Femi Adesina, the Special Adviser to President Buhari on Media and Publicity has described the #RevolutionNow protest embarked upon by some aggrieved Nigerians as irritating.
This description was made by the presidential media aide during an interview on Channels Television’s Sunrise Daily programme on Thursday August 5.
Adesina averred that only a few youths out of the 200 million Nigerians in the country embarked on the protest.
Adesina said;
“Well, was it really a protest? By my estimation, it just seemed like a child’s play because protests by their very nature are spontaneous things, mass things. These are just a sprinkle of people trying to be funny. As far as I am concerned, it is nothing to worry about.
“A revolution is always a mass thing, not a sprinkle of young boys and girls you saw yesterday in different parts of the country. I think it was just a funny thing to call it a revolution protest.”
Adesina further stated that the protests were nothing but an irritation and he had a right to his opinion when questioned if it was right for the Presidency to talk down on young Nigerians for protesting.
“In a country of 200 million people and if you see a sprinkle of people saying they are doing a revolution, it was a child’s play.”
When asked if the seriousness of a protest is determined only by size, Adesina added;
“Well, it will always matter because if you said it was a revolution, revolutions by definition are quite well known.
“Revolution is something that turns the normal order. What happened yesterday, would you call it a revolution? It was just an irritation, just an irritation and some people want to cause irritation in the country and what I will say is when things boil over, they boil over because you continue to heat them.
“When you see pockets of heating up in the country, eventually they culminate in a boiling over. So, Nigerians need to know that the country we get is what we use our hands to build.”
Adesina also maintained that the protest was misguided as some of the things the protesters were demonstrating about such as insecurity, corruption, poverty and rights abuse were not peculiar to Nigeria.
On if the clampdown on protests would continue, the President’s aide said;
“The government will do whatever is right, whatever is required to maintain peace.”
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