The
Inspector General of Police, Mr Ibrahim Idris, has attributed the arrest of
Chukwujeme Onwamadike, the suspected kidnapper popularly known as Evans, to
information sharing and intelligence cooperation among police services in West
Africa.
“Information sharing is crucial to tackling
the menace of trans-border crimes in West Africa; it is through such exchange
that we were able to nab a Ghanaian/Nigerian kidnapper two weeks ago, after
evading arrest for many years,” Idris said on Wednesday.
Idris
spoke in Accra, Ghana in a paper titled: “The role of Nigeria Police in
national security and its contributions in West Africa”, delivered at an
ongoing West Africa international security conference.
“For several years, Evans terrorised Nigerians
and nationals of many countries across West Africa. Efforts to apprehend him
did not yield the desired results until we spread our search net wider,” he
said. The police chief, who solicited closer ties among security agencies in
the sub-region, emphasised the need to improve the method of monitoring and
surveillance, particularly among border and coastal police units.
Idris
called for improved communication capabilities among intelligence gathering
outfits in West Africa, and called for mutual support to plug loopholes usually
exploited by criminals. He said that the Nigeria Police Force had 300,000
personnel in 127 area commands and 5303 divisions, adding that the force had
consistently contributed to stability and peace in ECOWAS nations and under UN
mandates.
“The Nigeria Police Force trained 250 Liberian
Police personnel in 2005 and has consistently offered training slots to police
officers from Gambia and Sierra Leone at the Police Staff College, Jos and the
Police Academy, Wudil. “We also trained 100 police officers from the Republic
of Niger on mobile police combat in 1998. At the end of the training, Nigeria
donated trucks, riot equipment and tear smoke to the Nigerien government,” he
said.
Idris
said that the Nigeria Police Force also helped to stabilise Guinea Bissau in
2012, when the military intervened in its leadership and truncated democracy.
“Our police personnel remained there until democracy was restored in 2014,” he
stated.
The IGP expressed Nigeria’s
readiness to consistently cooperate with police formations in other countries
to track down criminals, pointing out that such mutual cooperation had become
even more necessary as technology had reduced the world to a small village.
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