Why electoral offenders are difficult to prosecute – CSO

civil right
 
From Paul Osuyi, Asaba
Executive Director of Centre for Transparency and Accountability (CTA), a civil society group, Faith Nwadishi has said prosecution of election offenders will continue to be a challenge with the current practice of posting police officers before and after elections.
Mrs. Nwadishi lamented that on going cases and officers in charge were usually not taken into consideration when posting is being effected.
“Before elections, officers are posted to a particular state, and sometimes they arrest electoral offenders, obtain information from the offenders.
“But what happens after the election, such officers are posted out of the state, which usually stalls prosecution,” she said.
Nwadishi made the remark in Asaba, Delta State during the inauguration of Civil Society Organizations Observatory on the implementation of the Police Act, 2020 and the Police Trust Fund Act, 2019, and capacity building for stakeholders in the South-South region by the Rule of Law and Accountability Advocacy Centre (RULAAC).
Nwadishi said without political will by those at the helm of affairs, efficiency and effectiveness of the police as envisaged by the Police Act 2020 will be a ruse.
She said the tranches of funds running  into billions of naira that were released for police equipment contract became controversial within the NPTF management, which led to petition, because there was no proper monitoring by CSOs.
“The most dilapidated barracks you can see in Nigeria belong to the Nigeria Police Force or their sister agencies. The reason when a policeman engages you in a stop and search on routine duty, he transfers the aggression on you.
“A society deserves the service of the police because they speak for us and fight for the effective policing for a better society,” she said.
Welcoming participants, Executive Director of RULAAC, Okechukwu Nwanguma charged CSOs to conduct mid-term review of the implementation of the controversial NPTF, if its statutory mandate must be achieved.
He said since the enactment of the trust fund, there has been no guidelines for the monitoring of the monies that have been released.
Nwanguma said monitoring of the fund by CSOs is critical in assisting policy makers and contributors in obtaining facts about fund disbursement.
“To boost increase in price efficiency, training and retraining, and improved infrastructure and procure state of the art security equipment, the gaps in the old Police Act must be filled through proper monitoring by CSOs,” he said.
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