Opinion
FG’s Firearms Control Strategy
The killings in Benue, Zamfara, Nasarawa, Yobe, Taraba and Rivers have eventually given force to the somewhat moribund Firearms Act. The Inspector-General of Police (IGP), Alhaji Ibrahim Idris, has directed police commands in Nigeria to confiscate all illegal arms. The Firearms Act obviously forbids individuals from owning and possessing certain categories of arms and ammunition.
The IGP’s directive is a huge task. I hope he realises its critical and sensitive nature. Maybe that is why he has ordered Assistant Inspectors-General of Police to work in tandem with police commissioners to enforce the order. If the instruction is taken through, it may restrain the widespread murderous engagements of cattle herdsmen with farmers.
There had been indications that over 70 percent of arms littering in West Africa are safely lodged in Nigeria. But all the while the government did nothing about it till the situation seems to be out of control. Now, see the danger Nigerians are faced with. Guns, guns and guns everywhere. Everyone appears to be endangered without exception.
The federal government’s strategy is not astonishing. No serious-minded Nigerian will be startled by it. Since the inception of this year, Nigerians have been experiencing killings arising from the enterprise of herdsmen and bandits. Benue State lost 97 persons and Zamfara experienced over 50 deaths. Kaduna, Plateau and Taraba States have literally transformed into killing fields.
At the very onset of the year, Rivers State witnessed the untimely death of about 22 unsophisticated persons who were returning from a New Year eve church service in Omoku. They were slaughtered by gangsters. In Lagos, the endeavours of rival cult groups have left several people dead. The list is endless.
If the aforementioned incidents fail to portend grave danger for the country, the unending importation of large cache of arms and ammunition through the seaports and the portentous weapons renounced by criminal gangs during amnesty programmes should demonstrate otherwise. The latest of such by the Rivers State Government yielded a humongous harvest from cultists.
More than 8,741 arms and 7,014 rounds of ammunition were seized in 2013 from criminal hideouts in Rivers, Anambra and Edo States. The seizures befuddled the then Inspector-General of Police, Alhaji Mohammed Abubakar, who directed other state police commands to expropriate illegal arms in their domains.
No wonder the devastating aftermaths of lethal weapons in misguided hands has compelled President Muhammadu Buhari to embark on empathy visits to the states badly afflicted by recent violence. The states are Taraba, Benue, Zamfara, Yobe and Rivers.
But the question is, who is to blame for the horrifying killings in the country? How did we condescend to this stage? The federal authorities are blameworthy because they are entirely responsible for the protection of Nigerians and their possessions. Also culpable are security agents who collude with criminals to import guns into the country.
In 2017, a consignment of 661 pump-action guns were successfully cleared at the Apapa ports, but later seized by vigilant customs officials. How were the rifles taken in? Operatives of the State Security Service (SSS) were allegedly compromised with a million naira. If security agents at Apapa ports could be so conciliated, imagine what occurs daily at our unmanned land borders.
Equally problematic are rotten eggs in the police force. In 2014, an Assistant Superintendent of Police (ASP) was paraded at the Force Headquarters, Abuja, for supplying arms to a 45-member criminal gang. The gang reportedly paid between N230, 000 and N250, 000 and implicated seven police officers in the shaded deal.
It is for these reasons and more one considers the IGP’s directive a valuable starting point for the implementation of a credible firearms control. While the destructive effects of the illegal use of firearms are visible, it is expedient that the initiative is not turned into a witch hunt or partisan operation.
Recent declarations by the IGP and some of his officers on herdsmen’s homicidal acts have provoked justifiable fears of prejudice. Youths and local vigilante groups have consistently accused the police and other law enforcement agents of arresting and disarming them while their armed assailants are ignored. This prevents them from fending off attacks.
Since the federal government has failed disreputably to protect Nigerians from attacks by gun-wielding herdsmen and bandits, it behoves them to ensure that there isn’t half measures in the mop up operation else Nigerians may be compelled to re-acquire firearms for self-help after the exercise.
Arnold Alalibo
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