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Fresh calls for protests emerge in Nigeria's biggest city
by AFP Staff Writers
Lagos (AFP) Feb 9, 2021

Kidnapped Chinese workers freed in Nigeria: police
Lagos (AFP) Feb 9, 2021 - Nigerian police said on Tuesday they had freed three Chinese workers kidnapped last week from a gold-mining site in southwestern Osun state.

The Chinese were abducted and their police escort killed on February 1 following a dispute with local labourers at the mining site at the Atakumosa area of the state.

"We have rescued the three Chinese expatriates. They were freed on Sunday," state police spokeswoman Yemisi Opalola told AFP.

She said they were released following a joint operation of police and local hunters.

"Our operatives and the hunters had been combing the bushes and forests for the past one week," she said.

Opalola said the kidnappers had to abandon their captives when security forces closed in on them.

She said the foreigners became ill while in captivity and were being given medical care.

"We met them in a terrible state. These were people who were made to endure rough weather and not properly fed in captivity," she said.

She said no arrests had been made.

Kidnapping for ransom used to be common in Nigeria's oil-producing south but has lately spread to other parts of the country.

The victims are usually released after a ransom is paid although police rarely confirm if money changes hands.

Chinese firms are working in Nigeria on multi-billion-dollar infrastructure projects that include mining, railways, airports and roads.

Their workers have been repeatedly targeted by kidnap gangs.

Last July, four Chinese workers were abducted from a quarry site in southern Cross River state while their police guard was killed. They were released one month later.

Activists behind massive protests that swept across Nigeria in October have called for a new rally on Saturday in Lagos as an investigation stalls into a deadly shooting during last year's demonstrations.

Youth-led protests against police brutality and bad governance brought Africa's largest city to a standstill last year, with the campaign drawing support from many high-profile celebrities.

On social media, the hashtag "OccupyLekkiTollGate" was widely shared after a decision on Saturday by a judicial panel to authorise the reopening of the Lekki tollgate where security forces shot at peaceful protesters on October 20.

After the shooting, the army said only blank rounds were fired to disperse the crowds who had defied a curfew but Amnesty International said soldiers killed at least 10 protesters.

Demonstrations that had spread across the country came to a sudden halt after a wave of looting and civil unrest followed.

Amnesty said at least 56 people had died in the October protests.

Calm returned to Lekki but the company in charge of the tollgate had stopped operating -- until a judicial panel launched by the state of Lagos said on Saturday it could resume its work.

Protesters, angry at the decision to restart commercial activities at the tollgate where unarmed civilians died, are calling for a fresh protest to demand justice.

"No Justice, No Re-Opening. You can't open a tollgate where victims of state sanctioned murder are yet to get justice," was a slogan largely shared on social media.

The investigation into the shooting has lingered as representatives of the armed forces have failed three times to appear in front of the panel.

"If they reopen Lekki Tollgate & start collecting blood money, the people should occupy it again," wrote one protester, Comrade Deji Adeyanju, who has 120,000 followers on Twitter.

Some are worried that the protest could be used as an excuse to loot properties and have called for a counter-protest to take place on Saturday at Lekki, with the hashtag "DefendLagos" also trending on social platforms.


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