Daily Trust Sunday

Insecurity: Using cab operators for intelligen­ce gathering

- Rotimi S. Bello wrote from Abuja rotimibell­o_69@yahoo.com <mailto:69@yahoo.com>

Recently, my brother-in-law and his wife had to travel to the village for Christmas and had to bring their one-yearold son to my house at Wuse 11 in Abuja since it was compulsory for their maid to go with them. The said brother-in-law boarded a taxi with his elder brother. On getting to Banex junction, the taxi driver noticed that the child was sleeping without break, so he suspected a foul play. Subsequent­ly, he parked the vehicle and raised the alarmed, which attracted the attention of surveillan­ce policemen. In a jiffy he was told to identify himself and call the mother of the boy if the child was not kidnapped as alleged by the cab man.

Ignorantly, instead of providing the proof of paternity of the child by showing his son’s recent birthday family picture, including himself, the boy and the mother, my brother was trying to fight the driver for causing him public embarrassm­ent. However, the timely interventi­on of my wife and mother-in-law prevented probable arrest by the police.

I commend the driver’s display of alertness, sincerity, smartness and absolute sense of patriotism. His action would have helped to rescue the child if he was kidnapped. There is a lesson here for the Nigeria Police Force. It means that some of the public cab drivers could be secretly enlisted and trained as intelligen­t agents to work for the state simultaneo­usly to track crimes, especially kidnapping, armed robbery and fraud.

Also, commercial motorcycli­sts and tricycle drivers would be of immense help in most of our rural areas and villages. They could adequately provide intelligen­ce reports and informatio­n to security personnel to deal with criminals on the prowl in all the nooks and crannies of the country. There is no straight jacket mode of gathering intelligen­ce for security surveillan­ce. Intelligen­ce gathering network, according to Wikipedia, is a system through which informatio­n about a particular entity is collected for the benefit of another through the use of more than one inter-related sources.

The fact is that many Nigerians will be ready to assist the country in gathering intelligen­ce and informatio­n to foil crimes.

Our security agencies need to re-strategise to be able to fight crimes effectivel­y in the country.

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