Opinion
State Police: Two Sides Of A Coin
Those who drafted the 1999 Constitution would certainly not have contemplated the infiltration of the country by suicide bombers or may have been guided by the experience of the First Republic. Or could it be that the reason why the idea of State Police did not find any consideration in the Nigerian Constitution was because the 1999 Constitution is a product of military regimes which believe in unitary system of government?
Whatever the reasons might be, the current security situation in Nigeria has made the quest for state police irresistible.
Many Nigerians, including the political class, have been calling for the creation of state police as a way out of the rising spate of insecurity in the country.
Speaking at the Senate 2012 Retreat in Uyo, Akwa’ Ibom State last Tuesday on the theme: “ National Assembly and National Security: Securing the future for Development,” the National Chairman of the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN), Chief Bisi Akande said “Government must improve the quality of the life and general welfare of millions of Nigerians, embark on a workable decentralization of authority such as creating some form of neighbourhood or state police, because as it has been enacted, the internal security of each state is the responsibility of the state authorities only to be complemented by the Federal Government.”
In the same vein, the National Conscience Party (NCP) through its National Secretary, Dr. Tanko Yinusa has also thrown its weight behind the call for state police or what it calls community policing. The NCP noted that to tackle insecurity effectively, a national police like we currently have is not sufficient.
Last week, the state governors under the aegis of the Nigerian Governors Forum (NGF) upped the ante. Among other measures suggested to tackle insecurity in the country, the governors in a communiqué signed by their chairman and Governor of Rivers State, Hon. Chibuike Rotimi Amaechi said, “the forum identified the increasing need for state police as a strategy for combating the rising insecurity in the country.”
It is needless to say that agitation for state police in Nigeria is not new. Even before the albatross of the moment which is the Boko Haram insurgency, many Nigerians have lost confidence in the ability of the national police to combat crimes.
From the point of view of average Nigerians, the performance of the police is less than satisfactory. The Nigerian police cut the picture of an inefficient, corrupt, poorly trained and ill-equipped security outfit.
Now that the insecurity in the country has graduated from mere armed robbery, rape, kidnapping and political assassination to a more damning, frightening and audacious monster that threatens the unity of the country, the clamour for state police has become more deafening on daily basis.
Curious, questionable even, as the motive of those calling for state police might seem, it is apparent that with the spiralling security challenges in the country, the call for state police can no longer be ignored. Besides the anathema which the single centralised police constitutes in a nation that professes to practice true federalism, the inadequacies and inefficiencies of the Nigerian police to attend or rise up to the new dimension the security breaches in the country have taken, has made the call for state police very irresistible, compelling even.
In the last one and half years, Nigerians have had to watch, with helpless exasperation and frustration, the Boko Haram Islamic terrorists wrecking havoc on the country. This is in addition to the daily cases of armed robbery, kidnapping, rape and other similar ferocious attacks on innocent citizens.As it is now, there is no need pretending that Nigeria is insecured. No matter how hard we try to tar Nigeria’s image with the brush of a peace-loving country, her image before the international community as a safe haven for both human habitation and economic investment is fast dwindling by the day.
Again, the renewed call for state police is not misplaced against the backdrop of federal system of government we practice. In the true sense of federalism, each state is expected to be autonomous in securing the lives and property of its citizenry. The intervention of the federal might is only required in times of inter-state crisis.
A situation where the governors who are the chief security officers of their respective states depend on state commissioners of police who must take order from the Inspector General of Police for every security challenge in the state is, in the true sense of the word – federalism, absurd and a salady of contraries.
But again, the fear of state police being used to fight political enemies in the state, or being exploited to further polarising the nation along ethnic and religious divides has however, made the call an ominous one. The experience of the First Republic is still fresh in our memory.
But in as much as I agree with the presumption that in a clime like Nigeria where democracy is still at its infancy, having state police is more or less an invitaition to chaos and quick disintegration of the country, just as it has the potential of being manipulated by the State Chief Executives to suppress opposition or rig election in their favour as it is being currently done to the state electoral commissions, I still believe the merits of state police far outweigh its demerits, and should therefore, be given a place of thought in the on-going constitutional amendment.
Boye Salau
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