Correcting imbalance for police visibility

Mogaji

Mogaji

By Adeobowale Johnson

The ongoing redeployment of officers from Zone 2 Command, Lagos, has generated public debate, with some narratives portraying the exercise as irregular or excessive. Recently, a group of concerned police officers, as they describe themselves, alleged an “illegal” mass transfer of 695 personnel from the Zone 2 Police Command Headquarters in Lagos. However, emerging facts indicate that the move is a strategic step toward correcting long-standing imbalances in police deployment.

For years, Zone 2 Command, covering Lagos and Ogun States, has experienced a concentration of personnel beyond its administrative requirements. In theory, the Command is a critical operational hub requiring disciplined and deployment-ready officers. In practice, however, it has increasingly become a high-demand posting, attracting personnel beyond its functional needs. Available accounts indicate that as many as 855 Special Police Officers (SPOs) were attached to the headquarters at a time when several divisional and community commands across the country remained understaffed. This imbalance has come at a cost: slower response times, reduced police visibility, and mounting pressure on frontline officers. In some instances, field commands have operated with less than half of their required personnel strength, underscoring the urgency of redistribution.

Security experts have weighed in on the development. According to Mr. Busayo Mogaji, a security expert and CEO of Western Eagle Security Ltd, the redeployment is both necessary and overdue.

“Policing is about visibility and accessibility. When officers are concentrated in administrative hubs instead of communities, the system fails the ordinary citizen. What we are seeing now is a correction of that imbalance,” he stated.

Mr. Mogaji further noted that assignments in certain high-interest commands have historically attracted disproportionate personnel, not always based on operational needs, thereby distorting equitable deployment.

“Redistributing officers is not punitive; it is fundamental to efficiency, discipline, and institutional balance. The Inspector-General is acting well within his statutory powers,” he added.

Under the Nigeria Police Act, the Inspector-General of Police retains full authority over postings and redeployments. Such measures are routine and essential for maintaining operational effectiveness across the Force.

Beyond improving public safety, the redeployment is also expected to enhance officer welfare by reducing burnout, ensuring structured shifts, and improving overall efficiency in underserved areas.

With increased security demands anticipated in the lead-up to national elections, including crowd control, intelligence gathering, and rapid response, the need for a well-distributed police presence has become even more critical.

At its core, policing is measured not by internal arrangements but by the presence felt by citizens. Ensuring that more officers are visible, accessible, and responsive across communities is not only justified, it is imperative.

The current restructuring signals a deliberate shift toward restoring that presence where it matters most: among the people.

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