Business Day (Nigeria)

I- G for calls for change in public perception of police

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The Inspector General of Police (I-G), Usman Alkalibaba, has tasked Nigerians to change their negative perception of the police, for enhanced service delivery.

Alkali-baba, represente­d by Commission­er of Police Ade hamzat, said this on Wednesday at a one day high-level Policing executive Forum entitled: “A New Vision for Policing in Nigeria.”

The forum was organised by the Police Reform and Transforma­tion Office (PORTO), with the support of other partners including Cleen Foundation and Macarthur Foundation.

The I-G said there was need to change the narrative of the public in addressing the police during the discharge of their duties.

must be a constructi­ve change of public perception towards the police and policing in order for the transforma­tion of policing to be balanced in the country,” he said.

Alkali-baba urged human rights activists to address the constant breach of police rights by members of the public to ensure a balanced policing transforma­tion in the country.

he said that for a more balanced police transforma­tion, there was need for human rights activists to also stand up for the police whose rights were constantly being abused by the public.

“Just as I have said it, the police too have their rights abused. When we actually did a policing in some other clients outside Nigeria and we saw the cooperatio­n the police get from the public, and we compared our performanc­e outside Nigeria, we discovered that the difference is clear with the policing in Nigeria.

“Because in Nigeria, the civil society stands by the public, but who stands by the police because there have been breaches of the rights of the police too,” he said.

The I-G called for collaborat­ion with members of the public to ensure better security and policing in Nigeria.

Alkali-baba also said that the police would continue to improve on their service delivery while calling for the protection of the rights of officers.

Tunji Lardner, the ex“there ecutive Director of PORTO and Senior Special Assistant to the President on Policy, said that the police was intricatel­y intertwine­d with politics which ought not to be.

Lardner said that for improved policing, the police must stand alone central to law and order and must transcend regardless of what poltical party or government was in place.

“We have to find out why the police reform is working or not working and find out the elements that has creeped into the system and provide solution to it. We should not just think about the police reform as just a sectoral reform focused on the police alone, the police is constituti­onally at the center of law and order. NAN

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