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  • Barricades and police checkpoints dotted the empty streets of Lagos Friday as authorities tried to restore order to Africa's biggest city, under curfew following days of violent unrest. Sporadic gunfire was heard Friday morning but the centre of Nigeria's economic hub appeared calmer by the afternoon, and Lagos governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu announced he was easing the curfew. From Saturday, he said, "people can go out between 8:00 am and 6:00 pm". The shooting of peaceful protesters by security forces in Lagos on Tuesday triggered two days of unrest with shops and buildings looted and vandalised. Heavily armed police stopped a handful of cars left driving in the deserted streets on Friday while a few people tried to find their way home after the city was put under lockdown. A warehouse was looted on Friday in Ojo, near Lagos, witnesses told AFP. "They looted everything on site. They took everything they could lay their hands on," a witness who asked to be identified as Rafiki told AFP. Protests against police abuse first erupted in Nigeria on October 8 after a video of an officer allegedly killing a civilian went viral. Despite the disbanding of the police unit accused of brutality, the federal Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS), protests spread and violence escalated. Anger spread further after pictures and videos on social media showed security forces shooting at a crowd of around 1,000 protesters on Tuesday at Lekki toll gate, a key Lagos protest site. Amnesty International said 12 people were killed in the incident, with a total of 56 people dead across the country since demonstrations began. President Muhammadu Buhari warned demonstrators in a televised address on Thursday not to "undermine national security" -- while not directly addressing the Lekki shooting. The 77-year-old leader called for an end to the protests and appealed on the youth to "resist the temptation of being used by some subversive elements to cause chaos". "For you to do otherwise will amount to undermining national security and the law and order situation. Under no circumstances will this be tolerated," Buhari said. The Lagos governor on Friday published a list of 21 cases of policemen being prosecuted "for offences related to the violation of human rights in Lagos". "We are working to stabilise things across the state as we look to rebuild," he said. US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo called for an investigation into violence by security forces in Nigeria, which also triggered condemnation from the United Nations, the African Union, the European Union and others. Buhari shrugged off the international concern. "We thank you and urge you all to seek to know all the facts available before taking a position or rushing to judgement and making hasty pronouncements," Buhari said. The spreading of "deliberate falsehood and misinformation, in particular through social media" was, he said, "a ploy to mislead the unwary within and outside Nigeria into unfair judgement and disruptive behaviour." After the president's speech, a key protest group told its followers to stay home. "The past two weeks have been tough for many Nigerians, most specifically the last two days," the Feminist Coalition said in a statement. "We hereby encourage all young Nigerians to stay safe, stay home, and observe the mandated curfew in your state." The days of unrest have risked seeing the message of the initial protests get drowned out as looters and vandals took advantage of the chaos. But those involved insist they would keep the momentum going to ensure the demonstrations were just the start of broader changes. "'What next' is us collectively building the type of country we want to live in brick by brick," said one of the organisers, Moe Odele. "I am energised and do not feel defeated at all," she wrote on Twitter. "We strategise and we move." "This was just practice. We go again! Now we must deploy our unity and experiences in every sector to design the country that we want," said Adetola 'Tola' Onayemi, a lawyer involved in the protest movement. The demonstrations have received backing from major celebrities, including Beyonce, Rihanna, Cardi B and others. "This is the most important moment in Nigeria's history," Nigerian megastar singer Burna Boy told Britain's Sky News. "The youth of the largest black nation in the world came together and decided enough is enough." lhd/txw
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  • Police patrol Nigeria's Lagos after days of unrest
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