Abuja Deserves State Police, Group Counters FG

The Federal Capital Territory deserves to have local police drawn from indigenous people in the area whose ancestors owned the land, Network of Journalists on Indigenous Issues, (NEJII) said at the weekend.
The group was responding to the statement credited to the Presidency that Abuja, the Federal Capital would not have State Police. The President said the FCT will be under the jurisdiction of the Nigeria Police Force which would be renamed the Federal Police Service.
NEJII, in a statement signed by its officials, Akinwale Kasali and Fred Ojinika said Abuja though yet a state capital should not be denied the territory of local police drawn from Abuja Original Inhabitants, (AOIs).
NEJII said security is tied to territorial sovereignty, physical and economic ancestry adding that the position of the Federal Government negates the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.
“The idea of not having State Police in Abuja is wrong. There are some 2.5 million indigenous people in the Federal Capital Territory. There should be State Police in Abuja which should be constituted by indigenous people in the FCT,” NEJII said in the statement.
The Group called on the Presidency and the National Assembly to reject any proposal that excludes indigenous people from State Policing.
“The Nigerian Government should learn from the police structure in Washington, London and New York. The global best practice is for State Capitals to have their own police usually, largely drawn from original inhabitants of the capital city. In the case of Abuja, there are some nine indigenous ethnic groups in the FCT. They should not be denied of this historic opportunity,” NEJII said.
The group said the proposed State Police should recognise Abuja Metropolitan Police drawn from indigenous inhabitants of the FCT.
It argued that “Abuja Original Inhabitants form the majority of the people in the FCT. They own the land. They are attached spiritually, emotionally and sociologically to the land. It is their ancestral home. Having been denied the status of a state, they cannot again be denied of being stakeholders in the policing of Abuja. In fact, the Abuja Original Inhabitants are the first nation, they are the first stakeholders that should be considered in Abuja policing.”
The network said it was unfortunate that Abuja original inhabitants are denied the right to vote for State House of Assembly members and Governors and now that will not be involved in State Police, a critical aspect necessary for the protection of indigenous values, culture, heritage and forest resources.
NEJII said across the 36 states, police will be recruited mostly from indigenes of the states.
“With the lack of State Police in Abuja, the implication is that some 2.5 million representing nine ethnic groups will be denied and marginalised from involvement in state policing. This is a conscious way to further marginalise and isolate Abuja Original Inhabitants, AOIs,” NEJII said.








