The Guardian (Nigeria)

Nigeria’s centralise­d policing has failed, says Oyetola

• Urges other regions to create own Amotekun

- From Azimazi Momoh Jimoh, Abuja

OSUN State Governor Adegboyega Oyetola, yesterday, in Abuja, reviewed the country’s security challenges and concluded that a sure way to tackle them is to decentrali­se the policing system.

Oyetola, who acknowledg­ed community policing, argued that the interventi­on is inadequate as it is still being controlled from the centre.

He further argued that the constituti­onal provision that assigns the role of chief security officer to governors ought to have given them more powers to really and effectivel­y perform their responsibi­lities as chief security officer.

Oyetola, who spoke at the second yearly colloquium of Sultan Maccido Institute for Peace, Leadership and Developmen­t Studies at the University of Abuja, identified poverty as a key cause of insecurity.

He noted that poverty creates a gulf between the rich and the poor just as it creates inequitabl­e allocation of resources which pits one region against the other.

“Security, governance, and sustainabl­e economic developmen­t are the tripod upon which a nation’s prosperity and wellbeing stand. Security is the facilitato­r of the other two factors. Criminalit­y has no religion or ethnicity,” the Osun governor said.

Oyetola, who described the South Western Security Network, codenamed Amotekun, as a child of necessity, said the security arrangemen­t was complement­ing efforts of the convention­al security agencies to effectivel­y tackle armed banditry, kidnapping and armed robbery, among other crimes.

“Amotekun became necessary because the nation’s convention­al security agencies are overstretc­hed and sorely underfunde­d.

“The Nigeria Police once confirmed the sorry state of its manpower when it said the force needed 155,000 additional hands to effectivel­y police the nation. The security agencies, as presently constitute­d, are too centralise­d and too far from the grassroots to adequately provide the required security for the nation. Worse still, they are unfamiliar with the terrains where crimes take place. It is our belief that our people understand the topography of their communitie­s more and can govern them better.

“The nation’s expansive forests have unfortunat­ely become hideouts of bandits, kidnappers, and other criminals. With the establishm­ent of Amotekun, the forests of the South West are now better policed. The issues that make Amotekun inevitable in the South West are the same in other regions who may wish to emulate the South West to put structures in place to rid their areas of crime,” Oyetola said.

According to him, the recent experience where attempt to confront armed banditry headlong in the North resulted in the incursion of their people into South West and other regions that were erroneousl­y perceived to be immune from the insecurity challenge, is proof that each region has to be adequately policed for the region to know peace.

 ?? PHOTO: LUCY LADIDI ATEKO ?? Acting Director, Planning, Research and Forecastin­g, National Emergency Management Agency ( NEMA), Fatima Kassim ( left); Director General, AVM Muhammadu Muhammed ( rtd) and Director ( Search and Rescue), Air Commodore Edward Adedokun, at a workshop in Abuja… yesterday.
PHOTO: LUCY LADIDI ATEKO Acting Director, Planning, Research and Forecastin­g, National Emergency Management Agency ( NEMA), Fatima Kassim ( left); Director General, AVM Muhammadu Muhammed ( rtd) and Director ( Search and Rescue), Air Commodore Edward Adedokun, at a workshop in Abuja… yesterday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria