Community Policing: Fayemi makes case for reforms, raises need to address trust issues

Last Updated: December 20, 2020By Tags: , ,

The Governor of Ekiti State, Dr. Kayode Fayemi, has reiterated the need for a reform mechanism that would improve citizens’ trust in the Nigeria Police for the intent and purpose of community policing to be achieved.

Dr Fayemi stated this during a stakeholders’ forum on community policing, involving heads of security agencies, public servants, politicians, civil society organisations, youth and women organisations, heads of government institutions, trade and professional groups in Ado-Ekiti at the weekend.

The Ekiti State Governor spoke, just as a former Inspector General of Police, Mr Sunday Ehindero urged stakeholders to support the holistic establishment of community policing to tackle the menace of banditry, kidnapping and other security challenges bedevilling the Country.

Dr. Fayemi who stated that community policing is vital to addressing security challenges in the country, however, lamented the non-implementation of a wide range of recommendations made at different conferences on how the Nigeria Police can be reformed in the last 20 years.

The Governor who spoke through the State Attorney- General and Commissioner for Justice, Mr Wale Fapohunda; said the establishment of a police ombudsman with the mandate to receive and address citizens’ complaints against police officers and also address cases of abuse against police officers had become imperative.

He also urged the Federal Government not to despise recommendations made by the Judicial Panel of Inquiry set up in the wake of the End SARS protests with special attention on getting justice and compensations for victims of police abuse.

The Governor also called on the Minister of Police Affairs to engage a reputable audit firm to undertake an audit of the salaries, the wages, allowances of police officers including manpower and equipment available to the police, stressing that a Police officer with a poor condition of service and struggling to survive cannot deliver the purpose of community policing.

Fayemi said: “A large number of our people still don’t see police as their friends. So it seems to me that an important way we can get that trust is through police reform. We cannot simply hope to achieve the intent of community policing without police reforms.

“The Federal Government should take seriously the reports of the judicial panel of inquiry that has been set up in the aftermath of the End SARS protests. If we are going to move forward we have to look backwards and ensure that our people that have serious issues with police are properly compensated and their pains recognized.

“There is nothing wrong with the Nigeria Police today that has not been the subject of multiple reports of many committees which the IG and myself participated in. There are many high-level reports on police reforms including two constitutional conferences.

“The tragedy is that the recommendation of this committee and that of the constitutional conference had largely been left unattended to. We need to look at those reports to bring them back to life and based on those reports on an actionable agenda that is time-bound for the use of the country as a whole and for the enhancement of police reforms in Nigeria.

In his presentation, former Police IG, Ehindero said tackling security challenges solely from the angle of security personnel has shifted to community stakeholders playing vital roles in providing intelligence that would assist the security agencies to perform optimally.

Ehindero, who noted that such an approach of community policing was what assisted in the rescue of the abducted Secondary School Students in Katsina State, said the need to embrace community policing by supporting it was crucial to overcoming the security challenges bedevilling the Nation.

The Assistant Inspector-General of Police in charge of Zone 17 comprising Ekiti and Ondo, David Folawiwo called on the Stakeholders to take ownership of community policing. He said the Inspector General of Police was committed to making constabularies who were nominated by their community to serve in their locality thereby ensuring that there is a police presence in every hamlet, villages and towns.

Earlier in his welcoming address, the State Commissioner of Police, explained that the programme was designed to enhance and expand the horizon of collaboration between security agencies and other critical stakeholders in the society particularly traditional rulers and community leaders at the grassroots.

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