
Audio By Carbonatix
Nigerian Police Minister, Muhammad Maigari Dingyadi, has told the BBC that soldiers were not instructed to shoot at protesters.
"Soldiers have already spoken about this, they are denying their involvement and government is aware that they have not given any soldiers instructions to go into this crisis, not at all," Mr Dingyadi told the Newsday programme in an interview.
His remarks come after Amnesty International said at least 12 people were killed by soldiers and police in Lagos on Tuesday. Nigeria's army has dismissed the reports as "fake news".
The minister said the ongoing anti-police brutality protests in the country had been hijacked by rogue elements. He said the government was working on all the demands for reforms demanded by protesters.
Quote Message: We all know how this thing started, it started peacefully with genuine demands but suddenly this thing has turned to something completely different. You cannot call a situation where properties, houses, buildings were burnt down - you cannot call it peaceful, some people must have taken over this protests.
"We all know how this thing started, it started peacefully with genuine demands but suddenly this thing has turned to something completely different. You cannot call a situation where properties, houses, buildings were burnt down - you cannot call it peaceful, some people must have taken over these protests."
We are continuing with police reforms and we are appealing to protesters and at the same time continue with the implementation of the demands given to us."
He said President Muhammadu Buhari's administration inherited a bad system which it is currently reforming.
Latest Stories
-
‘I never did this advert’, AI clones hijack Ghanaian identities for profit
3 minutes -
25-year-old woman battles trauma after surviving deadly Nkwanta attack
19 minutes -
Vice President honoured at Tortsogbeza as South Tongu leaders highlight development needs
28 minutes -
Kwahu Business Forum 2026: Corporate citizenship, sustaining African businesses take centre stage with KGL as the case study
2 hours -
Trump seeks $152m to reopen notorious Alcatraz prison
4 hours -
Ex-Chelsea player Oscar retires with heart issue
4 hours -
CA Foundation drives constitutional literacy in Kpone Katamanso municipality
4 hours -
GPRTU to hold talks with Transport Ministry over rising fuel costs
4 hours -
CUTS International urges gov’t to halt sachet water price hike pending cost review
4 hours -
Chief Justice: Efficient Judiciary essential to reducing business costs
4 hours -
Bayern grabs 99th-minute winner to cap superb fightback
4 hours -
Ahmed Ibrahim urges Ghanaians to reflect Easter values in nation-building
4 hours -
ECG inefficiencies undermining power supply -Mahama outlines reforms
4 hours -
Lewandowski scores as Barca fight back to defeat Atletico
4 hours -
Lack of private sector consultation undermining economic growth – Jerry Ahmed Shaib
5 hours