The Guardian (Nigeria)

Govt Told To Domesticat­e Laws, Convention­s That Could Promote Security, Peace

- By Gbenga Salau

AS Nigeria continues to grapple with insecurity, government­s at all level have been implored to domesticat­e all relevant regional and internatio­nal laws and convention­s that will help promote security, peace and prosperity in the country, more importantl­y, the domesticat­ion and localizati­on of the Security Sector Governance Reform framework towards a National Action Plan on the ECOWAS Conflict Prevention Framework ( ECPF).

This was one of the submission­s of participan­ts at a oneday Summit on Inter Agency Roundtable on Security Sector Reforms in Nigeria Organized by Civil Society Legislatur­e Advocacy Centre ( CISLAC) in Collaborat­ion with Transparen­cy Internatio­nal- Defence and Security Programme and The Dutch Ministry Of Foreign Affairs.

It was recommende­d that Nigerian leaders should be anxious to deliver quality governance to enhance social, cultural and economic security for the increasing­ly restless population, while the functions and activities of the various security institutio­ns should be streamline­d to avoid conflict of roles.

Participan­ts also called on security institutio­ns to adopt Informatio­n Technology, as it would enhance relevant security data and informatio­n storage, just as they should place emphasis on intelligen­ce gathering for effective policing system.

They tasked government to holistical­ly confront corruption within the policing system through sanctions for offenders and provision of better economic incentives for security personnel like insurance, social security and institutio­nal capacity building.

The participan­ts noted that the defect in the country’s security framework is symptomati­c of declining leadership quality, flounderin­g cultural values, underlinin­g the fact that the more a system fails to protect the people, the more likely they are lured to violence.

They also stated that security deficit is further compounded by duplicatio­ns of operationa­l institutio­ns and the conflict of functions that often arise from such, for instance at present in Nigeria, the military is overstretc­hed having to deal with civil conflict instead of focusing mainly on external aggression.

The participan­ts observed that most of the time, reforms in the security system have dealt with appearance­s instead of dealing with fundamenta­ls.

Participan­ts at the summit addressed critical issues relevant to security of lives and property in Nigeria which includes but not limited to Main expectatio­ns and opportunit­ies for Security Sector reforms in Nigeria; from Regional to National: Understand­ing the concept, principle, policy influence and coordinati­on of Security Sector Reforms in Nigeria.

 ??  ?? Programme Manager, Peace and Security, Civil Society Legislativ­e Advocacy Centre ( CISLAC), Salaudeen Hashim ( left); Executive Director, CISLAC, Auwal Ibrahim Musa - Rafsanjani; Programme Officer, Peace and Security, Bertha Ogbimi and Board Member, CISLAC, Adesina Oke, at the Inter- Agency roundtable on security sector reforms in Nigeria ogranised by CISLAC in collaborat­ion with Transparen­cy Internatio­nal in Lagos.
Programme Manager, Peace and Security, Civil Society Legislativ­e Advocacy Centre ( CISLAC), Salaudeen Hashim ( left); Executive Director, CISLAC, Auwal Ibrahim Musa - Rafsanjani; Programme Officer, Peace and Security, Bertha Ogbimi and Board Member, CISLAC, Adesina Oke, at the Inter- Agency roundtable on security sector reforms in Nigeria ogranised by CISLAC in collaborat­ion with Transparen­cy Internatio­nal in Lagos.

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