Presidential panel wants police ministry scrapped …says IG earns less than D-G SSS, EFCC chair
The 2012 Presidential Committee on the
Reorganisation of the Nigeria Police on Tuesday told President Goodluck
Jonathan to scrap the Ministry of Police Affairs, saying the ministry
was no longer relevant in line with the 1999 Constitution as amended.
The committee also faulted the disparity
in the salaries of policemen and personnel of organisations carved out
from the NP, including the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission and
the State Security Service.
Chairman of the presidential panel, Mr.
Parry Osayande, said this while giving the President highlights of his
committee’s report. The report was submitted to President Jonathan in
Abuja on Tuesday.
Osayande, who is also the Chairman of
the Police Service Commission, said his committee discovered that the
budgeted fund of the police was unjustifiably domiciled with the
Ministry of Police Affairs despite the fact that the ministry was
neither in charge of police administration nor its operations.
Osayande, is an ex-Deputy Inspector General of Police.
Osayande said because the ministry
determined police projects with no input from police authorities, some
of the projects so executed ended up not being of priority to the
police.
This, he explained, was an aberration
which he said had led to “abuse, misapplication and haemorrhage” of the
limited resources made available to the police.
The PSC boss said, “The Ministry of
Police Affairs has no particular assigned role in the 1999 Constitution
as amended, being neither in charge of Police administration which is
assigned to the Police Council, nor in charge of operations which are
assigned to the Inspector-General of Police nor in charge of
appointment, discipline and promotion which is assigned to the Police
Service Commission.
“Notwithstanding, the budgeted fund of
the Police is unjustifiably domiciled with the Ministry of Police
Affairs. The ministry determines police projects and awards its
contracts, including organising and running training programmes
involving billions of naira with no input from the Police who are the
end users.
“The result is that some of the projects
being executed are not priorities to the Police. This is an aberration
which has led to abuse, misapplication and haemorrhage of the limited
resources made available to the police.”
He argued that the police should be
empowered to determine its priorities, draw its budget based on its
needs and be held accountable for the use of the funds.
Osayande observed that the gradual
decimation of the police by successive governments through carving of
integral units out of the force as autonomous entities had been
weakening its ability to effectively discharge its constitutional roles.
He said the creation of such agencies
violated Section 214 (1) of the 1999 Constitution as amended which he
said provided that there should be only one police force. He argued that
the funds that should have been aggregated and used to strengthen the
capacity of the police were dissipated on “quasi organisations.”
He said, “The committee therefore
recommends that some of the duties taken away from the police should be
returned as they are integral and still remain the constitutional duties
of the Nigeria Police Force.
“Consequently, the Independent Corrupt
Practices and other Related Offences Commission, Federal Road Safety
Corps and the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps should be
immediately merged with the Nigeria Police Force.”
The retired DIG observed that the
poverty of the ordinary policeman coupled with weak institutional
governance predisposed him to engaging in all sorts of schemes for
self-help and survival.
He regretted that despite the fact that
the parallel organisations carved out of the Nigeria Police only
performed part of functions of the police, their personnel were better
remunerated and motivated than policemen.
“For instance, while the
Inspector-General of Police earns N711, 498 per month, the
Director-General, State Security Service earns N 1.336m per month and
the Executive Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission
earns N1.5m per month.
“This disparity in salaries does not
reflect higher responsibility attached to the Office of the
Inspector-General of Police,” Osayande added.
The retired DIG said the agitation for
state police was irrelevant because the states could not afford the
cost, adding that the country would break up if state police were
allowed.
“The agitation is irrelevant. They
cannot afford it. Do you know how much it is to police a country? What
we are recommending is this, if they allow the Police Council to
function, the president is the chairman, the chairman of Police Service
Commission is a member, governors are members, the IGP is a member, and
you bring your policing plan to the council. They will now decide on
what to do. We don’t need state police, the country will break up, take
it from me,” he said.
The Ministry of Police Affairs on Tuesday said it could not comment on the recommendation of the presidential panel.
The Deputy Director, Public Relations,
in the ministry, Mr. James Odaudu, declined comment when asked for his
reaction to the call by the PSC.
A senior official in the police affairs
ministry however said the Federal Government had the freedom to take any
decision it deemed fit. “The ministry has no say in the matter,” the
official who asked not to be named said.
But a former IG, Alhaji Mohammed Gambo Jimeta, opposed the proposed scrapping of the police affairs ministry.
Gambo said this on Tuesday during a
closed-door meeting between Jonathan and four ex-IGs at the Presidential
Villa, Abuja. He said there was no need to scrap the ministry.
He said, “The police are directly under
the President or Prime Minister. With his busy schedule, the Prime
Minister or President will not have enough time to attend to the
day-to-day issues that are arising on police issues. During the
Parliamentary days, there was the need for somebody, not the Prime
Minister who should answer questions on Police so a Minister of State
was created in the Prime Minister’s office to ensure that he conducted
the political aspects related to Police just as he does now to the
President and he needs somebody to explain to the Public not a Police
Officer as to the validity of the policies that were carried out by the
Police that heightened criticisms or recommendations as is being
anticipated.”