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Topic: End SARS Movement Token (Read 148 times)

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October 22, 2020, 03:11:08 PM
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SARS: Why are tens of thousands of Nigerians protesting?

Support this movement. The End Sars Movement aims to raise minimal funds to help our members who have been terribly affected by the shooting and deaths across the country.

The End SARS Movement Tokens, ESMT will be listed on some exchanges. 10B token to be sold at 0.00000001 LTC. The goal of the project is to raise funds for the needs of everyone who sustained an injury and suffered losses during the ongoing protest. Once this goal is reached the sale of the tokens will be stopped. All remaining tokens will then be burned. Exchange listing will be announced soon.

Listing on Exchange :

https://main.southxchange.com/Market/Book/ESMT/BTC

contract source code: https://etherscan.io/token/0x108fF91e3c9Aee851A0890030a83e263d0BC93F2

Throughout the movement, we have recorded several casualties in terms of death and injuries for ourmembers. Funds raised will be used for:

1. payment of hospital bills for young nigerias with various levels on injuries
2. retain the services of lawyers for our arrested members
3. provide financial supports for the bereaved families of those who lost their lives
4. set up educational trust funds for children of the deceased

ABOUT THE END SARS MOVEMENT

 Nigeria has been rocked by protests that erupted against police violence and evolved into broader anti-government demonstrations, leading to a deadly crackdown.

Young people mobilising through social media began staging demonstrations calling for the abolition of the federal Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS), which has long been accused of unlawful arrests, torture and extrajudicial killings.

The hashtag #EndSARS has been trending not just in Nigeria but across the world for several days.



What is SARS?

SARS was a special police unit set up decades ago as Nigeria, Africa’s most populous country, battled rising levels of crime and kidnappings.



What triggered the protests?

The protests were sparked by a viral video allegedly showing SARS officers killing a young man in the southern Delta state. Authorities denied the video was real.

The man who filmed the video was arrested, provoking even more anger.



What are the protesters’ demands?

1. Disbandment of SARS
2. Immediate release of all arrested protesters
3. Justice for all deceased victims of brutality
4.  Appropriate compensation for their families.
5.  Independent body to oversee the investigation and persecution of all reports of police misconduct
6.  Psychological evaluation and retraining of all disbanded SARS officers before they can be redeployed
7.  Increase in police salary so they are adequately compensated for protecting the lives and property of the citizens.
8. Wide-sweeping change in Nigeria, which has the largest number of people living in extreme poverty in the world and a massive youth unemployment rate.



Lekki toll gate
“It became very clear very quickly that the protest cannot just be about SARS, because the kind of abuses that are documented with SARS squad are also something that has become part of everyday life of Nigerians in their contact with figures of authority across the board. The gross inequality, which we’ve seen, has meant that the young people going out on streets feel like it is a fight for survival. Despite massive oil wealth and one of Africa’s largest economies, Nigeria’s people have high levels of poverty and lack of basic services, as a result of rampant corruption, charge rights groups.



How many people have died in protests?

On October 13, thousands of people took to the streets in a string of cities, bringing traffic to a standstill in Nigeria’a economic hub and largest city Lagos. Two days later, the military issued a statement warning “troublemakers” and stressed it remained “highly committed to defend the country and her democracy at all cost”. On October 19, Amnesty said at least 15 people have died since demonstrations started, including two police officers. The following day, as anti-riot police units were deployed nationwide and a round-the-clock curfew was imposed in Lagos, witnesses and rights groups said soldiers opened fire on demonstrators who had defied a curfew in Lagos. The Lagos governor initially said 25 people were wounded but that there were not fatalities during the incident in Lekki toll plaza in Lagos. He later said the authorities were investigating the death of one person who suffered “blunt trauma” to the head. But later on Wednesday, Amnesty said it had confirmed that “the Nigerian army and police killed at least 12 peaceful protesters yesterday at two locations in Lagos. Killings took place in Lekki and Alausa, where thousands were protesting police brutality.”



Have the protests spread across the world?

The #EndSARS protests have taken place in several cities across the world including, London, Berlin, New York and Toronto. Several celebrities such as Beyonce Kanye West, John Boyega, Diddy and Rihanna and Manchester United footballer Odion Ighalo have voiced their support for the protesters online.

WE NEED YOUR SUPPORT

Every donation will be used to support our youths who have suffered untold hardship during this period. Please support us by buying the tokens or making direct contribution to our Ethereum and bitcoin address.

Our details:

1. website: www.endsarsmovement.live
2. email: [email protected]
3.twitter: @endsarsmovemen1

Thank you.




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