Benue State Government has declared its support for the creation of state police, as it commenced training for 300 members of the Benue State Civil Protection Guards.
Governor Hyacinth Alia made this known on Tuesday during the official launch of the six-day training programme held at the firing range in Ikpayongo, Gwer-East Local Government Area.
The exercise is being organised by the Kukah Centre in partnership with the state government to strengthen the operational capacity of the security outfit.
Represented by his deputy, Sam Ode, the governor stressed that the push for state policing has become timely, noting that governors should have direct control over security structures within their states.
He said, “The conversation about state policing, as contentious as it is, is a matter whose time has come. And as we approach the constitutional changes that will make that possible, I think Benue is in full support of state policing.
The President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, is working seriously on a legal framework to establish state policing. This is devolution of powers.
“We are a federating nation and federating units should be able to have self-determination on issues of security.
So when we talk about the governors being Chief Security Officers of their states, it shouldn’t just be in theory, it should be in practice.
“And so we should be able to have a police structure that the state can control, for efficient policing and, of course, for the security of the state.”
The governor also addressed concerns that state police could be misused for political purposes, assuring that safeguards would be considered.
Earlier, the Special Adviser on Security and Internal Affairs, Joseph Har, revealed that about 5,000 personnel had already been trained under the state’s security initiative.
He said, “As far as Nigeria is concerned, Benue State is leading on the issue of state policing, and others are following, having trained 5,000 people with a good training manual that is available, and now the Kukah Centre has come to strengthen the function. You don’t build on nothing; you cannot strengthen what does not exist.
“As you are aware, the conventional security military, police, paramilitary cannot be everywhere, but these people are in every council ward, so we are going to be first responders in every place and raise flags for the conventional security.
They are there to respond to issues before the conventional security, and with their presence, they will support the conventional security.”
Also speaking, Project Manager of the Kukah Centre, Terseer Bamber, explained that the training is designed to improve professionalism and ensure the guards operate within legal boundaries.
“We started with stakeholder engagements. We moved from there to signing a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the Benue State Government, which gave us the impetus to access the law establishing the security outfit.
“And it led to developing the Standard Operating Procedures (SOP), and today we are here to train the personnel of the guards based on the SOP that was developed.
“At the end of the training, we will have a more resilient BSCPGs, who understand their mandate, who understand the confines of the constitution, and who will also be positioned to deliver their mandate within the confines of the law.
That way, we would have contributed to strengthening peace and resilience here in Benue State and Nigeria in general,” Bamber said.
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