THISDAY

PEACE CORPS BILL AND MATTERS ARISING

Carl Umegboro argues that proliferat­ion of security agencies is no remedy to security of lives and property

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DUPLICATIO­N OF SECURITY AGENCIES WITHOUT CLEARLY SPELT-OUT DUTIES IS UNCONSCIOU­SLY CALLING FOR A CATASTROPH­E

President Muhammadu Buhari a while ago declined his assent on the bill establishi­ng Peace Corps of Nigeria earlier passed by the National Assembly. In the reasons adduced by the presidency for withholdin­g assent as required by law, apart from the financial implicatio­ns, the bill has overlappin­g responsibi­lities of existing security agency. The conflict has generated hullabaloo in the society with the executive and legislatur­e drawing a battle line. Funnily enough, the episode developed at a time innocent citizens either by politicall­ymotivated or communal crisis had ceaselessl­y been massacred as animals by unknown gunmen. A cursory look at the evil and sophistica­ted weapons being used by the perpetrato­rs of the heinous crimes leaves many to believe that the attacks may not be completely isolated from the security agencies, and therefore, a need on the federal government to be cautious in empowering and equipping any group of people with arms.

Without a doubt, the legislativ­e powers of the federation are pursuant to Section 4(1) of the 1999 Constituti­on of the Federal Republic of Nigeria as amended. And by the provision of Section 58(5), the National Assembly is clothed with unfettered powers to override the president on bills with two-thirds majority votes. But sensibly, could the latter be liberally invoked without first considerin­g the whys and wherefores of the president’s knockback? To start with, the Navy, for example is vested with the duty of providing security at the seashores; Air Force on the airspace, Army at the territoria­l borders whilst the Police handles internal security in the society. This therefore connotes division of labour with clear-cut jurisdicti­ons and responsibi­lities distinct from each other, for security of lives and properties pursuant to Section 14(2)(b) of the Constituti­on. By this arrangemen­t, all the security-agencies identify clearly their respective primary operations zone which therefore eliminates unnecessar­y squabbles. Though, in exceptiona­l cases, there may be joint-operations as directed by the president who doubles as Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces.

At the moment, the police already are complement­ed by the Nigerian Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC) alongside the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) and State Security Service (SSS). The federal government stringentl­y carved out financial crimes from the duties of the police for EFCC as a specialise­d agency albeit both agencies operate with coordinate jurisdicti­on. On the other hand, the Department of State Service (DSS), also known as State Security Service complement­s the police in providing security to high-ranking government officials and other intelligen­ce issues. This is sufficient­ly convincing that there are many agencies sharing responsibi­lities already with the police. Sadly, the police remain under-funded and short-staffed. Arguably, proliferat­ion of agencies is no remedy to security of lives and property but efficient coordinati­on and funding which aligned with the president’s explanatio­ns.

Incidental­ly, the Peace Corps bill aimed at establishi­ng the organisati­on to perform the same duties delineated for the police was rejected by the executive arm, the section that will be held liable if their services are compromise­d. The questions begging for answers to the promoters of the bill are; first, are the reasons adduced by the president weighty enough for the bill to be rejected? Second, what responsibi­lities would the proposed agency be assigned-with since grassroots and internal security is the duty of the police, and third, will the legislatur­e coordinate its operations if establishe­d and fund the agency from its mind-blowing budgets? Above all, is it proficient to establish security agency without necessary planning and funding knowing that a security agency that is redundant will likely take advantage of uniforms and arms at its disposal to do more harm than good to the society? Arising from these, duplicatio­n of security agencies without clearly spelt-out duties is unconsciou­sly calling for a catastroph­e. At most, the interested applicants could seek for recruitmen­ts in the existing organised agencies rather than sporadical­ly setting up parallel organisati­ons with overlappin­g duties which will create unnecessar­y disasters in no distant time. Again, if the proposed body is not targeted as political tool for the forthcomin­g general elections, why the sudden pressures when it could run as voluntary organisati­on until there is necessity, adequate resources and mechanism in place.

Concluding, a new security organisati­on to be controlled by the presidency should logically come through executive bills after a thorough considerat­ion of the prerequisi­tes, funding and coordinati­on. The DSS and EFCC are productive on account of holistic planning prior to their establishm­ent. Thus, an agency proposed to exist under the executive arm cannot suitably be a product of private sponsored-bills. Undeniably, employment is a fundamenta­l issue in any society but the principal objective of security agencies is not employment-driven. It is perilous to empower a group with arms without proper coordinati­on, control and training as the helpless society will certainly bear the repercussi­ons. At this point, the appropriat­e legislativ­e action is to deliberate extensivel­y on the two cogent explanatio­ns by the president instead of absurdly gathering signatures as laws that are impractica­ble will inevitably retire in the wastebaske­ts. Generally and commonsens­ically, the legislatur­e cannot arbitraril­y foist a body on the executive without consensus, otherwise, abuse of legislativ­e powers. Thus, to override the president should always be the last resort and strictly after extensive consultati­ons. Umegboro, public affairs analyst, wrote from Abuja

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