Photo: Obinna Anyadike/IRIN. Mobile Police – Not who you want to call
Source: IRIN
callNAIROBI,
18 April 2012 (IRIN) - Chidi Odinkalu, chair of Nigeria’s National
Human Rights Commission, was summoned for an interview with police
yesterday over remarks he made in March about the judiciary and the
police.
In a presentation on 5 March at an event organized by the National
Association of Judiciary Correspondents, he said Nigeria was “in the
throes of a severe safety and security crisis”. He said politicians,
judges, magistrates and lawyers were part of the problem.
“The response of law enforcement to the incapability of the legal system
to ensure convictions is an epidemic of third degree policing, torture
and extrajudicial executions,” he said.
Local and international rights bodies have regularly criticized the police for human rights abuses.
The Network on Police Reform in Nigeria
(also known as NOPRIN) monitors police behaviour and is among their
leading critics. In a 2010 report entitled Criminal Force, NOPRIN
recounts several cases of police abuse.
“Personnel routinely carry out summary executions of persons accused or
suspected of crime; rely on torture as a principal means of
investigation; commit rape of both sexes,” it said.
It gave examples of suspects being bound, suspended from ceilings,
kicked and beaten with machetes, gun butts, boots, fists, electrical
wires and animal hides. Female detainees have been reportedly raped, and
males have had sharp objects inserted into their genitals. Such
behaviour, NOPRIN said, was sanctioned or even commissioned by some
senior officers.
Killings
The number of extralegal police killings is estimated at 2,500 each
year, although accurate statistics are difficult to ascertain.
“Killings happen out of the glare of the public eye,” said Innocent
Chukwuma, director of the Centre for Law Enforcement Education (CLEEN).
The police spokesman, Deputy Commissioner Olushola Amore, could not be reached for comment on the accusations.
NOPRIN has identified two departments well-known for their violent
methods: Department B, which responds to active threats to law and order
or public safety and security; and Department D, which deals with
intelligence gathering and criminal investigations.
A unit known as the Police Mobile Force, or MOPOL, falls under the
command of Department B. It is a rapid deployment paramilitary outfit of
some 30,000 men divided into 47 squadrons of roughly 632 men each.
Known by Nigerians as “kill and go”, its personnel are feared.
Within Department D are the State Criminal Investigation Departments
which operate in the country’s 37administrative divisions. There is no
evidence-based policing here, critics say. Rather, personnel routinely
abuse suspects under interrogation to obtain confessions of guilt.
Special Anti-Robbery Squads, under the state criminal investigation
departments, are another feared unit, created initially in response to
what NOPRIN said was “a perceived” nationwide escalation of gun-related
robberies and killings. Human rights activists say genuine attempts to
reform the police have not been implemented.
Given these problems, public perceptions of the police are abysmal.
People tend to avoid the police. CLEEN’s Chukwuma said annual research
indicated that 80 percent of Nigerians do not report crimes or problems
to the police. “Rather, they use traditional means to solve problems,”
he said, “especially in the rural areas”.
Chukwuma said a public alienated from the police was an indicator of
public alienation from the government which, occasionally, talked about
police reforms but never followed through.
Understanding police behaviour
Many reasons have been cited for improper police behaviour: a repressive
colonial police heritage; a poorly funded and ill-equipped police
force; a highly centralized police structure plagued by political
interference.
Recruitment has been compromised and police training is poor, leading to
the hiring of unsuitable personnel. Salaries are bad, making police
prone to corruption and other crimes.
Suspects are tortured for confessions because police lack the ability
and means to conduct thorough criminal investigations. NOPRIN says in
many police stations, one staff member oversees torture in a room
specially set aside for this practice.
Human rights organizations acknowledge that police are killed in their
hundreds or even thousands every year, which may in part explain their
behaviour and their attitude to the public.
Police complain of poor working conditions, unhealthy environments, long
hours and inadequate housing - all demotivating factors.
“Some policemen sleep in broken-down vehicles,” Chukwuma said.
“The thing that is striking [about police stations] is the scent,” he added.
Reform efforts
Reforming the police requires considerable government commitment and
funding. Enhanced training; curricular reviews at training institutions;
the vetting of recruits and serving police; competent forensic
technicians and fit-for-purpose laboratories; DNA analysis and modern
finger printing capability; and community policing - are just some
measures suggested.
A measure of reform is under way. Recently, the police force converted its academy to a university-level institution.
“There is only so much the police can do because often when they plan or
begin something, newly-elected politicians come and halt the process,”
Chukwuma said.
Since assuming office in January, Inspector-General of Police Mohammed
Abubakar has said public recklessness, or abuse of human rights by
police, would no longer be tolerated, irrespective of rank. As a start,
he has opened special phone lines for people to lodge complaints against
the police; disbanded checkpoints and roadblocks, which had become
nodes of extortion; and set up a team to arrest any police manning
illegal checkpoints.
The removal of checkpoints has reduced extortion and extrajudicial killings, said NOPRIN National Coordinator Emeka Nwanevu.
“The current Inspector-General needs to be supported by government in
investing heavily in training - back to basics policing,” Chukwuma
added. “Police work is driven by intelligence, so that funds and
equipment need to be made available so that police can gather this and
act on it rather than harassing and brutalizing suspects.”
Reformers would like an external oversight body for the police. The
rationale is that this would help lessen police impunity. Reformers also
want skilled civilians to staff police administration, ballistic and
forensic centres.
“What we need are a non-police people who can help the police to plan and put in structures to improve their service,” he said.
Nwanevu, who was a member of a presidential police reform committee in
2008, said new recommendations by the current president and police
inspector-general were expected to be made known within two months.
One likely reform, Nwanevu said, could result in improved police
training. NOPRIN would also like to see greater involvement by civil
society in ensuring that police act as expected. The organization also
wants telephone numbers of divisional commanders to be made readily
available to the public so that complaints can be made against specific
officers.
Funding reform is another requirement. Currently, he said, money voted
for the police never seems to trickle down to the station unit level,
leaving them impoverished, dirty, lacking equipment (including basic
administrative documents), and police wearing different shades of
uniform. Reform, he said, would stop station commanders extorting money
from the public to pay for these requirements.
“We are recommending a structured approach for the dispensing of funds
for the police so that everyone in the command chain knows how much is
available to them for their work,” he said.

