Tag: secured

  • Magu: EFCC has secured over 150 convictions this year

    Acting Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) Chairman Ibrahim Magu yesterday dismissed speculations that the agency was being used to witch-hunt perceived enemies of the President Muhammadu Buhari administration.

    Magu, who said EFCC had sustained the anti-corruption war irrespective of personal or political affiliations, added that the agency had secured not fewer than 150 convictions of corrupt individuals from January to June.

    “That’s the best anybody can do,” he said.

    Magu spoke at a stakeholders’ interactive session held at the EFCC Ibadan Zonal Office, Iyaganku, Ibadan.

    He was received by the Southwest Zonal Director, Mr. Abdulrasheed Bawa, top officials of the agency, artisans, trade groups, religious leaders, among others.

    The session, aimed at strengthening partnership and collaborative efforts with stakeholders in the fight against corruption, had in attendance the leadership of Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), led by its Chairman in Oyo State, Mr. Waheed Olojede; Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN), led by its state Chairman, Pastor Benjamin Akanmu; founder of Shafaudeen in Islam Worldwide, Prof. Sabitu Olagoke; state Director, National Orientation Agency (NOA), Mrs. Dolapo Dosunmu and members of the Corrupt Practices Eradication Organisation of Nigeria (COPEON).

    Magu said: “The EFCC will not, and does not engage in a witch-hunt. Our activities are in line with international best practices. In all we do, we are guided first by the fear of God and patriotism to our fatherland and the rule of law. I will continue to discharge my duties by the fear of Almighty God, the overriding interest of our fatherland, Nigeria and the rule of law.

    “It is pertinent for all of us to see ourselves as stakeholders in this fight. We must strive to achieve the Nigeria of our dream, one which our children and generations unborn will be proud of.

    “For us at the EFCC, we are driven by courage, integrity and professionalism and our commitment to the common task of improving the lot of our people at the grassroots, as we promote working partnership with all of you. Corruption is the number one problem that has militated against the development of Nigeria, especially the poor at the grassroots. The havoc corruption has wreaked on the economy is, no doubt, endless.

    “This is why fighting it to a standstill is not only a must, but also the only lifesaver for our country, to save the next generation. I want to restate for the records that there is no better time to prop up the anti-corruption campaign than now. There are ways of fighting corruption, which is to sensitise, create awareness and all that. But I am telling you, the looting must stop. We should not glorify the corrupt. We should not appreciate the corrupt. The ill must stop in the interest of our future generation. We have to find a way to protect their future.”

  • Secured, treated by the Navy

    Secured, treated by the Navy

    A community, Okpuala, in Imo State relishes security and free medicals offered by the Navy, reports UGOCHUKWU UGOJI-EKE

    The community once could not defend itself against criminals, and suffered greatly at their hands. That scenario changed when the Navy moved into the area with their school. Since then residents of Okpuala, a short distance away from Owerrinta where the navy’s finance and logistics college is sited, have been enjoying both their days and their nights. Security, however, is just one of the delicacies served by the navy; there are also medical checks and medicines given free to Okpuala residents.

    The latest medical outreach, carried out when the Navy celebrated its 61st anniversary, was held at Okpuala in Ngo-Okpuala Local Government Area of Imo State. The medical rhapsody, as the navy called it, is a routine health scheme aimed at sensitising host communities about their operations and also part of their corporate social responsibility.

    Speaking during the event, the Flag Officer Commanding (FOC) Naval Training Command, Apapa, Lagos, Rear Admiral Ifeola Mohammed said the navy is grateful to host communities for their cooperation. Mohammed said the Chief of Naval Staff (CNS) Vice Admiral Ibok Ete Ibas is also happy with the support given to the navy by the communities in Abia and Imo states, adding that it is one of the reasons behind the free medical care being extended to them.

    He said, “This shows that apart from protecting life and property, we also preserve the lives of those around us through medical care delivery. It is only when the people of the state and country are in good health that the navy which has the prerogative of protecting the waterways in conjunction with other arms of the military will have people to protect.”

    Mohammed urged the recipients to take advantage of the free medical scheme being given to them by the Nigerian Navy Finance and Logistics College, Owerrinta to sort out their medical problems.

    “If there are any other problems you are facing please feel free to let us know,” he said.

    He charged the people of Okpuala community to be law abiding as the navy is ready to carry everyone along.

    “So long as you are doing the right thing, the law will always be on your side and the navy will always stand by the law abiding community,” he said.

    In his speech, the commandant of the college, Navy Capt Abdullahi Aminu said that the navy is celebrating its 61st year of its existence and that they always celebrate with their host communities.

    He said that the navy college has been offering free medical care to their host community since they came into Owerrinta, adding that people around them have been accessing the facility within the college to treat their medical needs.

    Earlier in an interaction with The Nation, the navy doctor Lt Cmdr Noel Olamide said that they were in the community to offer free medical services to the people which will help to improve the relationship between them and the host communities.

    Lt Cmdr said they have handled about 600 cases ranging from High Blood Pressure, fever, malaria, ulcer, arthritis, including high sugar level, “These include old men, women, children and students as well, while those with severe cases are referred to the hospital at our base”.

    He said, “I noticed that most of them are not even aware that they have health challenges, we have been able to tell them the type of ailments they have and given advice and drugs as well”.

    Earlier the chief nurse of the naval hospital, Lt Ijeoma Nwachukwu had given the patients lecture on how to take care of themselves and the need for their person hygiene, stressing that what they were doing is part of social responsibility to the community around them.

    Nwachukwu used the forum to tell the people that they have no reason to fear the naval officers who are in their community to give them free medical care and that they should listen to advises on how to take care of themselves on health related issues.

    She told them that they were going to run tests on them to determine their state of health, “We will also give those who have health challenges drugs free of charge, while the children from five years old down will be de-wormed”.

    Nwachukwu told them about HIV/AIDS saying that it is not a deadly disease as such, “But you need to take care of yourselves to avoid contracting the disease, as it is not written on the faces of those who are carriers”.

    Nwachukwu said, “The worst aspect of the HIV/AIDS is the issue of stigmatization of the patients which kills faster than the ailment and you cannot contract it through touching but through blood contacts, but if you have HIV/AIDS and take your recommended drugs regularly, you will live long”.

    “There are other forms of diseases that kill faster than HIV/AIDS which includes hypertension, Hypertitis B and other dangerous ailments, but these ailments could be controlled with the routine drugs meant for them”.

    She urged the men to allow their pregnant wives to come for ante natal check-ups and treatment at the base hospital, adding that they equally run free HIV/AIDS tests on such women, “Which is to avoid transmitting the disease from mother to child”.

    One of the recipients of the free medical scheme, Uzoma Okereke while reacting said, “I am a recipient of the navy free medical scheme which held in my community and I am very happy with the navy from Owerrinta in Abia state”.

    “The free medical care given to us will help our people especially the indigent ones who cannot under normal circumstance afford medical bills for their health problems to take care of themselves medically”.

    “The navy is also protecting us from criminals as they have helped our community to chase away criminals from our area including kidnappers, we are now sleeping with our two eyes closed unlike before”.

    In his vote of thanks, the traditional ruler of the community, Eze Kele Okereke said that it is not easy for civilians to see top military officers and thanked them for coming to give them free medical care free of charge.

    Eze Okereke said that the medical activities of the navy in his community show that the navy is not only interested in protecting the people during war period but is also concerned about the medical wellbeing of the people around them.

    The FOC, Admiral Mohammed also commissioned some projects built by the Navy Capt Aminuadministration which includes renovated auditorium, security features including perimeter fencing with security lights and car park.

     

  • NFF confirm: Eagles’ trip to Tanzania secured

    NFF confirm: Eagles’ trip to Tanzania secured

    The Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) has tidied up all arrangements surrounding Nigeria’s 2017 Africa Cup of Nations (AFCON) qualifying match away to Tanzania in Dar es Salaam, thenff.com can report.

    Already, the NFF has concluded agreement with a leading Nigeria airline to fly the team into Dar es Salaam and back to Nigeria, with departure to be from the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, Abuja and the return set for the Port Harcourt International Airport.

    NFF officials confirmed on Wednesday that the chartered aircraft will convey the delegation into Dar es Salaam on the eve of the match, as Tanzania is a high altitude zone.

    The delegation will depart Dar es Salaam immediately after the match, and fly to Port Harcourt, where the Super Eagles have an international friendly against the Mena of Niger on September 8.

    Arrangements for the hotel where the Super Eagles will stay in Dar es Salaam have also been finalised, according to NFF General Secretary, Mohammed Sanusi.

    Nigeria and Egypt have three points each from the Matchday 1 of the qualification series to be on top of Group G, though the Pharaohs have scored one more goal and are slightly ahead following their 3-0 defeat of Tanzania in Cairo.

    On the same weekend, the Pharaohs will travel to Ndjamena to confront the Les Sao of Chad.

  • ‘I graduated from pickpocket to robbery because I felt more secured as a robber’

    ‘I graduated from pickpocket to robbery because I felt more secured as a robber’

    A robbery suspect arrested by the Special Anti- Robbery Squad (SARS) of the Lagos State Police Command, Ugochukwu Felix Nebuwe (28), has said that he started as a pickpocket before he graduated into armed robbery. The suspect said after only narrowly escaping being lynched together with his other members of his pickpocket gang, he decided to change from pickpocket to armed robbery.

    Nebuwe and three of his gang members who are now at large were said to have gone to a night club at Tin Can, Apapa area of Lagos and as they were returning home the following day, they saw a man trying to start his car. They rushed towards the man, forcibly took his car key and drove off.

    Unfortunately, by the time they got to Mile 2 area, information had gone to the police whose men mobilised and began to pursue them. They, therefore, abandoned the vehicle and fled. Unfortunately, Ugochukwu ran in a different direction and some boys in the area arrested him. Before handing him over to the police, they gave him the beating of his life.

    Nebuwe, who spoke with our reporter, said he hailed from Mgbidi village in Imo State and traded in refrigerators and electronics at the Alaba International Market.

    He added: “I used to stay with my parents at Igando (Lagos). My father retired as a chief driver at Futuro Construction Company. I stopped my secondary school education at Senior Secondary School 2 because I was too stubborn. I did not use to listen when they told me to stop fighting with people.

    “May be it is somebody that is doing this to me. I stopped schooling at SS 2 because of my stubbornness. I used to be too aggressive and when elders told me to stop fighting each time I had a little misunderstanding with people, I would not heed their advice.

    “It is a spiritual problem caused by somebody to undo my family because at times, after participating in armed robbery operation, I would begin to regret. Another thing that would show you that the hand of an enemy is in what is making me to behave like this is that if I want to sleep, I sleep in a tokunbo (fairly used) vehicle displayed for sale. The owner does not see me because before day break, I would go out, have my bath and go to the market to hustle.”

    Asked how he became a guest of the police, he said: “I started as a pickpocket. We used to be two or three doing it at clubs, bus stops, market places and even stadia. That was around 2004. My pickpocket counterparts were mostly Igbo and Edo boys. Some of them are dead while some are in prisons or police cells. Some of them died during police raids.

    “At Tin Can side of Ajegunle, I met a gang of ‘one chance’ robbers at a place we used to smoke. They were Obi, Stephen, Lukman and Okey. There is also one we call Ochari, a very short boy but very wicked. He was the one that usually pushed out victims from the moving vehicle.

    “They used to cheat me and would not give me raw cash when we were shairing our loot. They would tell me to wait until I mastered the work. They used to give me phones. Some of the members like Okey and Lukman, are dead now. As for the rest, I don’t know whether they are dead or in prison.

    “Every morning, they would call me to join them. We would call passengers like other commercial buses, but when we had got enough passengers, we would rob them and go home.

    “Our routes include Iyana-Iba, Mile 2, Tin Can and Mile 12. I used to sell the phones for N2,000 each, no matter the make or quality, because I didn’t want them to remain with me to avoid being tracked down through them. The moment I got the phones, I would remove the SIM cards and throw them on the main road.

    “I later left the gang when the police started tracking them down. Even some of them were arrested and charged to court. But after some months, I was down financially. The only option left for me to survive was to join a robbery gang.

    “I went back to the club because armed robbers liked to go there. There I met one Azubuike and another boy called Ijebu and IK. There was also a boy they called Afo. They told me that my suffering had ended and very soon I would get enough money to help myself.

    “On that fateful day, I did not know that they had already planned to rob on the way. As we left the club in the morning, I thought that they would drop me at Mile 2. We were all inside our operational Danfo bus. Immediately they saw a man washing his car in front of his house, which had no gate, they stopped, rushed towards the man and pointed a gun at him.

    ‘’The man shouted and area boys came out in great number and pursued us. They abandoned the car and ran away in the Danfo bus. I could not meet up with them hence they escaped and left me behind.

    “When the area boys saw me, they said I was one of them and started beating me. They would have left me when I tried to tell them that I was not one of them. But they got to the car they abandoned and discovered that one of the gang members had left his gun. They became annoyed and started pounding me. They later took me to Tolu Police Station.”

  • ‘Pensions now  fully secured’

    ‘Pensions now fully secured’

    Umaru Modibbo, Managing Director/CEO of Sigma Pensions Limited, is optimistic that the pension funds are fully secured and safe. He spoke with Joe Agbro Jr.

    With N3.5tr pension funds in the pool and over 5.6 million workers, how do you think these funds should be invested to ensure optimum returns on investments?

    Already, these monies are not idle. As prescribed by PENCOMM, we can invest even up to 100% in government securities. We are holding government securities. We’re also having investments in money collection banks. And we also have equity. So, the monies are already being utilised by the economy. It’s inside the economy already. It’s not that it is a pile of money sitting somewhere. No, it’s in the system already.

    At Sigma Pensions, what share of the PFA market do you control?

    I’m controlling about ten to 11 percent of the market. I have a total of N240billion I am managing as at today.

    There has been claims by some workers that companies don’t remit their share of the pensions pool as at when due. What legal remedies are open to employees of those companies?

    Under the law, the Reform Act says you should remit it (pension) seven days after the last pay day. But if you don’t do that, you’re bound to pay interest rate of whatever amount you withhold. In fact the National Pension Commission has started appointing companies to go after these defaulting employers and get them to pay. And they have started paying. Some law firms and accounting companies were appointed by National Pensions Commission to pursue these defaulting employers and get them to pay together with the interest to the organisation.

    A lot of people’s confidence has waned in the areas of pensions, especially in the area of misappropriation of funds in different quarters of the economy. There is a fear that their pension would be subject to such. How do you think the confidence level of these categories of people bee buoyed?

    Actually, when you’re talking about pensions, I know it’s a generic word. When you say pension, they will get scared. But, you know, we are transiting from the old scheme to the new scheme. The old scheme is the one that has issue. And we are the new ones that are coming in to replace them. So, these things are going to be phased out in a way because for now, all these pension scams that you are hearing is associated with the old scheme. And that is why the Act itself transits to the new scheme. So, there is this perception. I know it is a problem to distinguish between the two.

    So, you’re saying the new scheme is better than the old scheme?

    Definitely. That is why we are saying that we have N3.5trn in the past eight years and there is no single fraud, no single one kobo, is lost because of thee segregation of duty. The pension administrator is just administering this fund while the custodian is in custody of these funds. And these custodians are the big three or four banks in the country. We all know them – First Bank, UBA, Zenith and Diamond Bank. They are the ones holding this money. We can’t touch this money. We are just the administering them. We give them instructions. They would not do anything except with our own instructions while they are holding the money and PENCOMM being the referee, is sitting there and watching over. And we do reconcile these accounts on a daily basis. So, if there is a discrepancy of one kobo any day, you’ll report. And this money is already in the market place, it is in the economy.

    What would consider as some of your greatest challenges after about eight years as head of Sigma Pensions?

    The challenges have always been compliance. People don’ want to comply, especially employers. Consider our population. We are 160 million. What percentage is the working population in Nigeria? We are possibly like 45 million by our estimates. Only about 5 million are registered out of an estimated working population of 45 million. So, where is the 40 million? Add that 40 million on top of five million and you will see the difference. You will see the amount.

    You talked of companies not being compliant being the major challenge. What do you think should be done to make companies more compliant?

    Like I said, we need to get them. Some of them would say, ‘I don’t have the money. It’s an additional expense to my payroll, why would I pay?’ But the issue is that we’re trying to sensitise the workers. It’s their rights. If an employer is short-changing you in a way because it is your money he is reducing. Some would even deduct and not pay. So, double jeopardy. He refuses to pay his portion. He took your own portion and refused to pay. So, he has taken two times of your money. He is supposed to take 7.5% from your salary which he has done. He is supposed to take another 7.5% to make it 15%. So, he has taken 15% of your salary. Why would you allow him? You (employee) are suppose to whistle-blow. Tell Pencomm that his guy is taking my money and he is not paying. Or he has refused to comply. You can do that anonymously without being known. You can write a letter without putting your name. The regulator would now send an investigator to track compliance because he would tell them his why he is no remitting or he is not even complying.

    How would you describe your experience in business?

    We brought a crop of people who are seasoned who have been in the financial market. And by regulation, for you to even be a managing director of a PFA, you have to have 20 years relevant cognate financial services experience. The rules are very clear. You cannot just bring anybody and say, come and manage this place. We have for each grade of employees, we have the number of financial services you need to have. That has been the rule and we have been following it throughout the cadre from the bottom to the top. So, whoever you see that is in the pensions industry must have been qualified to be there because your approval for appointment would have to be given by the National Pensions Commission and they are very strict on that. So, I don’ have any problem. And you can see the pedigree of those that are on board. And the management, they are all qualified by the law and they have the required financial and regulatory requirement.

    So, what is your management style like?

    We are consultative. We are open. We take feedbacks from clients and we try to improve on a day to day basis.

    How do you motivate your staff?

    Engage them. We encourage them, let then be a part of the business. We even give them shares so that they would be co-owners of the business. We have what we call staff share scheme which we have given them five percent of share capital of the company to be distributed to the staff on loan which they pay gradually. And it makes them feel they are part of the company and theey aree part of the successes.

    And how do you scold erring staff?

    We have internal disciplinary mechanism and there are also rules governing that. If you are caught with some bad behaviour, after being dismissed, you can also be blacklisted. And nobody else would employ you in the industry. This, we have been doing and I think we’ve been very successful in that,

    As a CEO, what are the simplest and the toughest decisions you’ve had to make?

    Simplest decisions are the day to day ones. These are very difficult questions. But to make people change is difficult because people are used to adhering standards. You have to put your feet down and say, ‘this is the standard I want to maintain.’ And whoever cannot meet that standards, then you show him the way out.

    What drives you as an individual?

    What motivates me is success and more success

    And your ideal worker?

    My ideal worker is somebody who is performing higher than his target. And I think that is the benchmark for measuring it.

    How do you measure staff loyalty?

    First, you meet your target. I don’t want somebody to be loyal to me and not meet his target. Meet your target first before any other thing.

    After being MD of Sigma Pensions, what plans do you have?

    I will retire and get my retirement benefits.

    Your best holiday choice?

    I go to the village where it is quiet and then I rest.

    Any hobbies?

    Not quite. I’m not a sportsman.

    So, how do you relax?

    I relax when I go reading

  • Why NAFDAC has secured only nine convictions in four years, by DG

    Why NAFDAC has secured only nine convictions in four years, by DG

    Judicial bottlenecks, absence of control over police officers attached to the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC), among others, are among the reasons behind the limited number of convictions the agency has secured in the past four years.

    NAFDAC’s Director-General, Dr. Paul Orhii, spoke on the agency’s challenges at the annual National Association of Judicial Correspondents (NAJUC) workshop in Lagos.

    He said the agency secured nine convictions from 2009 till date.

    The workshop, which was chaired by Chief Felix Fagbohungbe (SAN), had the theme: Government Agencies and Enabling Laws: Review and Overview.

    Also at the event were Director of Legal Services, National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA), Femi Oloruntoba.

    Participants at the workshop, who felt dissatisfied by the statistics, noted that the number of convictions was a far cry from the arrests the agency made within the period.

    But Orhii, who was represented by the agency’s Director of Legal Services, Kingsley Ejiofor, noted that NAFDAC was constrained by judicial and prosecutorial bottlenecks.

    He said cases take six to seven years before they are concluded.

    Orhii said: “Also, NAFDAC does not have control over the police officers (investigators) assigned to it. They can been transferred or withdrawn at anytime and that also cause a problem for us because calling them back from their new duty posts to come and continue their cases is always a problem.

    “Another problem we have is the cost of investigation. Some cases require our staff to travel abroad for a period of time, which we may not be able to fund.

    “So, those are some of the reasons why we have not secured as much convictions. If we have police officers permanently deployed to us, we will have control over them.”

    To Fagbohungbe, most government agency laws are outdated, just as he called on the various ministries of justice to come up with laws that meet current challenges.

    He said: “Government agency laws can no longer meet present day challenges. Most agencies are unable to effectively discharge their duties as a result of the backwardness of the laws. Some of these agencies still prosecute cases with lawsof the 1960s, which do not conform with present day realities.”

  • How Nigeria can be secured, by Aliyu, Fayemi

    How Nigeria can be secured, by Aliyu, Fayemi

    FOR enhanced national security, social justice and economic development, corruption and indiscipline must be fought to a standstill, Niger State Governor Babangida Aliyu said yesterday.

    Aliyu spoke at a public lecture organised by the Obafemi Awolowo Institute of Government and Public Policy.

    The event was held at the MUSON Centre, Onikan, Lagos.

    According to him, the mere physical protections or strategies that reinforce fear and isolation are cosmetics that cannot secure the country.

    He said national security effort should reflect the economic transformation agenda of government and backed with effective leadership.

    He traced the emergence of militant groups–Boko Haram, Bakassi Boys and Oodua Peoples’ Congress (OPC) among others to inequities, poverty and failure of a proper appreciation of what constitutes national security. He described the nation’s foreign policy as a “father Christmas” approach.

    The governor said: “We need to move away from our Father Christmas foreign policy posture of the past and embrace economic diplomacy and political reciprocity within the context of the new international order. “

    Those who attended the event were Ekiti State Governor Dr. Kayode Fayemi, Niger Assembly Speaker, the Institute’s Board of Trustees Chairman, Chief Bisi Akande, first female Federal Permanent Secretary, Mrs. Yetunde Emmanuel, Director, Institute of African Studies, University of Ibadan, Prof. I.O. Albert and International Relations lecturer at the Obafemi Awolowo University, Dr. Charles Ukeje.

    In his lecture entitled: “The search for national security: Challenges and prospect,”, Aliyu said the country should be more sophisticated in managing its security challenges rather than handling the issues in reactionary ways or adopting impulsive measures and strategies that fail to address the fundamental problems on a sustainable basis.

    He said the country can only enhance its national security if internal security challenges are handled effectively by fighting poverty, reducing unemployment, eradicating corruption and through effective leadership.

    Calling for a comprehensive economic plan to address endemic poverty in the land, he said there was also the need to institutionalise policies and programmes that foster national integration and citizenship. He said Nigerians should find a home wherever they live and enjoy full rights and privileges of citizenship without discrimination.

    Aliyu said: “We need to have pro-poor policies that address the fundamental social problems directly affecting the people. There must be free education at all levels, free healthcare services agricultural subsidies and abolition of food importation to boost local food production, affordable housing for all citizens, good roads, stable electricity to boost businesses, among others.

    “Nigeria is not being made more secured merely by anti-bomb or anti-terrorist barriers or by subjecting the people to checks that curtail their freedoms or violate their fundamental rights. Neither are we made more secure by curtailing movement of visitors, investors, lawful migrants or creating too many check points in different parts of our country.

    “Why do we think some nations like China, Japan, India and the European countries are stable and flourishing, despite their huge population and challenges? It is because they can feed their population and at the same time grow their economy to foster their national security.

    “Nigeria can also do the same. Let there be food on the table of every Nigerian first and foremost, to reduce the tension and scrambling across the nation.

    “Perhaps, the greatest impediment to national security in Nigeria today remains corruption which creates an unending vicious circle of poverty, deprivation, greed, exploitation, unemployment and general underdevelopment, thereby weakening the capacity of government to provide social and ultimately undermining national security.

    “In the same vein, elite fragmentation poses a serious challenge to national security because of the inordinate ambitions and competition within the elite. They are unfortunately engaged in endless competition and the pursuit of narrow selfish interests at the expense of national unity and integration.”

    The governor who decried the lack of equipment for the security agencies to function optimally, noted that the country has not been able to meet the minimum standard of adequate security as the current ratio is one police officer to 431 Nigerians; one army to 1, 270; an air force officer to 11, 000; a Navy to 9, 167 and one civil defence officer to 3, 200 Nigerians.

    Clarifying Northern governors’ position on state police, Aliyu said what the Northern State Governors Forum called for was a debate to help clarify the issues surrounding it especially with the peculiarities of the Nigerian state.

    Fayemi ,who chaired the occasion said there can be no concept of national security if the security of the individual is not placed at the centre. He said it was in the drive to ensure the security of lives and properties of the people that made some states to advocate for state police.

    Although, the Constitution allows for military’s collaboration with civil authorities in matters of internal security, Fayemi said it is a judgement call because the more the military is called upon to intervene in such matters, the more the civilian government makes the military believes it is incompetent.

    He said: “We have dominant of security issues to deal with, yet we have not demonstrated the capacity to do so.

    “If the safety and security of our people is the defining principle of policy, then the people must be carried along.

    “Do we have a consensus? Do we have a shared vision of this entity called Nigeria? Are we citizens or subjects? Do we have ownership? We need to return to the brass stand to get a sense of this place called Nigeria.

    “The states no longer possess the monopoly of the management of violence that is why we have so many security challenges. We have reached a level where the legitimacy and accountability of every security apparatus have been let loose through privatisation of violence.

    “For us to get it right, our defence, economic and foreign policy must be in tandem just as Governor Aliyu said and they must be driven by respect for the citizens.

    “Poverty itself is not the problem we are confronting in Nigeria but the inequality it breeds. Private jets are parked all over the tarmac when we cannot even run a national airline. We must set a pathway for the youths to look up to.”

    In his opening remarks, Chief Bisi Akande, who is the National Chairman of the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN), said the country continues to score close to zero in every positive dimension of human development irrespective of its abundant natural and human resources. He was represented by Mrs. Emmanuel.

    The ACN national chair said: “The point of course is that we have not suffered from a lack of insightful voices with regards to how we can better secure our nation and people, but the lack of political will on the part of the dominant factions of the elites over time or a criminal tendency of the same elite to generate and feed fat on the conditions that lead to instability.

    “It seems the elite prefer to cut their noses to spite their faces. They sacrifice strategic interests for transient, tactical gains. No wonder the Nigerian people have become more trenchant in their prayers to God to save them from their leaders.