The Force Headquarters has yet to restore any security details to the
Speaker of the House of Representatives, Mr. Aminu Tambuwal, over one week
after it said he would be given police protection.
Instead, it said on Sunday that Tambuwal should apply for police details
if he needed any.
Shortly after he emerged as the governorship candidate of the All
Progressives Congress for the 2015 elections in Sokoto State, the police said
they would give Tambuwal and all other candidates protection.
However, the force headquarters clarified that it would do so not
because it recognised Tambuwal as the Speaker but because of his emergence as a
governorship candidate.
The Force Police Relations Officer, Mr. Emmanuel Ojukwu, had stated,
“The police will do the needful in protecting Alhaji Tambuwal and all other
contestants.”
But, over one week after it made the promise, the force headquarters
made a U-turn on Sunday.
Ojukwu now said there was no automatic protection for any candidate,
adding that anybody desirous of police protection should apply for it.
He noted that policemen had a lot of work to do and would not run after
politicians asking whether they needed protection or not.
“It is the duty of the police to provide protection for all aspirants
but they have to apply to be given police operatives.
“We have enough work on our hands and we cannot be running after
candidates who need our protection.
“All candidates must apply for police protection,” Ojukwu told one of
our correspondents in Abuja.
But Tambuwal reacted that he would not join issues with the police over
their latest stance.
He recalled that the same police had long failed to obey a court order,
saying that the “status quo should be maintained” over the withdrawal of his
security details.
“We don’t want to join issues with the police. There is a court order
saying the status quo should be maintained, but they chose to violate the
order,” Tambuwal’s Special Adviser on Media, Mr. Imam Imam, said on Sunday.
The police had withdrawn Tambuwal’s security details soon after he
defected from the Peoples Democratic Party to the APC on October 28.
The police claimed that they acted in line with Section 68 (g)(1) of the
1999 Constitution, a provision that allows defection only on grounds of a
division in a political party.
The Speaker has since challenged the police action before an Abuja
Federal High Court.
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