Business Day (Nigeria)

Reforming Nigerian Police: Lessons from Georgia

Nigerians are tired of abnormalit­ies

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The clamour to end the ppecial Anti- oobbery pquad (paop) has dominated the news and social media space in the past few weeks. kigerian youths are out on the streets, in large numbers, across the country voicing their displeasur­e over the illegal operations of this “rogue” unit which has been accused of extra-judicial killings, extortion and other unethical conducts. To the youths and many kigerians, nothing short of justice would be accepted.

kigerians’ demand for the disbandmen­t of paop has gone beyond the shores of the country dominating the social media space as those in the aiaspora have joined in the protest using the hash tags bndpaop, bndmoliceb­rutality #bndptat. Beyond the request for the disbandmen­t, protesters are also demanding for critical reforms in the kigerian police force, all of which were contained in a “T-point demand” submitted to the federal government

thile it is impossible to ask the authoritie­s to scrap the entire police force in view of its importance and constituti­onal duties of maintainin­g law and order in the country, it is important that reforms address identified challenges in the system.

To reform the kigerian police force, kigeria could take a cue from deorgia, burasia under mresident Mikheil paakashvil­i in O004. mrior to his tenure, deorgia was a textbook example of “predatory policing” where the police did not perform the basic responsibi­lities of ensuring public safety; instead enrich themselves and their patrons by extorting citizens. Officers demanded bribes, trafficked narcotics and weapons, and worked for political and business elites as a mercenary security force.

oeasons being that the police could not survive on the tiny salary they received. meople paid as much as $O,000–$O0,000 in bribes for jobs as policemen, earning the money back through an internal pyramid scheme funded by illegal pursuits. bach week, for example, patrolmen paid a fixed amount from the bribes they extracted from citizens for various “offenses” to their immediate supervisor­s, who in turn were expected to share a cut with their bosses, and so on. Traffic cops were always on the take.

ln an hour’s drive, one could expect to be stopped at least twice and asked to pay a small fine, citizens had little or no choice but to pay up, whether they had broken laws or not. The corrupt system created a vicious cycle in which money rarely reached state coffers, salaries were not paid regularly, and police turned to crime to make money. After the oose oevolution, deorgian society united to demand reform. This is similar to the kigerian police story.

fn order to change the mentality of a broken, cynical, and fearful society at the same time earn their trust; deorgia eliminated redundant agencies and those beyond hope of rehabilita­tion, disbanded the Traffic Police, firing every one of the thousands of officers who had acted as state-sanctioned highway robbers. They were replaced with an entirely new force of matrol molice who had no background in law enforcemen­t and thus no ties to old, corrupted elites. nuality was prioritise­d above quantity.

By reducing the size of the force, jettisonin­g agencies and ministries, and hiring only qualified candidates, Georgia increased salaries of police officers nearly tenfold, and then enforced zero tolerance for corruption in the system.

te therefore advise the federal government to take a cue from deorgia in reforming the kigerian police force, that agency is corruption personifie­d with vices no different from bandits.

ft is highly commendabl­e how the democratic actions of the kigerian youths got both the state and federal government to listen and forced swift actions towards the need to reform the entire kigerian police force. eowever, protesters have refused to give a nod to some measures rolled out by the federal government and fnspector-deneral of molice, Mohammed Adamu. Beyond the fact that protesters perceive the measures as incapable of addressing their demands, the continued protest across the nation shows the trust gap between the people and the government.

fn our view, the protest so far has sent a strong message to the federal government that kigerians are tired of the abnormalit­ies in the country and more importantl­y showed the power of the citizens to demand for change. Above all, kigerians, not just the youths alone, can use the same spirit and energy so far exhibited to force both the federal, state and local government­s’ officials to apply accountabi­lity, transparen­cy and good governance in the discharge of their responsibi­lities in line with their oath of office. By so doing, we would have a people-oriented and people-centred administra­tion.

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