17th April, 2014
PRESS RELEASE:
SECURITY
SITUATION: FG MUST BE MORE PROACTIVE
Terrorists bombed Nyanya motorpark on Monday 14th
April, 2014 killing scores of innocent people. The next day, about 100
schoolgirls were abducted by insurgents suspected to be Boko Haram fighters. Within
the same week, another sizeable number of students on their way to write the
JAMB examination were slaughtered by dare-devil criminals.
All the above atrocities amplify the fact that the Nigerian
project is endangered. The security agencies seem to have been engaging in
sheer propaganda regarding the war against Boko Haram. We find it quite
disturbing that the Boko Haram phenomenon is escalating especially during the
month of April which the new army chief promised to end this social cankerworm.
While we condemn the ruthless bombing at Nyanya, the heartless
killing of JAMB candidates and the ruthless abduction of school girls, we
believe that the Federal Government has not done enough to protect ordinary
Nigerians. The spate of
bombings and killings also proves that the emergency rule imposed by the
Federal Government is not working.
The Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC) condemns the concentration of
the security paraphernalia around ministers, high-ranking politicians and other
influential people. It beats our imagination that those who can afford to
employ private security details are feeding fat on the jamaheer (poor
masses) thereby exposing them to great danger.
It is nauseating that a tiny cabal monopolises the insufficient
number of policemen and other security agents. This robs the rest of the
Nigerian society of adequate policing and the few security agents who are left
are overwhelmed by the pressure of work.
MURIC reminds the
Federal Government that the United Nations recommends one policeman for 488 civilians.
The Nigeria Police has about 310,177 officers and men while the State Security
Services (SSS) has about 33,000 personnel. These figures reflect numerical
deficiency because for Nigeria’s population of about 167 million Nigeria needs
at least 577,608 policemen. Our police-civilian population ratio today stands
at 1.538.
This is grossly inadequate. But the last nail in the coffin of security
concerns in this country is the concentration of security apparatus around top
government officials and powerful politicians. This is our
Achille’s heel and the earlier the Federal Government plugs this yawning lacuna
the better.
MURIC advises the Federal Government not to extend the emergency
rule. It has only succeeded in impoverishing innocent civilians. In fact
emergency rules are becoming anachronistic around the world.
What FG needs to do is to be more proactive. The security agents
should focus more on intelligence gathering. More policemen and SSS should be
recruited and their welfare should be improved. FG must also spend more money on
the army and acquire better weapons. More importantly, the excess security men around the
capitalist compradore bourgeoisie should be drastically reduced.
Finally, in view of the fact that security is an all-comers
responsibility, we remind Nigerians to be extra-vigilant. Unattended or
abandoned bags inside airports, markets and public buildings, strange faces,
suspicious behaviours, etc should be reported to security agencies.
Professor Ishaq Akintola,
Director,
Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC)
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