#PlateauKillings : Ekweremadu gives reasons FG must reorganize nation’s security architecture
The Deputy
President of the Senate, Ike Ekweremadu, has raised the alarm over the
escalating killings and insecurity in Nigeria, warning that more lives would be
lost unless the nation’s security architecture is reorganised.
Reacting to
the recent killings in Plateau State, which had left scores dead, Ekweremadu
decried the reluctance of the nation’s leaders to tinker with the nation’s
security structure, despite glaring lapses.
The Senator,
who spoke after decorating his newly promoted security aides, Mr. Uchenna
Igwebuike and Edward Utuh, with their new ranks of Superintendent of Police
(SP) and Assistant Superintendent of Police (ASP), respectively, however,
commended the Nigeria Police for the recent promotion exercise, noting that
such would motivate the personnel to give their best.
On the
recent killings in Jos, Ekweremadu said: “It is really unfortunate because our
country is a nation where the leaders have refused to learn from the mistakes
and missteps of the past.
“For many
years now, some of us have been consistent about the need to descentralise our
security architecture; and so long as we are not doing that, we are going to
get exactly the same result.
“It pains me
that innocent people, who voted us into power to protect their lives and property
are losing their lives and their property because we have refused to take the
correct steps.
“The sad
news is not only that many people have died, but also that more people will die
unless we take the right steps, putting the right security architecture in
place. There is no way you will have a federation like Nigeria as big as it is,
with all the diversities, and continue to operate a centralised policing and
expect it to work. It will never work and it is a major problem.
“So, it is
sad that this is happening. But, as I said, the real tragedy is that this
Plateau incident is not going to be last because we refuse to be corrected”.
Ekweremadu
reasoned that the Government of Plateau State would be in the best position to
protect the citizens if it had its own police outfit.
“I want to
call on the Federal Government and the leaders of this country again for us to,
for once, decide to protect the lives and property of those we are leading
because that is the primary purpose of government. I appeal to the Federal
Government to have a rethink on the issue of restructuring, especially the ones
relevant to the security of lives and property. And the only way to do that is
for all of us to sit down and agree to, within a space of the next two or three
months, amend the constitution to enable the component units of this country to
have their own security architecture, namely the police.
“If the
people of Plateau are empowered under the constitution to have their police,
then you can place the blame squarely on the governor because he will have the
responsibility to recruit sufficient police personnel to protect the people.
Right now, the responsibility is that of the Federal Government. There is
little or nothing the governor can do about it.
“I
sympathise with the people of Plateau State, especially the communities, which
lost their loved ones. However, I will continue to sound even like a broken
record until the correct thing is done”, he concluded.
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