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LATEST: Nigerian Governors Vow To Move Ahead With State Police

by Victor Ndubuisi
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The chairman of the Nigerian Governors’ Forum and Ekiti State Governor, Dr Kayode Fayemi, yesterday, insisted that devolving policing to various levels, including the local level, is the only solution to the myriad of security challenges facing the country noting that multi-level policing, which would give birth to state police, is an idea that nothing can stop even if it is delayed now.

Governor Fayemi stated this while delivering the convocation lecture titled: ‘Media, security and nation building’ at the Nigerian Institute of Journalism, NIJ, Ogba in Lagos.

His words: “As the Chairman of the Nigerian Governors’ Forum, I don’t know of any state governor who is not in support of policing being devolved to local levels. There must be multi-level policing. It is an idea which time has come. The excuse that state governors don’t have the resources to fund such is a fallacy.

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“Right now, state governors are the ones funding federal police in their states. We buy vehicles, diesel, give them allowances and provide insurance cover for them. The only thing state governors don’t have over the federal police is control over them. If you want the Commissioner of Police in your state to do something for you as a governor, he will politely tell you he has heard you and that he would go and put things together in his office. He is not going there to put anything together but to call the Inspector-General of Police and tell him of your propositions. If the IGP gives him the go-ahead, he would come back and say everything is ready, and if you don’t hear any feedback from him, his boss probably did not give him the go-ahead.

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“Multi-level policing does not mean the removal of the federal police. They will be handling federal crimes such as terrorism. But there are some things you don’t need to take to Abuja to be able to deal with them. People at local levels know every nook and cranny of their community, unlike somebody you just bring in from say Kaura Namoda.

“Multi-level policing will happen one day in this country. It is one sure way to tackle the numerous security challenges we face now. To say governors would use them to harass opposition is false. Federal police harass people too. I was a victim of such harassment even as a sitting governor in 2014.”

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On the impact the South-West regional security outfit, Amotekun, has made since its take off in some states, Fayemi noted that without the security outfit, the situation in the region would have been more unpleasant.

On the allegation that the government is over-regulating the media space, the governor suggested that journalists should hold themselves accountable.

He said: “There is a threat to journalism, there are gatekeepers in the industry and we must find means to deal with the excesses of some overzealous persons who would just go and post anything that catches their fancy online. It is not for government to address that, it is for professionals to deal with themselves.”

Giving a background to how journalism has evolved over the years in Nigeria, he commended the media in the country for being in the vanguard of the fight for justice and democracy.

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In his remarks, the Vice-Chairman of the Governing Council of the NIJ, who also chaired the occasion, Mr Ray Ekpu, said the topic for the lecture evoked a lot of passion because of its closeness to people’s hearts.

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Ekpu said: “It tugs at our heartstrings. For the past 11 years, our country has been harassed by Boko Haram terrorists, bandits, kidnappers, herders, and other assorted criminals. Our media have focused attention like a laser beam on these incidents because it is their responsibility to do so as prescribed by the constitution of Nigeria.”

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Also speaking, a Professor of Mass Communication, Ralph Akinfeleye, urged state actors not to stifle the press in any way.

Akinfeleye said: “The other name for democracy is a free press. The press wants to be the fourth estate of the realm not the fourth estate of the wreck. Government agencies trying to regulate the media are going overboard. Some of them have even become traders. They will be slamming fines needlessly on media outfits to raise money.”

 

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