http://www.marxist.com/revolutionary-upsurge-in-nigeria.htm

 Revolutionary upsurge in
Nigeria<http://www.marxist.com/revolutionary-upsurge-in-nigeria.htm>

*Written by Iyabo Ajewolle and Oke Ogunde Wednesday, 11 January 2012 17:07 *

** 
<http://www.marxist.com/revolutionary-upsurge-in-nigeria/print.htm><http://www.marxist.com/component/option,com_mailto/link,aHR0cDovL3d3dy5tYXJ4aXN0LmNvbS9yZXZvbHV0aW9uYXJ5LXVwc3VyZ2UtaW4tbmlnZXJpYS5odG0%3D/tmpl,component/>

*[image: Nigeria-fuel-price-protest-turns-violent-51PQQPE-x-large-th]History
was made today, 9th January 2012, as Lagosians in their thousands harkened
to the call of the Labour and Civil Society Organisation (LASCO) to embark
on a nationwide strike/mass protest toexpress their dissatisfaction with
the recent increment in the pump price of petrol as announced by the
Goodluck Jonathan-led government on 1st of January. LASCO encompasses the
two labour centers in Nigeria i.e. the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) and
the Trade Union Congress (TUC) as well as the Joint Action Front (JAF)
which is the umbrella body of the pro-labour civil society organisations.*
Report on the general strike and anti-fuel price hike mass protests in

Lagos – day 1

[image: Nigeria
revolution]<http://www.marxist.com/images/stories/nigeria/Nigeria%20revolution.jpg>As
early as 7.00 am in the morning, multitudes of workers and other working
people had assembled at the NLC secretariat in Yaba, Lagos, a traditional
starting point for such mass protests. The rally took off in full gear with
all manner of slogans visible on banners and placards. Prominent among such
slogans are ‘enough is enough’; ‘no to fuel subsidy removal’ and ‘Jonathan
must go!’

The historic nature of the rally and demonstrations lies first and foremost
in the size of the crowd. More than 300,000 people were on the streets to
protest the fuel price hike and poor standard of living in the country.
Never has the city witnessed such movement of people with such unanimity of
purpose. The anger was palpable and the dissatisfaction was unprecedented.
Apart from the heavy presence of ordinary workers and poor stratum, there
was also a mammoth middle class professionals’ representation. Most visible
among them were the medical doctors under the banner of the Nigeria Medical
Association (NMA); they came in their ward coats and brought ambulances
with stock of medications to help protesters in case of emergency; the
Nigeria Bar Association (NBA), the umbrella body of lawyers in Nigeria also
marched in the protest in their gowns and wigs, and members of the Academic
Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) who came to the mass rally in their

academic gowns. It was a sight to behold.

Compliance to organised labour’s directive for a total strike and mass
action was total and paralyzing. All shops, offices and commercial centres
remained closed and there was no sign of commercial vehicles. The ever busy
boulevards and major roads were largely empty with very few vehicular
activities noticed. The heads of protesters went as far as the eyes could
see, stretching along many kilometres on Ikorodu Road, the major path of
the demonstration, while the city of Lagos, renowned as the commercial
capital of Nigeria, became nothing but a ghost of itself.

The historic nature of the protest was also expressed in the quality of the
protesters. Unquestionably, large layers of the crowd are the advance guard
of the working people as represented by the trade union activists in
specific union attires and other groupings yearning for change, given the
comments being passed and the conclusions being drawn. It was indeed a
sight to behold!

The protesters trekked a distance of about 10km without showing signs of
 tiredness or weariness and chanting revolutionary songs, abuses and curses
on Jonathan and his cohort. The long walk culminated into a mega rally at
Gani Fawehinmi park at Ojota, where tens of thousands of people

[image: 
Nigeria-fuel-price-protest-turns-violent-51PQQPE-x-large]<http://www.marxist.com/images/stories/nigeria/Nigeria-fuel-price-protest-turns-violent-51PQQPE-x-large.jpg>including
the save Nigeria group led by pastor Tunde Bakare had already gathered.
Needless to say, the demand for copies of our paper, *Workers Alternative*,
was at an all time high, and the total sale was to the tune of 350 copies.

At the park, the masses were addressed by leaders of organized labour and
civil society organizations, including representatives of the doctors’
union, lecturers, lawyers and the spokesperson for actors/actresses and
filmmakers in Nollywood – the Nigerian Hollywood

equivalent . It was thereafter unanimously agreed that the streets would
continue to be occupied until the Jonathan-led government reverts the price
of petrol back to N65 and all the other key demands of the protest are
acceded to.

Spice and colour were added to the mix as popular Nigerian musicians also
performed to keep protesters’ spirit up and in the same vein revolutionary
music of the legendary Fela could be heard blaring in full blast.

Reports across the country also showed a similar pattern to the Lagos
experience. Maximum strike compliance was recorded in almost all the major
cities and towns both in the southern and northern parts of the country.
Rallies and demonstrations occurred in Abuja, the federal capital city in
central Nigeria, as well as in other cities like Kano, Sokoto, Zamfara,
Kaduna, Bauchi etc in the North. Public and financial institutions (Banks
etc) were also closed in the hitherto sectarian clashes hotspot, Jos, in
compliance with the LASCO general strike. The same experiences were
witnessed in almost all the southern cities; the general strike cum
demonstrations and rallies held in Ibadan, Osogbo, Abeokuta, Akure, Benin,
Asaba, Owerri, Calabar, Port Harcourt, etc.

What is obvious from this report is that the working masses in Nigeria who
are presently participating in the nationwide strike action and mass
protests have seen the futility of the argument of the government and its
apologists for the removal of the so called subsidy on petrol. Noteworthy
is the fact that the revolutionary pace of this movement is gradually
taking its own course starting with the demand to return the price of
petrol (PMS) to the status quo price of N65 per litre and now with the
growing demand that President Jonathan must resign and go!

It is however important at this point to deepen the present demand with
appropriate political programmatic demands which will link the anti-fuel
price increment demand with other pending demands of the workers and the
toiling masses. These include, but are not limited to, a truly National
minimum wage, Free universal healthcare services, free education at all
levels, a social pension scheme, the building of publicly-owned oil
refineries and nationalization of the commanding heights of the economy
among other socialist programmatic demands. More importantly, this movement
should signal the urgent need to create an independent mass political
platform organized around the existing structure of LASCO nationwide.

*Indeed this is the beginnings of the Nigerian Revolution!*
Home <http://www.marxist.com/> » Africa <http://www.marxist.com/africa/> »
Nigeria <http://www.marxist.com/nigeria/>


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