Editorial
Wadume’s Confessions
In what has been described as shame of a nation in several circles, the recent confessions by the detained kidnap kingpin in Taraba State, Hamisu Bala, popularly known as Wadume that a Captain in the Nigerian Army and his military collaborators connived to ensure his escape from police net is not only a national embarrassment but worrisome, unacceptable and condemnable in all ramifications.
The entire ugly and unfortunate incident not only puts the Nigerian Army in bad light but also lends credence and credibility to the notion that criminals and insurgents have indeed infiltrated into the nation’s security forces.
In essence, the war and campaign against banditry, insurgency, armed robbery, illegal bunkering, hostilities against farmers, among other forms of criminality may be a pipe dream if our security operatives whose constitutional obligation is to protect lives and property ironically become accomplices to criminals.
Wadume’s confessions are not an isolated one as stories abound of how military and police officers paid with tax payers’ money collude with uniformed personnel to perpetrate all manner of crimes and criminality in the country.
Wadume’s re-arrest is quite instructive. While Nigerians may have in the past always blamed the police for aiding and abetting criminality in various parts of the country, the Wadume’s case involving an Army Captain and other rank and file remain quite disheartening and unfathomable in many respects.
Until his re-arrest, there were accusations and counter-accusations between the Army High Command and the Police authorities as regards to the culpability or otherwise of the army officers in the entire shameful, shoddy and ignominious act by our security operatives, particularly the army officers.
While Nigerians await the outcome of the probe panel set up by the Chief of Defence Staff, General Abayomi Gabriel Olonisakin to unravel the entire circumstances surrounding the Wadume saga, we think the seeming disconnect, suspicion and rivalry between the Army and Police which is unhealthy and injurious to the wellbeing of the citizenry may have caused the avoidable deaths.
The 1999 Constitution, as amended, explicitly spells out the functions of the police and the Army by clearly stating that whereas the police should be in charge of internal civil matters, the Army, on its part, should oversee the nation’s territorial integrity and sovereignty and only in very peculiar or dire circumstances must soldiers be invited or be involved in civil matters.
To this extent, therefore, the Army Captain and his conspirators should have clearly stayed out of the Wadume’s case if they were, not accomplices in the illicit abduction business which the kingpin masterminded.
The Tide, like other well-meaning organisations and citizens is alarmed by this show of shame between the Army and the Police and States categorically that no amount of window dressing will really assuage the ill-feelings and perception created by the horrible and unpatriotic disposition of the soldiers involved in the matter.
We implore the panel investigating the matter to look deep into the entire episode with a view to ensuring that all culprits face the law accordingly.
It is our candid opinion that the campaign against terror, banditry, gangsterism, hooliganism, and other forms of criminality against the Nigerian State could be tackled effectively, if there is synergy between the entire nation’s security forces rather than the combative and hostile posture often being exhibited by one security outfit against the other. This infact is unhealthy.
From reports of the incident, the police duly informed the internal security network in Taraba State of the IGP’s Monitoring Team’s visit before setting out from Abuja to apprehend the kingpin before the unfortunate incident which left three police officers and two civilians dead.
The killing of the five persons as unfortunate as it seems was quite avoidable and would have been averted if there was no communication gap and perhaps selfish interest on the part of Wadume’s rescuers.
The Police and Army the authorities must henceforth bridge the obvious lacuna between them to ensure smooth, efficient and effective means of tackling crimes and criminality in the country.
This is our position.
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