Tag: Prof. Yusuf Ali

  • ‘Nigeria’s security policies  failing to protect citizens’

    ‘Nigeria’s security policies  failing to protect citizens’

    • By Adebisi Onanuga and Kafilat Alabi

    A Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN) Prof. Yusuf Ali has said that the current national security policies have been deepening human suffering, and actively creating new categories of victims.

    Prof. Ali  said this was contrary to the objectives of the policy which was designed to curb terrorism and insecurity.

    He said this was why the policies have been vehemently criticised by legal and security experts for abandoning constitutional safeguards,

    Prof. Ali made this observation in his keynote address delivered at the 2025 Gavel International Annual Lecture and Awards held at the Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industries (LCC1), Olowopopo Street, Alausa, Ikeja.

    The learned silk who spoke on the topic,: “The Impact of National Security Policies on Vulnerable Populations: A Human Rights Perspective,” warned that the nation’s counter-terrorism and law enforcement strategies have drifted perilously from their constitutional foundations, resulting in widespread violations against the very citizens they were meant to shield.

    Prof. Ali stated emphatically that the vulnerable, including the poor, women, children, and internally displaced persons (IDPs), have become unintended, yet consistent, casualties of the government’s efforts to combat terrorism, banditry, and separatist agitation.

    “The reality is that many of our security measures have turned citizens into victims. We have created a system where the people we are supposed to protect are being displaced, detained, or deprived of dignity under the guise of national security,” he declared.

    Read Also: FG vows swift rescue of abducted Kebbi schoolgirls, reaffirms duty to protect citizens

    The Senior Advocate stressed that national security cannot be pursued at the expense of human security. He urged policymakers to adopt a people-centred approach, where human dignity forms the bedrock of every security framework.

    “True security cannot be achieved by force alone. It requires the protection of rights, economic empowerment, and the strengthening of democratic institutions.

    “Where the state fails to uphold the rule of law or meet basic needs, insecurity will persist regardless of the number of guns or troops deployed,” he argued.

    Citing the acute humanitarian crises in the North-East and Middle Belt to support his view.

    Prof. Ali lamented that millions of displaced Nigerians face dehumanising conditions, are exposed to hunger, disease, and abuse.

    He pointed to the absence of accountability in security operations as a key factor fostering impunity among armed forces and police units, leading to a profound erosion of public trust.

    Prof. Ali specifically criticised provisions of the Terrorism (Prevention and Prohibition) Act 2022, which allow for prolonged detention without trial.

    He warned that such measures contradict both the spirit of the Constitution and international conventions ratified by Nigeria.

    “Laws designed to fight terrorism should not themselves become tools of terror. We cannot detain people indefinitely or silence dissent in the name of protecting the state. The Constitution was made for times of peace and crisis alike,” he cautioned.

    The legal luminary called for mandatory human rights training within the military, police, and intelligence services, alongside stronger legislative checks on executive power.

    He advocated for inclusive policymaking that actively incorporates the voices of affected communities, such as IDPs, women’s groups, and traditional institutions, stressing that lasting peace is intrinsically linked to community trust and participation.

    He said that the legitimacy of any security policy hinges on its ability to protect, not punish, citizens.

    “Security must never be an excuse for injustice. When citizens lose faith in the fairness of the state, the battle for national security is already lost,” he declared.

    Major General (Dr) James Alilu Atagura who spoke on security.issues, identified corruption and the chronic absence of an effective system of punishment and reward as the core drivers of Nigeria’s pervasive insecurity.

    He lamented the collapse of justice and accountability, noting that widespread impunity emboldens criminality across the political landscape.

    “Can anyone genuinely go to court and expect justice without bias?” he asked.

    “We see election malpractice, certificate forgery, and corruption go unpunished. Governors finish eight years and vanish when the EFCC comes knocking, while their predecessors remain in court 15 years later. Without justice, society reverts to a state of nature,” he added.

    Major General Atagura also questioned the extensive deployment of the military for internal security duties, arguing that the army has been overstretched beyond its constitutional role, which should primarily be the responsibility of the police.

    “The military should not be embedded among civilians. When soldiers act outside their defined scope, they create more problems,” he said.

    He insisted that insecurity is a symptom, not the disease, and will persist unless Nigeria addresses root causes such as poverty, unemployment, and institutional decay.

    “Even if Boko Haram is defeated today, another group will rise tomorrow because the root causes remain unaddressed,” he said, calling for a swift, certain, and consistent enforcement of laws.

    Dele Adesina (SAN) in his contribution described Nigeria’s 1999 Constitution as a fundamentally flawed document that actively undermines true federalism and effective governance.

    He cited scholars who have variously called the document a fraud and an illogical document.

    Adesina noted that despite Nigeria being a supposed federation, many of the constitution’s provisions are unitary, particularly concerning policing.

    He pointed to Section 214, which mandates only one police force, and Section 215, which restricts governors’ operational control over Commissioners of Police.

    “How can governors be chief security officers when they lack control over law enforcement?” he queried. He urged constitutional reform to correct these fundamental structural defects, insisting that no true federation operates a single, centralised police force.

    Earlier, the founder of Gavel International, Mustapha Adekunle Ogunsakin, said the lecture was conceived to draw urgent attention to the worsening security crisis and the government’s constitutional duty to protect its citizens.

    He lamented the political class’s indifference, urging leaders to rise above partisanship and unite against insecurity, which he rooted in poor governance, not religion.

  • ‘We need to get leadership recruitment right’

    ‘We need to get leadership recruitment right’

    Legal luminary, Prof. Yusuf Ali (SAN), has said Nigeria would continue to grope in the dark until the people changed their character by embracing virtues and values that would exalt a nation.

    He spoke to reporters at the weekend, shortly before the inauguration of the remodelled Central Mosque, in Ifetedo, Ife South Local Government of Osun State.

    At the event were the Olubosin of Ifetedo Kingdom, Oba Akinola Akinrera, Latiiri 1; Deputy President of Nigerian Supreme Council for Islamic Affairs (NDCIA) and President of Muslim Ummah of the South-West Nigeria (MUSWEN), Alhaji Rasaq Oladejo; Registrar, Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB), Prof. Isaq Oloyede; Aare Musulumi of Yoruba land, Edo and Delta states, Alhaji Dawud Makanjuola Akinola; Asiwaju Musulumi of Yoruba land, Alhaji Khamis Tunde Badmus; and Chief Imam of Ifetedo Central Mosque, Chief Imam AbdulJabar Hussein Akindunmi.

    Ali bemoaned that Nigeria had remained in ‘stunted growth’ in all ramifications for decades, due to lack of impactful leadership and followership.

    Read Also: Children malnutrition: FG moves to reverse Nigeria’s top global, continental ranking

    He noted that whereas the country ought to be running like the Asian Tigers that broke into the ranks of advanced economies, Nigeria could hardly crawl for years.

    “Nigeria has a stunted growth in all parameters in the measurement of the growth of a country. We are stunted because by now, we should be running, but we are hardly crawling.

    “All the indices of progress, we don’t need to reinvent the wheel. Other countries such as the so-called Asian Tigers and the advanced countries don’t reinvent themselves. You can borrow and buy technologies and as long as you are able to have it, you’re making progress.

    “We need impactful leadership and followers that are honest and patriotic,” he stressed.

    Ali said the followers were equally as guilty as their leaders for the precarious state of the country, advocating a holistic approach to redeem the situation.

    “It’s two sides of the coin. You can’t be blaming the leaders because the followers are as bad, if not worse, than the leaders in this country.

    “For me, we have to be holistic and must all play our roles, discharge our duties by doing all that are necessary, to have the kind of level of development that we need as a nation.’’

    The legal luminary said the challenges holding the country even 25 years after the restoration of civil rule were due to the incalculable damage done to the country by military interregnum. 

    “We grope in the dark because it is easier to destroy than to build. We may not appreciate the depth of what the military has done to our psyche as a people: lack of orderliness.

    “Ordinarily, the military is supposed to be orderly, but they introduced a lack of orderliness to us. You were on a queue, but when the military were in power, the soldiers would just come and pack all of you and go somewhere, especially when there was petrol scarcity. Military guys will just drive in and disrupt the queue.

    “The citizens also witnessed such scenes, but they couldn’t talk. You may think they are not so important, but they have their effects on the system.

    “What military has done to us is worse than what you’re thinking. So, if Nigeria had been left to grow in1966 when the military came in probably, some of these issues contending with our developmental strides would have been overcome. So, every time you truncate democracy is a baby that’s trying to fall and you shout sit down, it will take that baby another one year to recover. The same thing is applicable to a country,” Ali said.

    He also spoke about the controversy trailing the Tax Reform Bills pending in the National Assembly, which has elicited mixed feelings among some key stakeholders in the Nigerian project, saying Nigerians usually avoid paying taxes on the premise that there is hardly any evidence of the judicious use of the proceeds by the government.