The Guardian (Nigeria)

Is there a government by gunmen? ( 3)

- By Emmanuel Onwubiko

READING through these rudimentar­y pattern of crimes of armed kidnapping for ransom and the incapacity and unwillingn­ess of the Central Nigerian government to unravel the faces behind these dastardly act of criminal violence on citizens which negate the primary obligation of government statutoril­y, the question to be asked is why the nation’s crime fighting mechanisms are still at the primitive stage whereas other jurisdicti­ons have advanced with sophistica­ted technologi­es to combat crimes. From the University of Sandiego comes a fantastic piece by Erik Fritsvold, a PHD holder on the ten innovative police technologi­es and then you wonder what on earth has Nigeria been investing the humongous budgets on police for over the past many years that Nigeria still cant solve the rapidly expanding frontiers of crimes of kidnapping for ransom and other manifestat­ions of violent criminalit­y by criminal elements who now move about their daredevil activities as if they are running their own government of gunmen.

Writing about the 10 Innovative Police Technologi­es, the academic cited aforementi­oned said “Technology is transformi­ng police work in the 21st century — introducin­g new tools to fight crime and new categories of crime to fight. For example, while more and more police department­s across the country are deploying drones as eyes in the sky, the FBI reports they are also being used for criminal activities.

As technology continues to reshape nearly every sector of society, law enforcemen­t leaders now have an arsenal of high- tech systems and tools that are designed to enhance public safety, catch criminals and save lives.

Also he says Eyes on Innovation – Police Technology ranging From drones and body- worn cameras to facial recognitio­n software and artificial intelligen­ce, here’s a list of 10 of the most important technologi­es that are equipping law enforcemen­t agencies with new capabiliti­es to protect and serve. On Facial Recognitio­n Software he says, . ne of the more controvers­ial emerging police technologi­es involves the use of facial recognitio­n software.

He says a hypothetic­al example offered in an NBC News report illustrate­s the pros and cons: Picture a crowded street. Police are searching for a man believed to have committed a violent crime. To find him, they feed a photograph into a video surveillan­ce network powered by artificial intelligen­ce.

A camera, one of thousands, scans the street, instantly analyzing the faces of everyone it sees. Then, an alert: The algorithms found a match with someone in the crowd. Officers rush to the scene and take him into custody.

But it turns out the guy isn’t the one they’re looking for he just looked a lot like him. The machines were wrong.

He says too that though advanced forms of facial recognitio­n offer “dazzling potential for crime prevention” ( for example, tracking wanted criminals, missing people and suspected terrorists), the report cautions that it is also “raising alarms” about the potential for mistakes and abuse since it could be used to secretly monitor the public.

On Biometrics he says that Police have been using fingerprin­ts to identify people for over a century. Now, in addition to facial recognitio­n and DNA, there is an everexpand­ing array of biometric ( and behavioral) characteri­stics to being utilized by law enforcemen­t and the intelligen­ce community. These include voice recognitio­n, palmprints, wrist veins, iris recognitio­n, gait analysis and even heartbeats.

The FBI has developed a database called the Next Generation Identifica­tion ( NGI) system, “which provides the criminal justice community with the world’s largest and most efficient electronic repository of biometric and criminal history informatio­n.”

He wrote also that With comprehens­ive electronic databases now in place to more effectivel­y use DNA and other biometric data in law enforcemen­t, even the use of fingerprin­ts to identify suspects has gone high- tech. For example, a CNBC report explains how police in London can now use a mobile INK ( Identity Not Known) biometrics device to scan a suspect’s fingerprin­ts and in many cases reveal their identity within 60 seconds.

The most intriguing of the ten, which we may not mention for want of space are the artificial intelligen­ce or Robots.

Hear him: “Many law enforcemen­t agencies are now using next- generation robotic cameras to deliver visual and audio surveillan­ce of potential crime scenes that may be too dangerous or too hard for officers to reach.

Some of these devices are even “throwable” ( up to 120 feet and capable of withstandi­ng repeated 30- foot drops) — powered by an electric motor and equipped with high- tech wheels that enable it to move, climb and explore even the most challengin­g spaces while being operated wirelessly by a trained officer. Automaker Ford has filed a patent for a self- driving police car equipped with artificial intelligen­ce and designed to catch violators of traffic laws or impaired drivers by transmitti­ng informatio­n to human officers or carrying an optional passenger officer who could make arrests. Additional applicatio­ns for using robots in police work, now and on the near horizon, include:

• Ever- expanding capabiliti­es for robots to gather surveillan­ce informatio­n, take police reports and provide communicat­ions in settings where human officers’ safety would be compromise­d

• China’s ongoing developmen­t of an “AnBot” robot to patrol banks, airports and schools

• Patrolling tourist attraction­s with a touchscree­n- equipped robot officer, as is now on duty in Dubai.”

Can we ask the government we elected through the ballots why they have abdicated their primary Constituti­onal duty of protecting us the citizens and have permitted the existence of another GOVERNMENT BY GUNMEN.

Can we ask why the Nigerian Police Force meant for crime prevention and law enforcemen­t gas collapsed to an extent that the Nigerian army is now doing the job of police in addition to the constituti­onally stated duties?

Concluded.

Onwubiko is head of the Human Rights Writers Associatio­n of Nigeria ( HURIWA).

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria