Opinion
The Issue Of Security In Nigeria
A country without adequate security is doomed. Without security, there can be no safety. It is when the citizens are safe and secured that progress can be made. That is why governments the world over give top priority attention to the issue of security so that lives and properties could be safe.
Nigeria cannot be different. Nevertheless, the security situation in Nigeria appears to be porous. And this is very disturbing. The Federal Government should, therefore, rise to the occasion and secure the lives and properties of its people.
It is shameful and embarrassing that, no fewer than 15 persons were killed and 44 others injured when a powerful bomb went off at car park of the Nigeria Police Force Headquarters, Abuja, on Thursday, June 16, 2011. Police described the bomb blast as a suicide attack. Apart from the lives lost, 77 vehicles in the car park were destroyed.
According to reports, the suspected suicide bomber drove into the premises of the headquarters a few minutes after the Inspector-General of Police, Mr Hafiz Ringim’s four-vehicle convoy entered and attempted to park close to it near the entrance of the building. However, some policemen who suspected the driver’s movement directed a traffic warden to escort him to the car park and search the car. The traffic warden joined the suicide bomber in the car, and as they got to the parking area, the bomb exploded, causing the aforestated destruction. The explosion caused great panic among policemen and visitors in the premises.
It should be noted that the Police Headquarters is a minute’s drive from the gate of the Presidential Villa and three minutes drive from the National Assembly.
As already noted, no country plays with the security of its citizens. It is very alarming that a suicide bomber could move into the premises of the Police Force Headquarters in Abuja and cause tremendous physical and psychological destruction to the country. If bombers can move with ease to a. place like the Police Force Headquarters in Abuja, where else can they not go?
The development is a warning to all on the extent of the porousness of our security situation in this country. The Federal Government should, therefore, ensure that every part of the country is properly secured.
In the meantime, an Islamic group, Boko Haram told the “Voice of America” on the day of the incident that it carried out the bombing of the Police Force Headquarters. This claim should be thoroughly investigated, and if found to be true, the authorities should fish out those particularly responsible for the bombing and give them adequate punishment for the killing and destruction they have caused the nation.
It should be stressed that the group had threatened to destroy the entire North and other parts of the country, including Abuja, the capital territory. This group should not be handled with kid gloves again. They should be viewed seriously by the authorities.
Earlier, Nigerians were shocked to their marrows when two car bombs were detonated near the Eagle Square in Abuja where the nation’s golden jubilee celebration was taking place on October 1, 2010. The explosions killed not less than 11 persons and injured 36 others. Many cars were also destroyed.
All the victims were participating in the 50th anniversary of Nigeria’s independence from Great Britain. The injured were rushed to hospitals in Abuja, including the National Hospital, Abuja, for treatment.
President Goodluck Jonathan promptly visited the victims at the National Hospital, Abuja. He said government would take care of the victims and also take care of the families of those who died in the bomb blasts. He averred that they paid the supreme sacrifice for the nation.
In his reaction, a former Head of State, General Yakubu Gowon, described the incident as unfortunate. He urged Nigerians to eschew bitterness and work with one mind towards the development of the entire country. General Gowon emphasised that violence would not in any way do anybody good because at the end of the day, it was still the people of Nigeria that would rebuild their country.
Indeed, only people of evil could think, plan and carry out a plot that killed not less than 11 people, injured 36 others on a day Nigeria was marking her 50th independence anniversary. Let there be perpetual curse on them.
Similarly, Abuja experienced another bombings on the eve of December 31, 2010. According to reports, four people were killed and twenty-one others injured. The bombings happened at the mammy market near the Mogadishu Barrack of the Army. All those bomb attacks are handiwork of satanic people in our country.
In any case, apart from the Abuja bombing incident, there have been several other cases of bomb attacks in the country. On the day the Police Force Headquarters was bombed, three children were killed in another bomb attack near a church compound in Damboa, Borno State. Also, not less than 10 people were killed at Suleja, Niger State, when bombs exploded at a Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) zonal campaign rally in the city on March 3, 2011.
I want to, therefore, appeal to the Federal Government to take stern measures to check the activities of these criminals in our midst. It is when stern measures to safeguard the lives and properties of the citizenry that the country can breathe easily.
What we want in this country is peace.
Dr Tolofari, a distinguished fellow, Institute of Corporate Administration of Nigeria, lives in Port Harcourt.
Mann Tolofari
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