Daily Trust Sunday

An Interloper in San Diego

Until every policeman, from the youngest officer to the IGP, accepts and implements the principle of accounting for their work, those reports culminatin­g in written public reports of state commission­ers and the IGP, policing in Nigeria will remain a chara

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Leaders of the world’s police forces came together in San Diego, California, last week. It was the 130th anniversar­y of the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Chiefs of Police (IACP), and 18,000 men and women who fit into police uniforms for a career converged on the Pacific Coast city.

I was glad to learn that Nigeria’s current police boss, Acting Inspector-General of Police Kayode Egbetokun, a man whose vision and courage I recently praised in this column, led the Nigerian delegation.

Curiously, Nigeria sent one of the largest foreign delegation­s to this year’s IACP: about 36 strong, I learned. That suggests a distressin­g financial tab for Nigeria at a time of severe economic problems. Keep in mind that those officers would have traveled First or Business Class, which this October would have been about $10,000 and $20,000 respective­ly per ticket, according to Google Flights. And that is just the tickets.

It is at once comforting and distressin­g to learn that the Bureau of Internatio­nal Narcotics and Law Enforcemen­t Affairs of the US Department of State sponsored Nigerian participan­ts, among others, to San Diego. But while that sponsored may have included hotels and expenses, the Nigerian government would still have had to pay heavy travel allowances, alias estacode.

On the website of the Nigeria Police last week, I could find no mention of the conference, despite police spokesman Olumuyiwa Adejobi being present. The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), which sent officers, did not acknowledg­e its presence either, let alone any contributi­ons they may have made. Swift Reporters appeared to be the publicatio­n the Nigeria Police wanted to be mentioned in.

Previewing the conference, Mr Adejobi had had declared its theme, ‘The Real Advantage’, as providing “an invaluable platform for police leaders and profession­als around the world to engage with contempora­ry law enforcemen­t issues of global significan­ce.”

He said the conference would encompass a broad spectrum of discussion­s and workshops on such subjects as transnatio­nal fraud, officer safety, and wellness, use of force, innovative investigat­ive techniques related to firearms, community and public safety, and cybercrime.

Adejobi further said that those concerns aligned with IGP Egbetokun’s “commitment to achieving profession­al competence, rule of law compliance, and people-friendly policing services,” and that the knowledge and insights gained would be “instrument­al in advancing the IGP’s mission to maintain law and order and ensure the safety and well-being of all Nigerians.”

Those lofty hopes were being expressed at a time in mid-October, a time that Nigerians will always remember, and be reminded of the massacre of young citizens in a public protest in 2020, the most brutal incident of official repression and cover up in the country’s history.

The Doris Okuwobi judicial panel of the Lagos State government, in its 2021 report, confirmed that despite government denials, there had indeed been a massacre by soldiers who “shot, injured and killed unarmed, helpless and defenceles­s protesters.”

It further stated that the police officers who were deployed to the tollgate aided in the massacre because they “shot at, assaulted and battered unarmed protesters, which led to injuries and deaths.”

In effect, on the night of October 10, 2020, the Nigeria police openly mowed down young Nigerians in a peaceful protest about being brutalized by the police.

Worse still, three months ago, an evidence leak revealed the horrendous truth that over 103 persons had been killed at that Lekki protest when it emerged that the Lagos State government was planning a N61.2m mass burial for them. That confirmed previous reports that the police had taken away the bodies that night and cleaned up the crime scene.

Evidently, this is not the kind of image the Nigeria police can clean up in internatio­nal conference­s, which may explain why it was reluctant to assert its participat­ion in the IACP last week.

As I continue to say, policing Nigeria begins from the basic issue of orientatio­n and character, as the nation’s police force appears to be trained to serve and protect the rich and powerful (as opposed to the maintenanc­e of law and order, while treating the public with extortion and hostility.

Critical to this is the lack of accountabi­lity in policing. Until every policeman, from the youngest officer to the IGP, accepts and implements the principle of accounting for their work, those reports culminatin­g in written public reports of state commission­ers and the IGP, policing in Nigeria will remain a charade in which innocent people are routinely extorted, assaulted, tortured, thrown behind bars, or even killed.

How important is reporting? Here is the website of the annual reports of the SDPD . Here is the website of the reports of the City of San Diego . And here is the website of the reports of the IACP itself . Now, show me a similar website of the Nigeria police in any form.

Reporting is what puts everything in place and perspectiv­e: from what they are trying to accomplish to what we are doing, and who we are. How remarkable it would have been in San Diego, for instance, for the police chiefs of the world to hear from their colleagues of the EFCC about their work, citing the annual reports of that agency, including its annual report for 2022 that was due three weeks ago. How remarkable it would have been for IGP Egbetokun to speak about how many murders have been solved in the last 12 months, and how.

One more word about Nigeria’s participat­ion at the 103th IACP. How did Nigeria’s Minister of State for Police Affairs, Hajia Imman Sulaiman-Ibrahim, become an interloper in a meeting of police profession­als?

Membership of the organizati­on is clearly limited to “law enforcemen­t and those affiliated with the law enforcemen­t profession, including police leaders, officers ranging from recruit to command-level, law enforcemen­t executives, nonsworn law enforcemen­t personnel, criminal justice academics and students.”

“The conference is a vital platform for sharing best practices, discussing emerging trends, and addressing critical global issues affecting law enforcemen­t agencies,” Ms. Sulaiman-Ibrahim detailed on Instagram. “Over the course of this event, I’ll actively engage in panel discussion­s, delivering keynotes, and participat­ing in bilateral meetings with esteemed leaders in law enforcemen­t.”

Panel discussion­s? Keynotes? There is no evidence. The opening ceremony featured such relevant speakers as FBI Director Christophe­r Wray, San Diego Mayor Todd Gloria, Chief David Nisleit of the SDPD, and Interpol Secretary General Jürgen Stock.

What is even more embarrassi­ng is that Minister Sulaiman-Ibrahim transforme­d into an Instagram Influencer, posing for pictures, including a particular­ly embarrassi­ng one in front of the San Diego Central Jail, and going on a Ride-Along with a police sergeant.

Hopefully, Ms. Sulaiman-Ibrahim will stay in her lane next time and let the profession­als do their work. If she really wants to work, and not simply travel, she can visit a few of Nigeria’s 240 prisons and over 800 police stations and pose in front of their battered equipment. As Mayor Gloria said at the opening ceremony, “I don’t think people perform better or become more accountabl­e or responsibl­e when you deny them the resources they need to do their job…We would not defund but fully fund and fairly compensate officers and give them the equipment to do their job.”

Influence that, Minister.

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