Lagos State governor, Mr Babajide Sanwo-Olu, on Thursday, maintained that the state government never ordered the military shooting of EndSARS protesters who camped at the Lekki Toll- Gate to demand the end to police brutality.
According to reports, the shooting incident had left about 11 of the youths severely injured, leading to escalation of the protests across the state as well as condemnation worldwide of such action on the part of the country’s Army.
Governor Sanwo-Olu also maintained his earlier assertion that no protester died in the incident, stressing that he and officials of the state government had gone round private and public health facilities across the state without being able to identify bodies of those allegedly killed in the incident except one that died from blunt force trauma and another corpse that was recovered by the police in the Victoria Island area with bullet wounds.
The governor said this when appeared on “The Morning Show” programme aired live on Arise News, disclosing that the state was already investigating whether the deceased was a protester.
He urged members of the public with credible information on anyone or group of persons killed in the incident to come forward with the claim, saying the social media overblew the proportion of the incident with what he described as “false information” being shared by those who were not at the scene of the incident.
“There have been several false information that we have seen over the incident and we will appeal to people to show more restraint in posting information that cannot be verified,” the governor cautioned.
On the alleged removal of Close-Circuit Television (CCTV) security cameras at the Toll Plaza, before the shooting started, Sanwo-Olu debunked the claims that he ordered the action.
According to him, the cameras that were removed were not security cameras but laser cameras meant to capture vehicles’ electronic tags and number plates, saying their removal was a decision taken by Lekki Concession Company (LCC) that owns the facility.
“When I spoke to the Managing Director of LCC over the matter, he told me the company took the decision to remove installations critical to their service when the curfew was announced.
“Those cameras that were displayed in the viral pictures were not security or motion cameras. They are laser cameras for vehicles, specifically designed to pick electronic tags and number plates on cars.
“Security cameras installed at the Toll Plaza are still there as I speak and the footages from them are the ones that we will be using in probing the Lekki incident. Since Tuesday, the security cameras at the Toll Plaza are still there and nobody can touch them,” the governor stated.
Governor Sanwo-Olu indicated that multi-agency investigation into Lekki incident might begin next Monday when the order would have been fully restored across the state, pointing out that the recordings of the CCTV security cameras at the Toll Plaza would be useful in unravelling the circumstance that surrounded the incident.
The governor said members of the public would be part of the investigation for transparency, adding that security experts would be involved to analyse the recordings of the CCTV security cameras to ensured the footages captured since the time the protesters started camping at the tollgate were not tampered with.
On the allegation that he influenced the switching off of the billboard that illuminated the Toll Plaza area at night, Sanwo-Olu said the concessionaire that operates the billboard took the decision independently after the curfew order was announced.
The governor, while speaking on the aftermath of the organised attacks on government properties, iconic buildings and private assets in the state, said the nature of the destruction indicated an attempt by the arsonists to keep Lagos in limbo.
According to him, the attacks were specifically targeted at emergency response infrastructure of the state to weaken its response in the case of large-scale violence.
He disclosed that the arsonists, in the organised destruction, razed four state-owned fire stations and five fire trucks, saying the reconstruction of the damaged assets would cost billions, but assured that the state would bounce back after the devastation.
Speaking further, Governor Sanwo-Olu said it would be insensitive for him to buttress the narrative linking the arsonist attacks on public buildings to sectarian elements, noting that his immediate priority was to salvage the damaged assets and prevent further attacks.
He, however, said all materials suggesting the arson may have been organised by secessionists would be left for security agencies for proper analysis.
Clarifying his statement that forces beyond him were behind the deployment of troops to Lekki axis, the governor said the hierarchy and chains of command in the military were not within his purview, adding that this was not something he had responsibility for.
“The hierarchy and chains of command in the military are not within my purview. This is not something I have responsibility for. I do not have such power to control or activate the military. That essentially is what I was trying to say in that particular phrase,” Sanwo-Olu clarified.
Clarifying his efforts to speak with President Muhammadu Buhari on two occasions to seek for more help as public assets in the state were being destroyed, Sanwo-Olu said the president responded, directing the Chief of Defence Staff to liaise with him.
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“I made phone calls to speak to the president twice yesterday (Wednesday). The first time, he (president) hadn’t come to the office. The second time, he was at the Federal Executive Council (FEC) meeting. Indeed, I haven’t spoken to him directly.
“He was actually the one who directed the Chief of Defence Staff to call me and I feel that it was when he got my message. Because, when the Chief of Defence Staff called me, he said to me it was the president that asked him to call. But, I haven’t spoken to the president directly; maybe later today, that might happen,” he said.
The aftermath of the destruction, Sanwo-Olu urged the residents of Lagos to come together and heal the wounds inflicted on the state by the arsonists.
He posited that the ugly incident put citizens’ patriotism to test, urging them to unite and re-build the state from the ruins left by the attacks.
“We are at a point where all of us as a people living in the state must come together more than ever before. Our patriotism has been put to test and we need to re-engage ourselves and heal the several wounds that have been inflicted on us. We do not have any other country; this is our country.
“In Lagos, we cannot afford to put to waste what our forefathers and the generation of leaders before us have put in place. We need to preserve our heritage and we need to know that indeed we can build a future for our children. We need to put an end to any form of anger, protest, confrontation and bleeding. Let us come together and start a real healing process,” the governor said.