Opinion
Ban On Road Blocks Again?
Why is it that every
newly appointed person into a position of authority in Nigeria announces his “arrival” by dishing out orders and commands? At various levels of government institutions and organizations, you see freshly appointed/elected leaders making all kinds of promises, assuring the people that they would do more than their predecessors did, even when most of them eventually end up as failures.
The situation is not different with the Nigeria Police Force, where every appointed Inspector General of Police wants to create the impression that he has come to correct all the anomalies associated with the force. It is hard to remember any IGP who did not promise to make the force a more professional, respectable body, yet these noble qualities are still far to be found in the force.
Over the years, one issue that the IGPs had hampered upon is that of road blocks. Knowing how Nigerians detest the unwarranted intimidation of road users by police at road blocks, many previous IGPs had announced ban on road blocks warning that any police personnel caught in the act would be decisively dealt with yet the road blocks have not disappeared.
Just last week, the newly appointed Acting Inspector General of Police, Solomon Arase, towed the line of his predecessors by declaring the immediate ban on road blocks in the country. The AIG, who was speaking during his inaugural meeting with senior officers of the force said road blocks breed corruption. He warned that any police personnel caught mounting road blocks anywhere in the country would be made to face the law, while Commissioners of Police, Area Commanders and Divisional Police Officers in whose jurisdiction illegal road blocks are detected will be personally held liable and strict disciplinary actions initiated against them.
Recall that the immediate past IGP, Suleiman Abba on assumption of duty directed that all semblances of police road blocks and permanent checkpoints in various parts of the country should be dismantled. The former IGP through the Force Public Relations Officer, Emmanuel Ojukwu, described the re-emerging of road blocks as a serious violation of subsisting order on road-blocks and warned that severe sanctions awaited any police command, formation and personnel who violate the order.
Abba was no doubt, referring to the order from his predecessor, Abubakar Dikko Ibrahim, who in April, 2012, shortly after he took over the mantle of leadership of the force, announced the disbandment of checkpoints on our roads and also introduced new uniform for the police as part of efforts to launder the image of the force.
Incidentally, many years after these series of disbandment orders, the story remains the same.
There is increasing number of road blocks at various parts of the country, particularly in the south. Driving through some roads in the South East one would wonder if we are in a war time or there is a state of emergence in the area. Hardly can you drive upto two kilometers without meeting a road block, where the policemen do nothing other than insult, harass innocent drivers and extort money from them. At a particular check point at Obehie, drivers especially those of commercial vehicles, are forced to come down from their vehicles and go and settle “Our Oga” seated at a cool corner nearby.
The same scenario can be seen at a seemingly permanent checkpoint at the border between Abia and Enugu State, and many others. Policemen stand on the road and command motorists at gun point to park for checking. While some times the vehicles are searched, at other times the drivers are asked to “appreciate the boys” and move one.
Some people have described this style of policing as barbaric, crude and shameful and I quite agree with them. Some others have asked, “is there a convincing matrix that shows the reduction of crime from this noxious practice of enslaving Nigerians at checkpoints?” The truth is that the likelihood of catching criminals through this pattern is very slim because any criminal who knows that policemen are permanently at a particular spot will definitely avoid that route.
Many a time, I have wondered what would be the fate of the policemen if criminals with more sophisticated guns waylaid them. So, invariably, by mounting permanent check points at lonely, deadly areas, the policemen put their lives in danger.
Some have argued that with the present insecurity problem in the country there is need for the police to mount road blocks to serve as mitigating measures. But instead of this, I would rather subscribe to the view that instead of road blocks and permanent checkpoints, there should be regular stop and search based on security information.
So it is interesting that the AIG had seen the need to do away with the out-dated practice and go with the trend. However, making pronouncements is one thing and ensuring that they are carried out is another. Nigerians are tired of hearing the order on ban of road blocks.
We need action. Let us stop paying lip service to this practice which is bringing shame and scarn to Nigerians police.
Nigerians expect more actions than words. Nigerians, want to see the AIG arrest, dismiss and prosecute erring officers including their supervisors whom they bring returns to and the DPO that allows them to operate such illegal road blocks.
There are also expectations that the AIG if truly he wants to redeem the image of the police should stop all forms of impunity going on in the force. In states like Rivers, the use of siren was outlawed by the Police Commissioner, yet policemen harass members of the public with siren.
The attitude of the police towards accused persons is till appalling. Once an accused person is arrested and taken to a police station, he is treated as a criminal even without being tried.
There are a whole lot of other negative attitudes of Nigerian police which have made many people lose faith in them.
Can Arase deal with these challenges and make us have a reformed police force that we will be proud of? Time will tell.
Calista Ezeaku
Opinion
Policy Intervention: More Than Administrative Reform
Opinion
Redefining New Year Resolutions
Opinion
Trans-Kalabari Road: Work In Progress
-
Editorial15 hours agoBeyond Accessing Bonny By Road
-
News18 hours agoSERAP Sues Govs, FCT Minister Over Security Vote Spending
-
Sports15 hours agoTinubu Lauds Super Eagles’ after AFCON bronze triumph
-
Niger Delta15 hours agoINC Polls: Ogoriba Pledges To Continuously Stand For N’Delta Rights … Picks Presidential Form
-
Sports15 hours agoFulham Manager Eager To Receive Iwobi, Others
-
News18 hours agoAkande Proffers solution to insecurity in Nigeria
-
Sports14 hours agoAFCON: Lookman gives Nigeria third place
-
Sports15 hours ago“Mikel’s Influence Prevent Some Players Invitation To S’Eagles Camp”
