Aminu Tambuwal, |
Sokoto State Governor, Dr. Aminu Tambuwal, has blamed the recurring
killings in most parts of the country to the failure of leadership.
He lamented that the harvests of deaths were not what Nigerians voted for in 2015.
In a statement on Tuesday, Tambuwal noted that the growing spate of
mindless shedding of innocent blood, especially of policemen and other
security personnel on their lawful duty posts, has brought a new
dimension to the reprehensible state of insecurity in the country
The governor said with the killing of security agents on their duty
posts, the questions from every law-abiding citizen today are: “Who will
protect us, when even those constitutionally charged with the
responsibility of protecting our lives and property have, themselves,
become vulnerable targets of criminals?
“Where shall we run to for protection, when the institutions of State
put in place to protect us are being progressively dismantled by
opportunistic criminality and the trained personnel are also on the run?
”Last May, three policemen were shot dead in Sokoto State by
kidnappers, who abducted a Syrian national they were escorting. A few
days later, four police officers were ambushed and killed in Benue
State. Last week seven policemen were reportedly gunned down in cold
blood in Abuja, and their arms and ammunition were taken, by unknown
persons. This is happening amidst repeatedly reported cases of attacks
on police stations and other security facilities in various parts of the
country.
“It bears repeating for me to state here that Nigeria’s security
architecture and the strategies currently adopted and deployed for
national security, if any, need a comprehensive overhaul. It is not
working.
The needless waste of life everywhere, both those of trained
security personnel and ordinary citizens, is a drain on the nation’s
resources and an unacceptable diminution of our valuable human capital.
”Every policeman or military personnel is someone’s father, mother,
brother, sister, uncle, aunt or friend. The number and frequency of
deaths are undermining our humanity, making us less sensitive to the
gravity of the situation we are in today and also creating a new
generation of Nigerians, who may get accustomed to inhuman acts as the
norm.
”The worst part of all this is that these deaths are avoidable and
the killings preventable. It boils down, at the end of the day, to the
failure of leadership. Nigeria cannot progress and be part of a 21st
Century forward-looking world by creating new batches of mourners every
other day. This is not the way to go. That is not what Nigerians voted
for in 2015. That is not what will build a virile, united, politically
stable and economically prosperous African Giant.”
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