The
police authorities were in shock last night after an angry President Goodluck
Jonathan stormed out of the Police College, Ikeja, Lagos during an unexpected
visit to personally assess the rot at the college.
The
President’s visit was provoked by a weeklong expose by the Lagos –based
Channels Television on the dehumanising conditions trainee policemen go through
in the college.
President
Jonathan, who was on his way to Abidjan, Cote d’Ivoire for a meeting of ECOWAS
leaders on the insurgency in Mali, was as embarrassed by what he saw as the
inability of the Commandant of the institution, Police Commissioner I.F.Yerima,
to answer any of the four questions he asked the police officer.
The
President and his entourage, including the Assistant Inspector General of
Police (AIG) Zone Two, Mamman Tsafe, and the Lagos State Commissioner of
Police, Umar Manko, drove into the college at about 3pm and parked in front of
the Sports Store.
From
there,he walked to the hostels. He also inspected the women’s hostels,the
kitchen, the dining halls facing the parade field and the officers’ mess.
Security
was tight with armed soldiers and policemen deployed in strategic places in the
college.
As
he left the mess to enter his car, he suddenly paused and faced CP Yerima to
ask him a few questions.
By
now, a crowd had gathered struggling to see the President and were at the same
time hailing him.
He
waved to them to acknowledge their greetings.
Then
came the first question for the College Commandant: How was Channels TV able to
penetrate and record the mess without detection?
The
CP had no answer.
The
second question followed: When was the recording done. Again there was no
answer.
The
Commandant turned to his deputy and other senior officers to assist him in
answering the President’s questions, but none was able to help him out.
The
President then quipped: “This is a calculated attempt to damage the image of
the government, as the college is not the only training institution in the
country.”
He
soon entered his car and left.
After
the President’s departure, the college Commandant met briefly with his officers
before he too took his leave.
Senior
officers later gathered in groups to review the visit.
Some
of policemen in the college who pleaded for anonymity were happy at the
President’s visit which they said would help in reversing the fortunes of the
college.
They
called for the probe of the trainees’ welfare in the last five years.
Source:
The Nation
No comments:
Post a Comment