Nigeria's President Muhammadu Buhari has bid for peace as a judicial panel set up to investigate police maltreatments in the business center point of Lagos starts sittings on Monday. 

The investigative panel was one of the demands of the protesters who need police officers prosecuted of maltreatment to be considered responsible. 

They likewise need survivors of police brutality or their family members to be repaid by the government. 

Lagos state was the first of the country's 36 states to set up a panel and has requested that individuals submit objections. 

In a tweet, President Buhari said the request had his full help: 



He said he had from the start abstained from going into a debate about the shootings in Lekki toll gate, a wealthy suburb in Lagos, until the real factors are set up, as indicated by statement from his office. 

"The President prompts that harmony, fraternity, and bury mutual agreement are vital to our ethos and urges Nigerians 'not to betray each other in disdain'," the statement said. 

The examinations will begin after almost fourteen days of protests across Nigeria by adolescents demanding police reforms and how the country is run. 

President Buhari said 69 individuals were killed during the brutal protests, including 51 civilians. 

Lagos State Governor, Babajide Sanwo-Olu, said the specialists had expanded the extent of examinations to incorporate the shooting occurrence at the Lekki toll gate a week ago Tuesday.