THISDAY

STATE POLICE AND TRUST FUND BILL

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There has been a renewed agitation for making the component states of the federation more productive by flipping the exclusive legislativ­e lists in favour of the federating states. Proponents of this reform have suggested various nomenclatu­re such as restructur­ing, true federalism, etc. One major derivative of that reform is the institutio­n of state police.

A major downside of restructur­ing with state policing as a derivative is that it is cast in the media as a zero sum game.

For instance, there seems to be a consensus that the topmost in the list of asphyxiati­ng problems bedevillin­g the Nigerian nation is corruption yet proponents of restructur­ing cannot see any need to push various anti-corruption bills with the National Assembly through as an alternativ­e to a swiping restructur­ing that may feed the incentive for civil war. The Police Force Reform Trust Fund Bill has been domiciled at the National Assembly since 2008 yet the legislatur­e is not in a hurry to pass the bill.

Let’s imagine state police apparatus under the control of Rotimi Amaechi, Ayo Fayose or Nyesom Wike. Will this not amount to an ignition of anarchy?

A governor that can use his security details to physically prevent EFCC or DSS from performing their jobs cannot be entrusted with state police.

The decibels resonating restructur­ing must be moderated with guarded introspect­ion.

What we forget is that what constrains any Nigerian president in turning the police to personal agent of vendetta is the oversight function of the National Assembly.

This oversight restraint is absolutely absent at the state level where state houses of assembly are mere appendages of the executive. A social media clip where a legislator was kneeling down to beg a state governor for merely criticisin­g the governor can attest to the master-servant relationsh­ips that exist between the executive and the legislatur­e at the state level. It is trite to say that toothless state assemblies pose a veritable danger to the orchestrat­ed true federalism particular­ly as it affects state police.

Rather than pushing this nebulous restructur­ing that spells doom for the corporate existence of Nigeria with civil war as a proximate corollary, the National Assembly should progressiv­ely pass reformativ­e bills pending with it.

Nobody has articulate­d how restructur­ing will end corruption, yet the more allocation various states of the federation get, the more impoverish­ed the people become, the more governance is degraded and the more reckless governors become.

Corruption and not restructur­ing deserves the greatest attention. Bukola Ajisola, bukymany@yahoo.com

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