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Governors Of 36 States Embrace State Police

Governors of the 36 states in Nigeria have collectively embraced the idea of each state having its own police formation.

The Chairman, Nigeria Governors’ Forum, Governor Abdulaziz Yari, who spoke to news men today, Monday, at the end of a two-day summit, organized by the Senate Ad-hoc Committee on Review of Current Security Infrastructure in Nigeria, said that the creation of state police would help in addressing the spate of insecurity in the country.

Abdulaziz Yari, who doubles as governor of Zamfara State said: “today, we have reiterated the position of Vice President Yemi Osinbajo. And the position of the security summit we held in August, that there is a need for the state police; we can say it is the only answer.”

The governor said that internal security is supposed to be handled and managed by the police and that the police of today were inadequate, adding: “there are about 4 million people in Zamfara and we have fewer than 5000 policemen.

 “We in governance agree that we can find a way through which we can fine tune the issue of state police.”

On the cost implications, Governor Yari explained that “It is not all the states that are supposed to have the state police, those that could, should be able to have it.

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“It is something we cannot take off at the same time.  We were created differently.”

He said that the issue of security was not something to play with, adding that the primary responsibility of any government is to ensure that lives and properties of citizens are protected.

“Many challenges of Nigerians for the past ten years ranging from Boko Haram, cattle rustlers, armed banditry, and militancy in the Niger Delta are dwindling the Nigerian economy, and threatening the unity of the nation.”

It will be recalled that the Vice President, Yemi Osinbajo, had during the opening of the summit last week, advocated the idea of state police, saying: “we cannot realistically police a country the size of Nigeria centrally from Abuja. State police and other community policing methods are clearly the way to go.”

Source: NAN