Opinion
Police And Indiscipline
It provided entertainment to Nigerians who saw the pictures in different poses in newspapers on the news stands. It is one of the most topical issues in the polity now, aside from election matters.
The street brawl by three corporals of the Mobile Police Force complete with their rifles. The fight, which occurred at Ajegunle, along the Lagos-Abeokuta Expressway penultimate Friday, was reported to have caused a serious traffic build up that lasted for hours on both sides of the road.
Analysing the pictures in which two of the policemen were locked in combat at a news stand in Port Harcourt, a free-reader joked that their pose revealed that they may have come from Ijaw or Igbo areas of the country, reputed for their wrestling prowess.
The ever-present, ever-ready pocket analysts and commentators at the news stand agreed that the bottom-line of the cause of the feud was “roger”, a veiled reference to bribe taking.
The fight was said to have been so messy that the policemen dragged themselves on the ground.
The guns they wielded while still fighting, prevented motorists and passers-by from intervening to separate them for fear of “accidental discharge”, it was learnt.
Well, if the Minister of Information and Communications, Prof. Dora Akunyili believes that she is making progress with her image laundering project for Nigeria –GOOD PEOPLE, GREAT NATION-in the international community, the Nigeria Police Force has given the lie to it.
But, come let’s reason together. The FORCE, whatever force, whether Army, Navy, Air Force or Police, is a disciplined regiment.
The rank and file must conduct themselves, in the barracks and outside it, on duty and off duty with decorum, dignity and respect, knowing that any negative or dishonourable conduct makes them a bad example of the Nigerian.
More importantly, any member of the Nigerian Armed Forces, no matter how highly or lowly placed, in uniform, has a bounding duty to wear it with dignity and honour, appreciating that to do the contrary amounts to dishonouring the nation.
So, what could make three Nigerian policemen to lose their discipline, senses and all to engage in combat along the expressway in Lagos?
Quite frankly, this writer is saddened by the disquieting import of the show of shame of the policemen under reference.
Their action represents an alarming signal of a nation without security. This contention may sound alarming but what is there to treasure in a security outfit that lacks discipline and is at war with itself, so to speak.
If gold should rust, they say, what would iron do?
If those who keep watch over the nation, fight among themselves, who then can say the nation is safe?
If those who watch over borders to check entry of illegal aliens, arms and contraband; if those who man check points and all who generally ensure safety of lives and property are busy fighting and dragging themselves on the road, then the nation is endangered.
Seriously speaking, the sacrilegious action of these uniformed policemen is an indictment on the police hierarchy and raises some fundamental issues about the operations of the force.
How are these policemen recruited? What training and retraining do they get? How effective is the reward/punitive system as a core value in the force?
There is no gainsaying that, over the years, the core values of the force have been devalued by what is called the “Nigerian factor,” a reference to the disposition to assault and rape laid-down procedure, cut corners and fraudulently achieve objectives.
Most recruitment exercises in Nigeria today, even in the police force, is like a magical show. The more you look, the less you see. Prospective job seekers defy rain and sun, wait for hours on end to be interviewed, and after going through the ordeal, others who were not interviewed, perhaps ill-trained, ill-equipped, get the job with a note from a personality. This is a problem.
Consequently, in the force today, especially the Nigeria Police, you could see the diminutive, the physically impaired and the be-spectacled, who in the days of yore, had no place in the force.
Furthermore, recruitment into the security forces is known to be an undertaking done with deliberate diligence, carefulness, investigation and circumspection to ensure that no criminal was entrusted with the security of the innocent citizen.
Today, there have been evidences of known armed robbers and other criminals recruited into the police force. Certainly, those who do not possess the moral, educational and professional foundation for service in the force, will, like the policemen under reference, bring indignity, disrepute and shame to it.
There is also the issue of training and retraining which should avail officers and men, the ethical and professional re-armament required in a dynamic social environment.
In a knowledge-based and technology-driven century such as we are in, now, exposure to training within and outside the country will make the Nigerian policeman more competent and professional. A professional will not fight in the street; talk less of a professional security officer.
It also seems like the old tradition of rewarding excellence, outstanding performance and gallantry as well as punishing wrong doing, indolence and indiscipline have suffered neglect or partial paralysis in the Nigeria Police Force.
Clearly, discipline is the watchword in the force, the fear of which is the beginning of wisdom. If uniformed and armed policemen could engage in a no-holds-barred combat (thank God they didn’t shoot themselves) on the expressway without a thought to attendant punishment, then, discipline has taken flight in the force.
The action of the brawling policemen in Lagos is a disservice to the glowing reputation the Nigerian Police had acquired globally in international peace keeping.
It is a shot in the foot of the force which needed to prove discipline, competence and professionalism to attract improved welfare, state-of-the-art equipment and technology and improved training facilities.
Needless, therefore, to emphasise that the Inspector General of Police, Hafiz Ringim has enormous work to do, to give Nigeria a disciplined and professional force, even as it faces the challenges of the 2011 general elections.
The discipline and house-cleaning should start with the brawling policemen in Ajegunle.
Donald Mike-Jaja
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