At least six people are said to have died and several others injured as soldiers shot at #ENDSARS protesters at Lekki Toll Gate in Lagos on Tuesday night.
According to Amnesty International, “excessive use of force” occasioned “deaths of protesters at Lekki toll gate in Lagos”.
The body said while it would continue to investigate the killings, it reminded the Nigerian authorities that under international law, security forces are only allowed to resort to the use of lethal force when strictly unavoidable to protect against imminent threat of death or serious injury.
Several Nigerians on Twitter on Tuesday night posted videos of Nigerians shot at the Lekki toll gate and those rushed to different hospitals in the state.
In some of the videos, the protesters tried to remove bullets from some of the wounded while some died in the process.
One of the tweets read, “The Nigerian government has ordered the army to shoot live ammunition at peaceful protesters sitting unarmed in Lagos, Nigeria. The army has killed six people in the last one hour.”
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The PUNCH quoted an eyewitness,Samuel Ajani as saying that many protesters were injured.
Ajani noted that the shooting caused pandemonium as protesters scampered to safety.
He said, “They shot at us. They initially started shooting into the air. We were all scared but some people told us not to run. We then surrounded ourselves in clusters.
“Their faces were covered. We did not know that that was their plan when they put off the light. They forgot that we have our phones and can stream live. Some people ran away but others stood. I hid behind a cemented barricade.
“They shot a guy right in front of me. The guy wanted to bend when the gunshot hit him. He started bleeding. Later we rushed to save him but he stopped breathing.”
Also, videos of continuous gunshots had gone viral on social media.
In one of the videos, a lifeless youth was seen on the floor.
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The protesters in the video called for help, saying they were under heavy gunfire bombardment.
The state governor, Babajide Sanwo-Olu, had declared a 24-hour curfew, citing the violence that greeted the #EndSARS protest in the state.
Some of the protesters, who claimed that the timing was short, refused to vacate the protest ground.