Governors have lost a chunk of their security detail as a result of the
reorganisation of the functions of police officers and men.
Police
security attached to the governors has been reduced to a maximum of 62
men – which is a unit – according to Inspector General of Police Solomon
Arase.
Hitherto some governors had 150 policemen to secure them.
Arase,
who spoke in Lagos at the weekend, said the police were worried that
too many of their officers and men were doing jobs other than their core
police duties, yet they were being promoted.
“When these people
now have to be deployed from these special assignments back to their
core duties, they may have lost touch,” he said.
According to
him, that was behind the decision to withdrawal security from
unauthorised persons who use police orderlies for personal
aggrandisement rather than as a result of a real threat to their lives.
Such people, he said, should find other ways to secure themselves.
He
denied that policemen working with the Economic and Financial Crimes
Commission (EFCC) were recalled to undermine the anti-corruption crusade
of the government.
According to him, policemen working in other
agencies like the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS), NAPTIP, ICPC
and others, who had stayed more than five years, were recalled to be
replaced with another set, if necessary.
He said the EFCC
Chairman Ibrahim Lamorde requested the retention of some of them because
they were on special assignments, which, he said, he agreed to do.
The
Police Service Commission said last week that a special squad would be
deployed on the highways and airports to stop policemen doing illegal
guard duties.
Arase said deployment of policemen for guard duties
had ensured that of the about 305, 000 policemen engaged by the
government, only about 150,000 were available for core duties.
He
added that 40,000 policemen across ranks were due to attend promotion
courses which he would ensure as soon as funding is available.
The
recruitment of 10,000 policemen as announced by the Federal Government
would have to wait till next year when there would be budget for it,
Arase said adding that only the best hands would be recruited to
ensuring that people of integrity are hired.
He expressed his
determination to build a data base crime investigation with the support
of a $10millon grant from a foreign country.
“I assure you that I will leave the police better than I met it at the end of my tenure next year,” he said.
0 Comments