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Restrained Suspect Shot Dead by Police in Delta, Forcing Nigerians to Ask: Are We Really Safe?
Nigeria Is Beginning To Sound Like 2020 Again. If The Government Is Not Careful, Another #EndSARS May Rise
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Nigeria Is Beginning To Sound Like 2020 Again. If The Government Is Not Careful, Another #EndSARS May Rise

#EndSars

How Many More Nigerians Have To Die Before Something Changes?

There is a dangerous kind of silence that happens before people finally decide they have had enough.

Not the silence of peace. The silence of frustration. The silence of citizens watching the same problems repeat themselves while those in power keep acting like public anger is just another social media trend that will eventually disappear.

For many Nigerians, 2020 was supposed to be a turning point. The #EndSARS movement was not just a protest. It was young people crying out against police brutality, harassment, intimidation, extortion, and the fear of simply existing in their own country. It was emotional. It was painful. And for a brief moment, it felt like the government had finally heard the people.

But here we are again in 2026, and the conversations are starting to sound painfully familiar.

Recently, social media was flooded with outrage after a man identified as Mene Ogidi was allegedly shot by a police officer in Delta State. According to reports and videos circulating online, witnesses claimed the victim had already been restrained before the shooting happened.

The incident immediately triggered anger across different platforms, with many Nigerians comparing the situation to the exact kind of police violence that sparked the #EndSARS protests years ago.

And honestly, you cannot blame people for being angry.

Because this is not just about one incident anymore. It is about accumulated frustration. It is about Nigerians constantly hearing stories of harassment, extortion, unlawful arrests, intimidation, and abuse from people who are supposed to protect them.

Just recently, Amnesty International released reports accusing the Tiger Base police unit in Imo State of torture, unlawful detention, extortion, and human rights violations. Reading through some of the allegations felt like reopening old wounds Nigerians have been trying to heal from since 2020.

That is the scary part.

People no longer get shocked the way they used to. Many Nigerians now see videos of police brutality online and react with exhaustion instead of surprise. That emotional numbness says a lot about the state of the country.

And the truth is, protests do not just happen overnight.

A protest begins long before people gather on the streets. It starts when citizens begin to lose trust. It starts when young people feel unheard for too long. It starts when people begin to believe that nobody is coming to protect them. It starts when every new incident feels like proof that nothing has changed.

Right now, Nigeria is slowly entering that emotional space again.

The economy is already frustrating millions of young Nigerians. People are struggling to survive. Many are mentally exhausted. Add repeated cases of police brutality to that mix, and what you get is a country sitting on bottled-up anger.

Nobody truly wants another #EndSARS moment. The memories are still heavy. The pain is still fresh for many families. But the government must understand something important: you cannot keep ignoring public frustration and expect people to remain quiet forever.

Nigerians are not asking for too much.

People simply want to move freely without fear of harassment. They want law enforcement officers who protect instead of intimidate. They want accountability when abuse happens. They want to feel safe in their own country.

Because when citizens begin to fear the people meant to protect them, society slowly starts breaking from the inside.

And if those in power are not careful, Nigeria may once again hear the voices of angry young people echoing through the streets, demanding the same thing they demanded years ago:

Enough is enough.

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