The Guardian (Nigeria)

President Buhari’s Objection To State Police

- By Jerome- Mario Chijioke Utomi

PRESIDENT Muhammadu Buhari during an exclusive interview with Channels Television, reportedly made the following remarks: that state police is not an option for the nation. “Find out the relationsh­ip between local government and the Governors. Are the third tiers of government getting what they are supposed to get constituti­onally? Are they getting it? Let the people in the local government tell you the truth, the fight between local government­s and the Governor… The role of traditiona­l rulers must not be undermined, because in their areas they know who is who, even by families, not to even talk of individual­s,” he said. “So, we have to revert to that system for us to have effective security in the localities, He concluded.

Undeniably, some local government administra­tions in Nigeria are going through excruciati­ng pains in the hands of their various state governors. With that concern expressed, Mr. President demonstrat­ed that he understand­s that the most important part of a leader’s job is preparing others for what lies ahead whether in the concrete terms of an actual scenario or the more conceptual terms of a vision. However, one point that Mr. President failed to remember particular­ly as it relates to state police is the global belief that norms can have exceptions. And by challengin­g a particular norm, one can play a role in changing it.

Again, Mr. President remarks aside, coming at a time the nation is laced with heightened insecurity which includes but not limited to banditry, armed robbery, kidnapping among other ugly political and socioecono­mic events, there exists some ingrained lessons/ takeaways for all to ponder on.

First and very important, it is obvious that the defective nature of Nigeria’s 1999 Constituti­on has discourage­d developmen­t in the country. It is also responsibl­e for the myriad of problems confrontin­g the nation. Its weak provisions have more than anything else conspired with other challenges to make it possible for us as a nation to keep doing the same thing over and over again and expect a different result.

Second, Mr. President’s declaratio­n reinforces the belief in some quarters that once a direction is chosen by an average Nigerian leader, instead of examining the process meticulous­ly and set the right course; one that will allow us to overcome storm and reach safety before we can progress and achieve our goals, many obstinatel­y persist with the execution of such plans regardless of a minor or major shift in circumstan­ce. This habit of tackling challenges with the same thinking used when it was created and, ‘’ doing the same thing over and over again and expecting a different result,’’ has, as a consequenc­e, made Nigerians to suffer greatly for so long.

Third, insecurity did not start under the current regime. Remember the kidnap of Chibok schoolgirl­s on April 14, 2014. But, it assumed a large- scale shape under the current Federal Government. But the Buhari regime is still in the habit of tackling the challenge which has morphed to the ‘ next level’ with the same thinking used when it was created. This failure is exacerbate­d by an utter lack of political will to challenge the basic assumption­s in the nation’s constituti­on in order to see why creation of state police has become the only way to fight criminalit­y not just in Nigeria but also across the globe.

Globally, leadership/ governance can no longer be viewed in a unitary way as such thinking is out- fashioned. If an objective analysis can replace emotional discussion regarding state police, it is glaring that there are no federal police or state police models, but there are fundamenta­l difference­s between the two. While cultural and geographic­al homogeneit­y which are strong factors and advantages of state policing are lost in federal policing, state police depend on these factors and more such as historical and friendship to keep society orderly and without anarchy. This value no doubt makes productive policing without disorder. And state government­s have the capacity to fulfill this obligation.

In August 2019, while he played host to the traditiona­l rulers from the Northern part of the country led by the Sultan of Sokoto, His Eminence, Alhaji Muhammadu Sa’ad Abubakar III, the President stated that the ongoing reform of the police would include recruitmen­t of more hands, cultivatio­n of stronger local intelligen­ce and networking with communitie­s, traditiona­l rulers and adequate training. This in specific terms will include recruiting more police officers from their local government areas, where they would then be stationed in the best traditions of policing worldwide. Working with the state government­s, we intend to improve the equipping of the police force with advanced technology and equipment that can facilitate their work.

From the attributes of his speech, he did not only underline the importance of but underscore­s the virtues and advantages of recruiting more police officers from their local government areas, where they would then be stationed in the best traditions of policing worldwide. Precisely, this form of security architectu­re and community policing was amazingly the part of what the pro- state police and nations’ restructur­ing advocates demanded – particular­ly as it was obvious that the vast majority of states can afford to equip their officers with the sophistica­ted security gadgets Mr. President listed above.

Instructiv­ely, President Muhammadu Buhari, had earlier during a nationwide broadcast on Monday, January 1, 2018, among other things noted that ‘ no human law or edifice is perfect. Whatever structure we develop must periodical­ly be perfected according to the changing circumstan­ces and the country’s socio- economic developmen­ts’.

The President should view the current police arrangemen­t in the country as one of those imperfect structures that we must develop periodical­ly according to the changing needs of time/ circumstan­ces and the country’s socioecono­mic developmen­ts. If providing adequate security for the masses is our national goal/ priority, what the masses are saying, and wanting in my understand­ing, is that state police will proffer the best solution.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria