Editorial
That Police Arms Audit
Nigerians were shocked discourteously by a recent revelation from the Office of the Auditor-General of the Federation (OAuGF) to the effect that about 178,459 different types of weapons and ammunition were lost in various police armouries in 2019 without any vestige or official report.
Among the missing weapons were 88,078 AK-47 rifles and 3,907 other types of rifles and pistols from formations across the country. As of January 2020, none of them could be accounted for. In a country already saturated with arms, an enraged insurgency, and expansive criminality, reports of this description add a severely meteoric dimension to the general insecurity.
Apart from the well-established phenomenon of illegal arms importation, it strikes fear to realise that many of the guns and bullets deployed by terrorists, armed robbers, bandits, kidnappers, and thugs against Nigerians probably come from official ordnance stores. By implication, the taxpayer is arming his executioners and tormentors!
This discovery should necessitate serious attention from the Presidency. We consider the report rather startling, especially in light of the obvious and present danger posed by the activities of insurgents, bandits, kidnappers, armed robbers, and sundry criminal elements who terrorise the country. For any nation, nothing can be more formidable than a lack of transparency and accountability in the repository of hazardous weapons.
Indeed, this is clear inhumanity, a denunciation of the police and the government. Strangely, the authorities have not acknowledged the alarming report long after it was made public. The Inspector-General of Police (IGP), and the National Security Adviser (NSA) are yet to make comments to take the sting out of public anxiety. President Muhammadu Buhari has also not interposed publicly.
If Nigerians needed further confirmation that they are wretchedly and ineptly governed, the missing arms and ammunition saga has already provided it. The police armoury, like those of other security forces, has been drooling for years with no unflinching or effectual counter-measures to stop it. The audit report points to a more radical challenge with the police force. It will serve the interest of the country for the matter to be scrupulously handled.
Sadly, the spanworm of arms trafficking runs deep among state agencies. In January 2017, a police officer, Bulus Jatau, was dismissed for stealing firearms and ammunition from the armoury of the Police Mounted Troop Unit in Kaduna State. According to a report, the firearms retrieved from those he sold them include one pump-action gun, a Beretta pistol, four English revolver pistols, and 50 rounds of 9 mm live ammunition.
Similarly, in 2017, the Department of State Services (DSS) befuddled members of the House of Representatives Joint Committee on Customs and Excise and National Intelligence with the disclosure that some bad elements in security agencies were involved in small arms sales to bandits. It also noted that security agencies failed to do enough checks on those they recruited, which was the reason for the inclusion of bad eggs in the security structure.
Late George Iyamu, a Deputy Superintendent of Police, was a resilient cop who terrorised underworld figures. He also lived an affluent life and owned several effusive homes, glamorous cars, and other valuables, living beyond his means. However, upon Lawrence Anini’s arrest, it became obvious how Iyamu hedged and protected Anini and his boys. He divulged police secrets widely to them, giving logistics backing, including firearms for their operations, among others.
There is no specific data on how many police officers have been dismissed for stealing or selling firearms and ammunition. The Police Service Commission (PSC) is responsible for the discipline of erring police officers in Nigeria. Disappointingly, a check on the PSC’s annual reports of 2017, 2019, 2020 did not detail the offences for which police officers were generally disciplined or even dismissed.
Both the IGP and the PSC must be held accountable for these lapses. Specifically, the IGP should provide reasons why records of unserviceable and expired firearms and ammunition were not preserved. He should also forward a compendious record of all unserviceable firearms and ammunition and an up-to-date record/schedule of expended ammunition to the Public Accounts Committees of the National Assembly.
The resolution by the House of Representatives to probe the audit report is commendable, but that presupposes that the legislature is also amenable to play by the rules. We urge the Senate to do likewise. President Buhari must break his reticence and order a prompt investigation into the missing weapons. Strong sanctions, including dismissals and prosecution, should be inflicted on complicit officers.
Quite urgently, the police and the armed forces should put tough measures in place to buffer and account for all arms and ammunition in their possession. The authorities should review internal control mechanisms fashioned to help ensure that assets, including firearms, are guaranteed against damage, loss, theft, and unauthorised use.
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