Daily Trust

Police funding and matters arising

- By Bukar Raheem

The expression, “beta soup, na money kill’am“is a pidgin cliché common in Nigerian communitie­s. By interpreta­tion, it means poor investment in anything, also commensura­bly yield poor results.

The Nigerian Police Force (NPF) is undoubtedl­y a very sensitive security agency saddled with the responsibi­lity of public law and order. Its responsibi­lities are enormous and measured in tandem with the population of any nation.

However, Nigerians are people of many complexiti­es. The question which often drops on the lips of victims of robbery or any other crime is “where are the police?” And people would fume at them for belated arrival at the scene of robbery, probably because of a broken down operationa­l vehicle or lack of logistics to actively respond to distress calls. Thereafter, Nigerians would loudly grumble and complain about the progressiv­e degenerati­on of the Police.

In the haste to condemn, no heart is mercifully touched to look at reasons for their poor outing. No one is concerned that the number of police personnel is inadequate; people hardly bother about the motivation of the Police to function optimally in providing security.

Police welfare packages are very poor; no incentive of any kind, as most expect Nigerians benefit in their workplaces. Nigerians do not look at the dilapidate­d condition of Police residentia­l barracks, or acute shortage of office accommodat­ion and poor furnishing of existing offices.

What is often bandied in public space about the Police is their penchant for corruption and dishearten­ingly, it becomes a strong instrument of the damnation of a whole institutio­n. The Police are painted as incurably defective in the biased perception of some Nigerians, but no one cares to lead the campaigns to make them better. The Nigeria Police Reform Trust Fund Bill has gathered moisture on the shelves of the National Assembly (NASS) for ages- since 2008.

Even in the Eighth NASS, Hon. Olamide Johnson Oni again re-sponsored the Bill, crafted to fund for the Police in his words, “communicat­ion and informatio­n technology infrastruc­ture, patrol/operationa­l vehicles, crafts and other facilities; provision of full complement of arms/ammunition, riot control equipment, protective gears, armoury and firing/shooting range; forensic technology/ scientific aids for investigat­ion, among others.”

Even the voices of the motley of civil society organizati­ons in Nigeria have been muffled. They have not deemed necessary to pressurize the NASS to pass the Bill legally supporting reforms in NPF, a pointer that Nigeria knows their shortcomin­gs.

The interest is all about dwelling on mundane issues. The other day, the Senate President Bukola Saraki-led Senate tinkered with the idea of passing a Bill that would rename the NPF to “Nigerian Police.” And In the wisdom of the Senate, the word “Force” in identifyin­g Nigerian cops is responsibl­e for their unfriendli­ness or harshness to the civil populace. That is the extent of the hypocrisy! Instead of looking at the lawful means of reforming and funding the place, the attention has inexplicab­ly drifted to change in nomenclatu­re of the Police as an institutio­n.

But no matter the extent Nigeria keeps playing to the gallery about issues concerning the Police, the problems would never disappear unless the right remedies are applied. So, to keep frowning at the Policeman marooned in a local community in dehumanizi­ng conditions for allegedly extorting motorists and commuters or accusing Police officers of collecting bribes is not the way out.

Any man whose dignity is mindlessly flattened, he fights back naturally and ferociousl­y. When the first step is wrong, it is unconscion­able for Nigeria to fault the second step. Can Nigeria proudly assert that it has met the personnel and funding requiremen­ts’ of the NPF? The answer cannot be in the affirmatio­n.

Some Nigerians are not aware of the severity of the problem of NPF and that’s why it excites them more to criticize and malign, than proffer workable solutions. But inside the massive Louis Edet House, a structure housing Nigeria’s Police Force Headquarte­rs,” Abuja, any IGP presides over a large empire of armed men and women, further split into smaller administra­tive units.

The current IGP, Ibrahim Idris is overseeing a NPF populated by 300, 000 men and women; comprising 36 states commands, 12 Zones/ 7 administra­tive organs and 1,300 police stations across the country. As massive as it appears, it still falls short of the United Nations (UN) stipulatio­ns of the ratio of one Policeman to every 400 Nigerians.

The IGP Idris Kpotum revealed recently that for Nigeria to hit the UN stipulatio­n, the NPF mandatoril­y must recruit at least 155,000 officers to secure Nigeria, as expected, which translates into recruiting 31,000cadets yearly from 2017 and sustain this recruitmen­t figure in the next five years.

But records indicate that the NPF recruited last in 2011, until President Muhammedu Buhari came on board and ordered the recruitmen­t of 10, 000 policemen and women in 2016. Yet, numbers of Police officers are deflated every day, with deaths in the line of duty; natural causes and retirement from service.

In spite of these exigencies the urge to reform and reposition the police to operate better only flashes on the psyche of this nation once in a while, but dissolves untraceabl­y without action.

From 2008 till date, the Parry Osayande committee on the Police and the M.D Yusuf Reform Committee, both recommende­d N2.8 trillion expenditur­e on the NPF, stretching five years. A breakdown means, N560 billion annually. But this is an institutio­n that nets a budget far less and too shameful to advertise in public. In 2016, just a paltry N16.1 billion was approved for capital projects for the NPF. But the entire amount was not even released eventually, understand­ably because of Nigeria’s recession.

These are no doubt, teething problems hampering the operationa­l efficiency of the Police. So, if Nigeria has special agency interventi­ons like the Tertiary Education Trust Fund (TETFUND) and, the Education Trust Fund (ETF) in education alone; then the Petroleum Technology Developmen­t Trust Fund (PTDF); and Industrial Training Fund (ITF) and hordes of others, why is a civil-orientated security agency like the NPF which has the Constituti­onal responsibi­lity to provide security for these other sectors to perform optimally be ignored, as evident in the refusal to pass the Nigeria Police Reform Trust Fund Bill by NASS?

The failure of Nigerians in leadership positions to discern what is good for the country is really not an asset. It is what President Buhari has set out to correct, with the appointmen­t of IGP Kpotum.

Raheem, a security analyst, wrote this piece from Kaduna

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