No fewer than 195 senior police officers are facing a
disciplinary panel for various acts of misconduct, it was announced yesterday.
Among the officers are four
Assistant Inspectors General of Police (AIGs); 17 Commissioners of Police
(CPs); two Deputy Commissioners of Police; six Assistant Commissioners of
Police (ACPs); and 166 others of the rank of Assistant Superintendent of Police
(ASP) and above.
The affected officers are to face
the Force Disciplinary Committee (FDC) chaired by the Deputy Inspector General
of Police (DIG) in charge of ‘A’ Department, Suleiman Fakai.
Fakai, who briefed reporters at the
Force Headquarters shortly before the committee’s sitting yesterday, said all
the affected officers had been queried by the various superior authorities at
various times within the past three months.
According to him, any of the
officers found culpable would be handed disciplinary actions ranging from
dismissal, prosecution, demotion, reprimand and warning to advice, depending on
the degree of their offences.
Any of the officers found without
blemish will be exonerated.
Fakai did not release the names of
the affected officers, neither did he specify their offences.
The panel will be sitting from
Monday through Friday, between 10am and 6pm. A report containing the
recommendations of the committee would be forwarded to the Police Service
Commission for action.
Speaking on the activities of the
FDC, the police chief said his committee inherited over 3000 cases in January
2013 and that all the cases had been dispensed with.
Some of the officers found culpable
in that batch were handed various disciplinary actions ranging from dismissal,
prosecution and demotion to reprimand and warning.
The committee chairman corrected the
impression among members of the public that only junior officers of the rank
and file are punished for acts of misconduct.
He said: “The Force Disciplinary
Committee essentially serves to review disciplinary matters involving senior
officers from the rank of ASP and above who may have erred in the course of
their duties and make recommendations to the Police Service Commission.
“This is in line with extant
provisions and Force policy guiding discipline geared towards upholding
professionalism, respect for rule of law and observance of human rights among
senior police officers in the performance of their duties”.
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