Mba said the police only advised the protesters based on security concerns.
"The Police did not ban peaceful rallies,” he said.
So
effectively, Nigerians were able to upturn what CP Mbu called a
“nuisance to the government” into a “peaceful protest” as agreed by Mba.
Do you think the power of the social media had a role to play in this?
No comments:
Post a Comment