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Don’t incite public against military, Presidency warns opposition

Ezekiel Johnson
Ezekiel Johnson
ASUU strike: Buhari gives minister two weeks to resolve issues
Buhari

The Presidency has warned a section of the political class against misleading the public and inciting protests against the heads of military institutions.

It said the warning became necessary “in view of received reports that about two thousand men and women have been hired to demonstrate against Nigeria’s service chiefs on Monday.”

The imminent gathering, the Presidency said, was the latest in a series of demonstrations orchestrated by the opposition to embarrass the government of President Muhammadu Buhari.

It said as part of the overall scheme, “the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, with its belligerent politics, has been marching from one embassy to the other in protest against the Buhari administration and the nation’s highest court of justice, the Supreme Court. They are keen to give the impression that Nigerians are in support of them as they take to the streets, and they will go to any length to promote this false narrative.”

The Presidency said “the recent incident in Maiduguri, Borno State, where an overwhelmingly cheering crowd gathered to welcome President Buhari, while a handful were recorded booing him, is a part this elaborate scheme.”

It described the development as misleading.

Some analysts, it said, had tried read that as verdict against President Buhari, who emerged winner with 94 per cent of the votes cast in the Presidential election in the state in February last year.

“This was clearly a hired few, but the news was promoted by the opposition who had of course positioned themselves to record the booing – all just to embarrass the President.”

The statement by the Presidency as issued by the president’s media aide, Mallam Garba Shehu, reads in part:

“We urge the media to remain unbiased and discerning in their reporting, instead of becoming unwitting tools in the hands of the opposition.

“A group of politicians and beneficiaries of the Boko Haram insurgency is right now paying for people to join their planned protest against our country’s service chiefs, and they will no doubt seek the media’s collaboration on this as usual.

“But there is news and there is promoted content – two very different things, one of which should never make the headlines as these recent fake protests have done.”

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