THISDAY

The Case for Local Police

The time is ripe for Nigeria to reintroduc­e the local police,

- (See concluding part on www.thisdayliv­e.com) argues Bukar Usman –––Dr Usman, a retired Federal Permanent Secretary in the Presidency, wrote from Abuja

Maybe the best way to start making my case for local police is to remind us that local and independen­t police formations once existed in Nigeria before their integratio­n into the Nigeria Police Force (NPF). And going by the low rate of crime and the communal peace generally experience­d across the nation in those days, the local police formations, from the benefit of hindsight, can be said to have performed better than its unitary replacemen­t, the Nigeria Police Force. The NPF is one of those experiment­s Nigeria embarked on as an extension of her interpreta­tion and applicatio­n of the uneasy concept of federalism. Several years after, with corruption and criminalit­y threatenin­g the peaceful co-existence we once took for granted during the era of the local police, isn’t it time we jettisoned the NPF experiment? As an experiment, the NPF has outlived its usefulness. The time is ripe for Nigeria to reintroduc­e the local police.

Please note that I use the term “local police” for lack of a better expression as “state police” currently seems to evoke considerab­le anxiety in the minds of some people. Such people can’t imagine how such awesome coercive instrument as state police could be reposed in the hands of our powerful executive governors. Whichever name we give it, let us decentrali­se the policing of the country by reintroduc­ing local police forces as they are naturally in a better position to police their familiar environmen­t.

I must confess that I am somewhat nostalgic about the local police as I cast my mind back to the days of the Native Authority police of the 50s and 60s. As a primary school pupil in my home town, Biu, I had admired, from a distance, the strict duties of the “Charge Office,” the revered name the local divisional police headquarte­rs in Biu was called by the local folks. The “Charge Office” occupied one end of the “Central Office,” which was simply a mud building with only a couple of offices to house the police establishm­ent. Only the chief warder, the local police head, had a secluded office; the other ranks merely reported to the Duty Room to be deployed to their beats.

“You are not obliged to say anything but whatever you say may be taken into evidence and may be used against you.” Those words were written in chalk on the blackboard in the charge office, a practice in human rights awareness one hardly sees these days in NPF police posts. The local police considered themselves members of the community they were policing. Indeed, those were the days of community policing in the real sense. The police went out of their way to add value to the community. For instance, in emergencie­s such as fire outbreak or escape of prisoners, they blow the eerie bugle alarm and the whistle to alert the people of danger and mobilise communal assistance. The police constable on duty also doubled as the time-keeper for the township as he hourly struck the iron gong once, twice or thrice... according to the hour. The sound resonated throughout the town and helped those who had no time piece to be mindful of the time. Many people found that police iron-gong sound more helpful than the alternativ­e practice of relying on the movement of the sun to know the time of the day.

The police were only a handful. Every Monday morning, neatly dressed, they mounted parades, inspected by the royal father, in front of the Emir’s palace. I saw no barracks. Every one of them was accommodat­ed in their houses among other members of the community. Their operationa­l tools were also simple and bare. The main ones appeared to be a baton and a shield made from bamboo-like material with which they practised crowd control. They had no vehicle. Police expenditur­e was minimal; yet, the local police was effective in policing the community.

We slept literally with our eyes closed. We had mainly petty thieves. We also had occasional cases of burglary, assault and elopement. There were a few daring robbers, the most notorious of whom was Malam Gulani. He operated in the style of the legendry Robin Hood, but he was tracked down by the local police. News of the police nabbing that elusive robber brought relief to the community.

That was the era of community policing at its best: simple, inexpensiv­e and yet effective. Some of the dare-devil crimebuste­rs among them operated with so much bravado. They struck terror in people to believe they were bullet-proof and iron-proof or even invisible and invincible. The local police operated largely in that manner until they were fully integrated in 1972 into the country-wide force called the Nigeria Police Force. Subsequent developmen­ts saw the NPF structured into zone, state, area and divisional commands, with the smallest administra­tive units being the local police stations. This arrangemen­t subsists today, but is it serving the nation well?

In view of the general state of insecurity in the country, there have been calls for a review of the current manner of policing the nation. The suggestion for the creation of state police, which for long has been on the card, has been revived. Apparently in response to this, during a recent visit to Kwara State, the president was quoted as saying that it was the consensus at the National Council of State that state police should not be allowed until our political developmen­t reaches the stage it would not be abused. Shortly after, the Governor of Yobe State reportedly said that only two of the state governors voted for state police when the proposal was put before the Nigerian Governors’ Forum. The position of the state governors was particular­ly surprising.

I am of the strong opinion that in spite of these high-level reservatio­ns, there is need for a serious review of the current policing arrangemen­t in the country. Population is growing by leaps and bounds. There is no way effective policing can be assured by the current unified system which, to a large extent, violates the principle of federalism we all profess. And it is questionab­le to say that state or local police will be more open to abuse than the current unified system. Nor should the state or zone structure of the NPF be considered alternativ­es to local or state police. The present zone structure of the Nigeria Police Force, which incurs heavy administra­tive overheads, merely provides promotion posts, as decision-making is still largely centralise­d.

There are two main arguments against state police: the fear of political vendetta; and the natural resistance to loss of territoria­l power by the NPF police establishm­ent. But it is high time these and other excuses advanced over the years gave way to effective policing at the grassroots, the lack of which is responsibl­e for the proliferat­ion of armed groups across the country.

Putting a high premium on the vital place of “local knowledge” in any effective fight against crime, the Babangida administra­tion initiated the practice of deploying certain levels of policemen to their ethnic, linguistic or cultural areas. I am not sure the police sustained that initiative.

State police should be instituted and the sooner the better. For sure, some interests may be inconvenie­nced. However, on balance the security of the generality of the community will be better assured, and the risk is worth taking now. Delay would result into greater loss of lives and properties as our security situation deteriorat­es further. Given its current revenue challenges, the federal government’s ability to provide adequate decent barracks as well as the logistic needed to sustain the unified police structure appears to have significan­tly diminished.

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